| Literature DB >> 7688516 |
N Hogg1, R C Landis.
Abstract
During a successful immune response, several families of adhesion molecules participate in a cascade of binding events that lead to the binding of leukocytes, both to each other and to cell types such as the endothelium and epithelium. A central theme emerging from recent studies is that the function of an adhesion receptor cannot be inferred from its expression alone; rather, adhesion receptors are 'selected' to perform distinct effector functions based on their cell-background and factors present in the local microenvironment. Thus, adhesion receptors expressed on different cell-types may find themselves in different states of 'activation-readiness' and may be further selected by prevailing conditions in the microenvironment to bind tissue-specific ligands and mediate leukocyte effector functions such as homing or transendothelial migration.Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1993 PMID: 7688516 DOI: 10.1016/0952-7915(93)90057-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Opin Immunol ISSN: 0952-7915 Impact factor: 7.486