| Literature DB >> 21911599 |
Sharon J Hyduk1, Jacob Rullo, Adrianet Puig Cano, Haiyan Xiao, Mian Chen, Markus Moser, Myron I Cybulsky.
Abstract
Chemokine/chemoattractant G protein-coupled receptors trigger an inside-out signaling network that rapidly activates integrins, a key step in inflammatory leukocyte recruitment. Integrins mediate leukocyte arrest and adhesion to endothelium through multivalent binding, and they transmit outside-in signals to stabilize adhesion and coordinate cell spreading and migration. In the present study, we used RNA interference in the U937 monocytic cell line to investigate the role of talin-1, kindlin-3, and α-actinin-1 in the fMLF- and SDF-1α-induced upregulation of α(4)β(1) integrin affinity and consequent adhesive events. Affinity upregulation of α(4)β(1) integrin was not impaired by small interfering RNA knockdown of talin-1, kindlin-3, or α-actinin-1. Only kindlin-3 knockdown increased flow-induced detachment from VCAM-1-coated surfaces in response to fluid flow, whereas knockdown of either talin-1 or kindlin-3 increased detachment from ICAM-1-coated surfaces. Biochemical analyses revealed that α(4)β(1) expression was highly enriched in U937 cell microridges and murine lymphocyte microvilli. Kindlin-3 was present throughout the cell, whereas talin-1 was largely excluded from microridges/microvilli. The subcellular colocalization of α(4)β(1) and kindlin-3 in microridges may explain why kindlin-3 rapidly associates with α(4)β(1) after G protein-coupled receptor signaling and contributes to adhesion strengthening. Talin-1 contributed to α(4)β(1)-dependent chemotaxis, suggesting that it participates in a later stage of the leukocyte adhesion cascade when the leukocyte cytoskeleton undergoes dramatic rearrangement.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21911599 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1003725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422