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Title: Comparison of E-selectin-binding glycoprotein ligands on human lymphocytes, neutrophils, and bovine gamma delta T cells. Author: Jones WM, Watts GM, Robinson MK, Vestweber D, Jutila MA. Journal: J Immunol; 1997 Oct 01; 159(7):3574-83. PubMed ID: 9317157. Abstract: We compared E-selectin-binding cell surface ligands on bovine gamma delta T cells and human leukocytes using an E-selectin/Ig chimera. The chimera worked well in flow cytometric studies and showed that bovine gamma delta T cells were the only lymphocyte population in newborn animals that bound E-selectin chimera. Furthermore, the chimera blocked gamma delta T cell rolling on E-selectin. Chimera reacted with four potential glycoprotein ligands of 180, 200, 250, and 300 kDa in Western blot analysis of gamma delta T cell detergent lysates, and it specifically precipitated at least two of these E-selectin ligands (200 and 250 kDa) from lysates of cell surface biotinylated gamma delta T cells. Preclearing bovine gamma delta lysates of GD3.5 Ag and workshop cluster 1 did not abrogate E-selectin ligand precipitation, suggesting that these surface markers do not represent E-selectin ligands. Human neutrophils possessed three E-selectin-binding ligands of approximately 80 to 90, 130, and 230 kDa, while human lymphocytes variably possessed three ligands of 120, approximately 220 to 240, and 260 kDa. Cross-precipitation experiments confirmed the results of others that neutrophil L-selectin serves as the 80 to 90-kDa E-selectin ligand. The human lymphocyte approximately 220 to 240-kDa and 260-kDa ligands may be analogous to the bovine gamma delta T cell molecules, whereas the 120-kDa is unique to human cells. The identities of the human and bovine lymphocyte E-selectin ligands are unknown. Finally, E-selectin ligand-1 apparently may have a minimal role, if any, in lymphocyte/E-selectin interactions, since a polyclonal anti-E-selectin ligand-1 serum stained a minimal number of cutaneous lymphocyte-associated Ag-positive human lymphocytes and bovine gamma delta T cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]