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Title: Continuous activation and deactivation of integrin CD11b/CD18 during de novo expression enables rolling neutrophils to immobilize on platelets. Author: Sheikh S, Nash GB. Journal: Blood; 1996 Jun 15; 87(12):5040-50. PubMed ID: 8652817. Abstract: In an in vitro flow model, unstimulated neutrophils rolled steadily over a surface coated with platelets, until superfusion of the chemotactic peptide formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP) caused a dose-dependent (10(-11) to 10(-7) mol/L) transition from rolling to stationary attachment in seconds, followed more slowly by neutrophil shape change and spreading on the surface, However, at low concentrations of Ca2+ and Mg2+ (0.1 mmol/L and 0.05 mmol/L, respectively, rather than physiologic 1 mmol/L and 0.5 mmol/L), neutrophils first halted but then started to roll again and to detach from the surface over 5 to 10 minutes. At the low cation concentration, stopping was largely inhibited by antibodies to the neutrophil integrins CD18 or CD11b, but not CD11a. When neutrophils were pretreated with antibodies to CD11b or CD18 in 1 mmol/L Ca2+ 0.5 mmol/L Mg2+, stopping was not prevented but delayed. However, if antibodies were also included with the superfused fMLP, stopping was inhibited, and detachment followed. This indicates that CD11b/CD18 was newly expressed during shape change and mediated the second phase of neutrophil immobilization and spreading in a cation-dependent manner. Prestimulated neutrophils also bound to platelets and spread, but immobilization was blocked if they were perfused with antibody to CD18 or CD11b or with low Ca2+ and Mg2+. Examining the cation-dependence further, it was evident that the presence of Mg2+ was essential for integrin-mediated adhesion and that the Mg2+ concentration determined whether immobilization could be maintained or was transient. Continuous superfusion of fMLP was also essential for maintenance of stable adhesion and spreading. Thus, activation of constitutive CD11b/CD18 rapidly and reversibly converted rolling to stationary attachment, whereas maintenance of adhesion and neutrophil spreading required continual expression of additional CD11b/CD18 that was only functional at physiologic Mg2+. Continual activation and deactivation of CD11b/CD18 during de novo expression could mediate immobilization and onward migration of neutrophils in vivo, and activated platelets appear capable of supporting this process as well as endothelial cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]