학술논문

CD11/CD18-independent neutrophil adherence to inducible endothelial-leucocyte adhesion molecules (E-LAM) in vitro.
Document Type
Article
Source
Immunology. Aug89, Vol. 67 Issue 4, p502-508. 7p.
Subject
*ENDOTHELIUM
*EPITHELIUM
*NEUTROPHILS
*GRANULOCYTES
*IMMUNOGLOBULINS
*GLOBULINS
Language
ISSN
0019-2805
Abstract
We examined the mechanisms involved in neutrophil adherence to cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HEC) induced by direct stimulation of the neutrophils by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP), or the calcium ionophore A23 187 (neutrophil-dependent adherence), or by pretreatment of HEC with interleukin-1 (IL-1), tumour necrosis factor (TNF) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (endothelial-dependent adherence). Two distinct mechanisms for neutrophil adherence to HEC were demonstrated by performing adherence assays: (i) at 37° versus 4°; (ii) in the presence of Ca2+ only venus Mg2+ only; and (iii) in the presence or absence of monoclonal antibodies (mAb) to the CD11/CD18 adhesion complex of neutrophils. A CD11/CD18-dependent mechanism (i.e. inhibited by anti-CD18 mAb) was identified that was active in the presence of Mg2+ only but not of Ca2+ only, and at 37° but not at 4°. A CD11/CD18-independent mechanism (i.e. not inhibited by anti-CD18 rnAb) was active at 4° and at 37°, and in the presence of Ca2+ only and of Mg2+ only. Neutrophil-dependent adherence induced by FMLP or PMA occurred solely via the CD11/CD18-dependent mechanism, whereas endothelial-dependent adherence induced by a 4-hr pretreatment with IL-1, TNF, or LPS involved both CD11/CD18-dependent and/independent mechanisms. CD11/CD18-deficient neutrophils isolated from a patient with leucocyte adherence deficiency (LAD) maintained the ability to adhere to LPS-pretreated HEC in the presence of Ca2+ only, indicating that this mechanism of adherence involves a receptor on the neutrophil distinct from CD11/CD18. Furthermore, the disappearance of the CD11/CD18-independent, but not of the CD11/CD18-dependent mechanism of adherence, in HEC treated with TNF for 24 hr suggests that the two mechanisms of neutrophil adherence also involve distinct inducible endothelial-leucocyte adhesion molecules (E-LAM). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]