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      Threshold Levels of Fluid Shear Promote Leukocyte Adhesion through Selectins (CD62L,P,E)

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          Abstract

          Leukocyte adhesion through L-selectin to peripheral node addressin (PNAd, also known as MECA-79 antigen), an L-selectin ligand expressed on high endothelial venules, has been shown to require a minimum level of fluid shear stress to sustain rolling interactions (Finger, E.B., K.D. Puri, R. Alon, M.B. Lawrence, V.H. von Andrian, and T.A. Springer. 1996. Nature (Lond.). 379:266–269). Here, we show that fluid shear above a threshold of 0.5 dyn/cm 2 wall shear stress significantly enhances HL-60 myelocyte rolling on P- and E-selectin at site densities of 200/μm 2 and below. In addition, gravitational force is sufficient to detach HL60 cells from P- and E-selectin substrates in the absence, but not in the presence, of flow. It appears that fluid shear–induced torque is critical for the maintenance of leukocyte rolling. K562 cells transfected with P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1, a ligand for P-selectin, showed a similar reduction in rolling on P-selectin as the wall shear stress was lowered below 0.5 dyn/cm 2. Similarly, 300.19 cells transfected with L-selectin failed to roll on PNAd below this level of wall shear stress, indicating that the requirement for minimum levels of shear force is not cell type specific. Rolling of leukocytes mediated by the selectins could be reinitiated within seconds by increasing the level of wall shear stress, suggesting that fluid shear did not modulate receptor avidity. Intravital microscopy of cremaster muscle venules indicated that the leukocyte rolling flux fraction was reduced at blood centerline velocities less than 1 mm/s in a model in which rolling is mediated by L- and P-selectin. Similar observations were made in L-selectin–deficient mice in which leukocyte rolling is entirely P-selectin dependent. Leukocyte adhesion through all three selectins appears to be significantly enhanced by a threshold level of fluid shear stress.

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          Most cited references46

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          Selectins and their ligands: current concepts and controversies.

          G Kansas (1996)
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            Lymphocyte homing and leukocyte rolling and migration are impaired in L-selectin-deficient mice.

            L-selectin, a cell adhesion molecule expressed by leukocytes, mediates the attachment of lymphocytes to high endothelial venules (HEV) of peripheral lymph nodes and mediates the earliest interactions between leukocytes and activated vascular endothelium. Mice possessing a mutant L-selectin gene that results in the complete loss of cell surface receptor expression were generated by gene targeting. Lymphocytes from these mice did not bind to peripheral lymph node HEV and these mice had a severe reduction in the number of lymphocytes localized to peripheral lymph nodes. Short-term homing experiments demonstrated that L-selectin was also involved in lymphocyte migration to mucosal lymph nodes, Peyer's patches, and spleen. Furthermore, significant defects in leukocyte rolling and neutrophil migration into the peritoneum in response to an inflammatory stimulus were observed. Thus, L-selectin plays an essential role in leukocyte homing to lymphoid tissues and sites of inflammation.
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              The integrin VLA-4 supports tethering and rolling in flow on VCAM-1

              Selectins have previously been shown to tether a flowing leukocyte to a vessel wall and mediate rolling. Here, we report that an intergrin, VLA- 4, can also support tethering and rolling. Blood T lymphocytes and alpha 4 integrin-transfected cells can tether in shear flow, and then roll, through binding of the intergrin VLA-4 to purified VCAM-1 on the wall of a flow chamber. VLA-4 transfectants showed similar tethering and rolling on TNF-stimulated endothelium. Tethering efficiency, rolling velocity, and resistance to detachment are related to VCAM-1 density. Tethering and rolling did not occur on ICAM-1, fibronectin, or fibronectin fragments, and tethering did not require integrin activation or the presence of an alpha 4 cytoplasmic domain. Arrest of rolling cells on VCAM-1 occurred spontaneously, and/or was triggered by integrin activating agents Mn2+, phorbol ester, and mAb TS2/16. These agents, and the alpha 4 cytoplasmic domain, promoted increased resistance to detachment. Together the results show that VLA-4 is a versatile integrin that can mediate tethering, rolling, and firm arrest on VCAM-1.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Cell Biol
                The Journal of Cell Biology
                The Rockefeller University Press
                0021-9525
                1540-8140
                10 February 1997
                : 136
                : 3
                : 717-727
                Affiliations
                [* ]Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22908; and []Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Northwestern Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611
                Author notes

                Address correspondence to Michael B. Lawrence, Ph.D., Department of Biomedical Engineering, Box 377, Health Science Center, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908. Tel.: (804) 982-4269. Fax: (804) 982-3870.

                Article
                10.1083/jcb.136.3.717
                2134292
                9024700
                48bbf729-370d-42d8-b138-5d93b9adb2ff
                Copyright @ 1997
                History
                : 29 May 1996
                : 17 September 1996
                Categories
                Article

                Cell biology
                Cell biology

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