| Literature DB >> 19268609 |
Ziv Shulman1, Vera Shinder, Eugenia Klein, Valentin Grabovsky, Orna Yeger, Erez Geron, Alessio Montresor, Matteo Bolomini-Vittori, Sara W Feigelson, Tomas Kirchhausen, Carlo Laudanna, Guy Shakhar, Ronen Alon.
Abstract
Endothelial chemokines are instrumental for integrin-mediated lymphocyte adhesion and transendothelial migration (TEM). By dissecting how chemokines trigger lymphocyte integrins to support shear-resistant motility on and across cytokine-stimulated endothelial barriers, we found a critical role for high-affinity (HA) LFA-1 integrin in lymphocyte crawling on activated endothelium. Endothelial-presented chemokines triggered HA-LFA-1 and adhesive filopodia at numerous submicron dots scattered underneath crawling lymphocytes. Shear forces applied to endothelial-bound lymphocytes dramatically enhanced filopodia density underneath crawling lymphocytes. A fraction of the adhesive filopodia invaded the endothelial cells prior to and during TEM and extended large subluminal leading edge containing dots of HA-LFA-1 occupied by subluminal ICAM-1. Memory T cells generated more frequent invasive filopodia and transmigrated more rapidly than their naive counterparts. We propose that shear forces exerted on HA-LFA-1 trigger adhesive and invasive filopodia at apical endothelial surfaces and thereby promote lymphocyte crawling and probing for TEM sites.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19268609 PMCID: PMC2803105 DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2008.12.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunity ISSN: 1074-7613 Impact factor: 31.745