| Literature DB >> 25477463 |
Vinatha Sreeramkumar1, José M Adrover1, Ivan Ballesteros2, Maria Isabel Cuartero2, Jan Rossaint3, Izaskun Bilbao4, Maria Nácher5, Christophe Pitaval1, Irena Radovanovic1, Yoshinori Fukui6, Rodger P McEver7, Marie-Dominique Filippi8, Ignacio Lizasoain2, Jesús Ruiz-Cabello4, Alexander Zarbock3, María A Moro2, Andrés Hidalgo9.
Abstract
Immune and inflammatory responses require leukocytes to migrate within and through the vasculature, a process that is facilitated by their capacity to switch to a polarized morphology with an asymmetric distribution of receptors. We report that neutrophil polarization within activated venules served to organize a protruding domain that engaged activated platelets present in the bloodstream. The selectin ligand PSGL-1 transduced signals emanating from these interactions, resulting in the redistribution of receptors that drive neutrophil migration. Consequently, neutrophils unable to polarize or to transduce signals through PSGL-1 displayed aberrant crawling, and blockade of this domain protected mice against thromboinflammatory injury. These results reveal that recruited neutrophils scan for activated platelets, and they suggest that the neutrophils' bipolarity allows the integration of signals present at both the endothelium and the circulation before inflammation proceeds.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25477463 PMCID: PMC4280847 DOI: 10.1126/science.1256478
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728