These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • 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]