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Brief Definitive Reports |


Merck Co., Inc., Rahway, New Jersey 07065
| Abstract |
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700%) the number of lymphocytes rolling on vascular endothelium under a broad range of physiological shear stresses, and significantly slowed their rolling velocities. Therefore, L-selectin dimerization may explain the rapid increase in ligand binding activity that occurs after leukocyte activation and may directly influence leukocyte migration to peripheral lymphoid tissues or to sites of inflammation. Inducible oligomerization may also be a common mechanism for rapidly upregulating the adhesive or ligand-binding function of other cell-surface receptors.
Key Words: L-selectin dimerization leukocyte/endothelial interaction rolling regulation
Leukocyte accumulation at sites of inflammation is regulated at the level of binding to the vascular endothelium, a multistep process initiated by the selectin family of adhesion molecules (1, 2). Although selective expression is a prominent means of governing selectin function, other mechanisms also regulate adhesive function. With L-selectin, lymphocyte activation through antigen receptors or neutrophil activation by chemokines upregulates its binding affinity for ligand (3). This rapid and transient increase in ligand binding presumably results from intracellular signals involving G proteins, since L-selectin's upregulated binding activity correlates with rapid phosphorylation of conserved cytoplasmic serine residues and upregulated binding activity is blocked by pertussis toxin and protein kinase C inhibitors (4). In addition, L-selectin localization at the tips of leukocyte microvilli (5, 6) regulates leukocyte capture since it facilitates contact with ligand-coated walls of in vitro flow chambers (7). However, the topographical position of L-selectin does not influence rolling velocity or detachment rates once rolling is established (7). Moreover, correct cell surface positioning is not sufficient for L-selectin–mediated adhesion, since deletion of L-selectin's cytoplasmic domain abrogates in vivo and in vitro leukocyte rolling (8) and its interactions with the cytoskeleton, but does not inhibit microvillus localization (9). Thus, the L-selectin cytoplasmic domain critically regulates receptor function. In this study, we assessed whether upregulation of L-selectin binding activity through its cytoplasmic domain could result from the formation of L-selectin dimers on the cell surface and whether receptor dimerization affected receptor function and leukocyte rolling.
Coumermycin Treatment and Phosphomanan Monoester Core Complex Binding Assay.
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Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results and Discussion
References
DNA Constructs and Cell Transfection.
A modified GyrB cDNA fragment was generated as previously described (10) and ligated at the 3' end of a human L-selectin cDNA (11) via an XbaI site introduced at the L-selectin translation-termination codon. All constructs were verified by DNA sequencing, subcloned into the pMT-2 expression vector (provided by Genetics Institute, Cambridge, MA), and used to transfect 300.19 cells (12). Transfected cells were selected in RPMI 1640 medium containing 10% calf serum and G418 (1 mg/ml; Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO). Multiple clones of transfected cells expressing similar cell-surface levels of wild-type L-selectin or L-selectin–GyrB fusion proteins were identified by immunofluorescence staining with flow cytometry analysis.
Cells were washed once with RPMI 1640 medium before incubation at 37°C for 25 min (unless indicated otherwise) in RPMI 1640 containing either 0.1% DMSO or the indicated amounts of coumermycin and novobiocin (in 0.1% DMSO; Sigma Chemical Co.). After washing with ice-cold PBS without Ca2+/Mg2+, the cells were divided and incubated with biotin-labeled PPME (5 µg/ml) in PBS containing either Ca2+/ Mg2+ or 10 mM EDTA. After a 30-min incubation on ice, FITC-labeled avidin was added to visualize phosphomanan monoester core complex (PPME) binding as previously described (3, 4), with staining assessed immediately by flow cytometry as in Fig. 1. Ca2+-dependent PPME-binding was calculated by subtracting the mean linear fluorescence channel number for background staining (in 10 mM EDTA) from the mean value of fluorescence staining in the presence of Ca2+. Antibiotic treatment did not change the mean fluorescence intensity of background staining.
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1,3fucosyltransferase-VII cDNA (fucosyltransferase VII, provided by Dr. Brent Weston, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill). Transfected EA.hy926 cells were grown to confluence on 25-mm circular glass coverslips and mounted in a parallel-plate flow chamber. Flow medium was drawn through the chamber at a rate of 804 µl/min with a syringe pump (Harvard Apparatus, Natick, MA), which generates an estimated wall shear stress of 1.85 dynes/cm2. Cells (106 cells/ml) were perfused through the chamber for a 10-min period. Cell rolling was observed using an inverted phase-contrast microscope (Olympus Corporation, Lake Success, NY) and videotaped using a CCD video camera (Hitachi Denshi, Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) with a SuperVHS video recorder (model SVO-9500MD; Sony Corporation of America, New York, NY) and an attached time-date generator (Microimage Video Sales Co., Bechtelsville, PA). Interacting cells (tethering and rolling) were determined by analysis of videotapes in which four fields (0.16 mm2) on a video monitor were counted at 14 random time points throughout the flow period. For calculating velocities, the distance each cell traveled between two time points was measured, converted into actual distance, and divided by the elapsed time. | Results and Discussion |
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L-selectin binds its ligands with rapid association and dissociation rates, which results in a minimal shear stress threshold requirement for the initiation and maintenance of leukocyte rolling (18–21). Despite the coumermycin- induced increase in L-selectin binding activity, both coumermycin-treated and -untreated L-Gb cells required shear stress for the promotion of L-selectin–dependent interactions since no tethering or rolling was observed below wall shear stresses of 0.75 dynes/cm2 (Fig. 4). Nonetheless, coumermycin-treated L-Gb cells interacted with HUVEC monolayers at a significantly greater frequency compared with untreated L-Gb cells at shear stresses between 0.75 and 3.0 dynes/cm2 (Fig. 4). Thus, L-selectin dimerization influences rolling velocity and receptor detachment rates as opposed to selectin localization to the tips of microvilli, which appears to promote cell capture (5–7). L-selectin dimerization may retard the dissociation of selectin bonds, which would enhance the lifetime of L-selectin binding to its endothelial ligand(s) and promote leukocyte tethering to endothelium during rolling.
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Since leukocyte rolling may involve multivalent binding (22), rapid oligomerization of L-selectin would favor the formation of multivalent bonds with its low affinity endothelial cell ligands (24). Consistent with this notion, L-selectin ligands consist of multimeric sialylated and sulfated oligosaccharides appropriately presented by mucin scaffolds (1). As such, oligomerized L-selectin molecules may interact cooperatively with ligands presenting multiple low affinity oligosaccharide binding sites that are optimally stabilized by multivalent bonding. This is consistent with the many animal lectins that dramatically increase their affinity for carbohydrate ligands by combining multiple oligosaccharide binding sites in each lectin polypeptide (25). However, in the case of L-selectin the generation of multimeric binding by receptor oligomerization may provide a rapid means for upregulating adhesion receptor function with leukocyte activation. In addition, dimerization may be particularly important when L-selectin or its ligands are expressed at low site densities (26). Therefore, this study supports the notion that selectin oligomerization is of primary physiologic significance and is likely to directly influence leukocyte migration and entry into sites of inflammation. Moreover, the coumermycin–GyrB dimerization strategy is likely to be useful for studying other transmembrane proteins and adhesion molecules that share the property of being functionally upregulated in response to cellular activation.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants AI-26872, CA-54464, and HL-50985.
Submitted: 15 June 1998
Revised: 23 July 1998
| References |
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