| Literature DB >> 19346499 |
Thomas Quast1, Barbara Tappertzhofen, Cora Schild, Jessica Grell, Niklas Czeloth, Reinhold Förster, Ronen Alon, Line Fraemohs, Katrin Dreck, Christian Weber, Tim Lämmermann, Michael Sixt, Waldemar Kolanus.
Abstract
Adhesion and motility of mammalian leukocytes are essential requirements for innate and adaptive immune defense mechanisms. We show here that the guanine nucleotide exchange factor cytohesin-1, which had previously been demonstrated to be an important component of beta-2 integrin activation in lymphocytes, regulates the activation of the small GTPase RhoA in primary dendritic cells (DCs). Cytohesin-1 and RhoA are both required for the induction of chemokine-dependent conformational changes of the integrin beta-2 subunit of DCs during adhesion under physiological flow conditions. Furthermore, use of RNAi in murine bone marrow DCs (BM-DCs) revealed that interference with cytohesin-1 signaling impairs migration of wild-type dendritic cells in complex 3D environments and in vivo. This phenotype was not observed in the complete absence of integrins. We thus demonstrate an essential role of cytohesin-1/RhoA during ameboid migration in the presence of integrins and further suggest that DCs without integrins switch to a different migration mode.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19346499 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2008-08-176123
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113