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Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
)
5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adhesion
of T cells to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins through VLA integrin receptors is crucial for lymphocyte trafficking, tissue localization and inflammatory function. We have investigated the expression of different VLA integrins (VLA-1-5) on peripheral blood (PB) and synovial fluid (SF) T lymphocytes from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Their expression on different cell types from synovial membrane (SM) is also reported. The role of VLA-4 fibronectin (FN) receptors in the interaction of activated SF T cells from RA patients with a 38-kD fragment of FN has been previously demonstrated. Here we have focused functional studies on VLA-5 as an alternative FN receptor for RA T cells. A significant higher proportion of SF T cells were able to bind to an 80-kD fragment of FN, containing the Arg-Gly-
Asp
(RGD) cell binding site, compared with PB T cells. This attachment was almost completely inhibited by anti-VLA-5 MoAbs as well as by RGD peptides. This enhanced capability by SF T cells appears to be independent of the level of the surface expression of the receptor and correlates better with their activation state as determined by the expression of the activation molecule AIM (CD69). The evidence for the expression of VLA heterodimers on both SF and SM cells from RA patients suggests the possible implication of ECM proteins in mediating and perpetuating inflammation in vivo.
...
PMID:VLA family in rheumatoid arthritis: evidence for in vivo regulated adhesion of synovial fluid T cells to fibronectin through VLA-5 integrin. 137 52
The regulation of extracellular matrix (ECM) protein receptor expression was followed in the human promonocytic cell line U937 before and after stimulation either with PMA or various cytokines implicated in monocytopoiesis. On undifferentiated U937 cells, alpha-chains of very late Ag (VLA)-4, VLA-5, and VLA-6 were constitutively expressed whereas alpha-chains of VLA-2 (alpha 2) and vitronectin receptor (alpha V) were not. Maturation of U937 cells with PMA resulted in a marked decrease in alpha 4 expression (25% of control by day 5), and a small but significant increase in the expression of alpha 2 and alpha v over 4 days of stimulation. Unstimulated U937 cells attached to fibronectin (FN) but not to laminin (LM), collagens I/IV-coated surfaces. After PMA stimulation, U937 cells exhibited enhanced adherence on FN and expressed the ability to adhere to LM. PMA stimulation also promoted U937 spreading both on FN and LM.
Adhesion
on FN all along the maturation pathway was specifically and totally inhibited by anti-alpha 5 mAb but not by anti-alpha 4 mAb. Anti-beta 1, anti-alpha 6, anti-alpha 2, and anti-alpha v mAb, as well as Tyr-Ile-Gly-Ser-Arg and Arg-Gly-
Asp
synthetic peptides from LM, had no effect on adhesion of PMA-stimulated cells on LM, implying that U937 cell adherence to LM is mediated through hitherto distinct receptors. In the presence of rIFN-gamma, differentiating U937 cells did not adhere to LM and lost the capacity to bind to FN. Loss of adhesion to FN was correlated with the concomitant decrease in the expression of alpha 4 and alpha 5 integrin subunits. In contrast, TGF-beta 1 mimicked most of the effects of PMA by enhancing the attachment of maturating U937 cells on FN through alpha 5 receptors and by promoting adherence to LM. TGF-beta 1 stimulation also promoted U937 cell spreading on both FN- and LM-coated surfaces. The data suggest that inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-gamma and TGF-beta 1 may be critically important in the homing of monocytic cells at sites of inflammation by modulating cell-surface expression of ECM receptors.
...
PMID:IFN-gamma and transforming growth factor-beta 1 differently regulate fibronectin and laminin receptors of human differentiating monocytic cells. 153 26
When coated on bacteriological plastic at doses greater than or equal to 0.1 microgram/cm2, human and bovine angiogenin support calf pulmonary artery endothelial and Chinese hamster fibroblast cell adhesion and spreading, but do not affect cell adhesion when in solution. The kinetics of endothelial cell attachment to angiogenin are indistinguishable from those in the presence of gelatin. Calcium and/or magnesium ions are critical for cell adhesion or spreading onto angiogenin but protein synthesis and glycoprotein secretion are not necessary.
Adhesion
to angiogenin is not altered by the addition to the incubation solution of fibronectin, fibrinogen, laminin, collagen I and IV, or vitronectin. The peptide Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser inhibits endothelial cell response to angiogenin whereas the reverse peptide Ser-
Asp
-Gly-Arg-Gly has no effect. These findings show that angiogenin can serve as an effective substratum for cell adhesion by inducing an interaction similar to but independent from that of other extracellular matrix molecules. Induction of cell adhesion and subsequent migration may be critical steps in the process of angiogenesis.
...
PMID:Angiogenin supports endothelial and fibroblast cell adhesion. 154 88
Synthetic elastomeric polypeptide matrices based on the repeating amino acid sequences of elastin have biophysical and biological properties which are favorable for prosthetic materials. An important requirement envisaged for some applications is the ability to support cell adhesion and growth. The X20-poly-(GVGVP), the gamma-irradiation cross-linked elastomeric matrix based on the repeating pentamer Val-Pro-Gly-Val-Gly, and X20-poly[n(GVGVP), (GRGDSP)] containing the covalently incorporated cell adhesion sequence Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser (RGDS) were synthesized. These matrices were tested for their ability to support the adhesion and growth of bovine aortic endothelial cells and of bovine ligamentum nuchae fibroblasts.
Adhesion
experiments carried out in albumin-containing media showed that matrices containing 60:1, 40:1, and 20:1 ratios of (GVGVP):(GRGDSP) supported maximal cell attachment, that matrices containing 100:1 exhibited an intermediate level of attachment and that matrices composed of 500:1 and (GVGVP) alone were very poor supports for cell attachment. Serum in the media promoted submaximal cell attachment to X20-poly(GVGVP) but did not permit substantial cell growth. Cell growth was supported by matrices having high ratios of (GRGDSP). Ratios of 60:1, 40:1, and 20:1 supported three population doublings of endothelial cells over 3 days resulting in confluent matrix-adherent monolayers. Ratios of 40:1 and 20:1 similarly supported the growth of fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Cell adhesion and growth on synthetic elastomeric matrices containing Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser-3. 161 28
The involvement of integrins in mediating interaction of cells to well-characterized proteolytic fragments (P1, E3, and E8) of laminin was assessed by antibody blocking studies. Cell adhesion to fragment P1 was affected by mAbs against the integrin beta 1 and beta 3 subunits and furthermore could be prevented completely by a synthetic peptide containing the Arg-Gly-
Asp
sequence. Because the beta 3 antibody-sensitive cell lines expressed the vitronectin receptor (alpha v beta 3) at high levels, the involvement of this receptor in cell adhesion to P1 is strongly suggested. Integrin-mediated cell adhesion to E3 is of low affinity and was inhibited by antibodies against the integrin beta 1 subunit. In contrast, adhesion of some cell types to E3 was not or only partially sensitive to inhibition by anti-integrin subunit antibodies. Cell adhesion to E8 was blocked completed by integrin alpha 6 or beta 1 antibodies. The alpha 6-specific antibody did not inhibit cell adhesion to E3 or P1. Furthermore, the antibody only blocked adhesion to laminin of those cells that adhered exclusively to the E8 fragment. In addition, expression of alpha 6 beta 1 was closely correlated with the ability of cells to bind to the E8 fragment of laminin. These results indicate that the alpha 6 beta 1 integrin is a specific receptor for the E8 fragment of laminin. Many cell types expressed, instead of or in addition to alpha 6 beta 1 the recently described integrin alpha 6 beta 4. Although the ligand of alpha 6 beta 4 was not identified, it must be different from that of alpha 6 beta 1, because cells that express alpha 6 beta 4, but not alpha 6 beta 1, do not adhere to E8, and cell adhesion to E8 was specifically blocked by beta 1 specific antibodies. In conclusion, the data indicate that distinct integrin receptors belonging to the beta 1 or beta 3 subfamily are involved in adhesion of cells to the various laminin fragments.
Adhesion
to E3 may also be brought about by other receptor molecules, possibly proteoglycans, not belonging to the integrin family.
...
PMID:Integrin recognition of different cell-binding fragments of laminin (P1, E3, E8) and evidence that alpha 6 beta 1 but not alpha 6 beta 4 functions as a major receptor for fragment E8. 169 24
Adhesion
of cells to the terminal complement complex of C5b through C9 containing the serum S-protein (SC5b-9) was investigated using a microtiter plate attachment assay with L8 myoblast indicator cells. The skeletal muscle-derived L8 myoblasts bound and spread on substratum coated with SC5b-9, and with the vitronectin/S-protein component of SC5b-9. The myoblasts did not adhere to substratum coated with collagen, laminin, or fibronectin. The cell attachment was blocked by antibody to vitronectin/S-protein, whereas antibody to the other components C5, C6, C7, C8, or C9 had minimal effect. The cells were not bound to free vitronectin because attachment activity was removed by adsorption with an anti-C6 antibody column. The L8 cell attachment was dependent on divalent cations, was blocked by synthetic peptides containing the amino acid sequence Arg-Gly-
Asp
, and was inhibited by antivitronectin receptor antibody. These results indicate that cells adhere to the SC5b-9 complex through interaction of the vitronectin component with an integrin vitronectin receptor. Cell attachment to terminal C complexes could be used for leukocyte adherence and migration during inflammation, and also for attachment of tissue cells during regeneration after disease or traumatic injury.
...
PMID:The complement SC5b-9 complex mediates cell adhesion through a vitronectin receptor. 169 2
The alternatively spliced type III connecting segment (IIICS) region of fibronectin contains two distinct sites that support the adhesion of melanoma cells. These sites are contained within the synthetic peptides CS1 and CS5 (residues 1-25 and 90-109 of the IIICS, respectively). Recently, the cellular receptor for the CS1 site has been identified as the integrin heterodimer alpha 4 beta 1. In this report, we have investigated the role of the CS5 sequence in melanoma cell adhesion and the identity of its receptor.
Adhesion
to CS5, when presented to cells as an immobilized IgG conjugate, was blocked by antifunctional monoclonal antibodies directed against either the alpha 4 or beta 1 integrin subunits, but not by antibodies against other subunits, implying that alpha 4 beta 1 is also the receptor for CS5. In peptide inhibition experiments, CS5 was inhibitory for melanoma cell spreading on both CS5-IgG and CS1-IgG conjugates; conversely, CS1 inhibited spreading on both CS1-IgG and CS5-IgG. In both cases, peptide inhibition could be outcompeted by increasing the concentration of substrate-bound conjugate. These results suggest that CS1 and CS5 are recognized by the same or overlapping sites on alpha 4 beta 1. The minimal active sequence within CS5, the tetrapeptide Arg-Glu-
Asp
-Val (REDV), is somewhat related to the Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser (RGDS) sequence that represents a major active site in the central cell-binding domain (CCBD) of fibronectin. When RGDS peptide homologues were tested for their ability to inhibit spreading of melanoma cells on CS1- and CS5-IgG conjugates, GRGDS, GRGES, and REDV were found to be inhibitory, while GRDGS had no effect. In contrast, spreading on a fibronectin fragment containing the CCBD was inhibited by GRGDS only. GRGDS was also able to elute alpha 4 beta 1 specifically from a CS1 affinity column, confirming directly that alpha 4 beta 1-IIICS interactions are sensitive to peptides containing this recognition motif. Because the minimal active sequence within CS1 is the tripeptide Leu-
Asp
-Val (LDV; Komoriya et al., manuscript submitted for publication), these findings together define a new adhesive recognition sequence, X-
Asp
-Y, used by alpha 4 beta 1 for binding to fibronectin. The central aspartate residue in this tripeptide is almost always essential, but some flexibility in the amino acid residues at X (glycine, leucine, or glutamic acid) and Y (serine or valine) is tolerated. Potential models for the interaction of the IIICS region with alpha 4 beta 1 are discussed.
...
PMID:The CS5 peptide is a second site in the IIICS region of fibronectin recognized by the integrin alpha 4 beta 1. Inhibition of alpha 4 beta 1 function by RGD peptide homologues. 175 Sep 29
Adhesion
proteins are cofactors in the aggregation of human platelets, and can mediate the ADP-induced response of these cells. It was shown that the synthetic cell adhesion peptide, Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser inhibits the aggregation of platelets from normal donors and ophthalmic patients with diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma and retinal vein occlusion. This effect increases in the relative order of activity retinal vein occlusion greater than or equal to glaucoma greater than or equal to diabetic retinopathy greater than control. Deaggregation due to the peptide appeared to be diminished in the order control (normal) greater than diabetic retinopathy greater than glaucoma greater than retinal vein occlusion after its addition at the maximum of aggregation curve. It is concluded that there are differences in the ability of Arg-Gly-
Asp
-Ser peptide to block the fibronectin adhesion receptor on ADP stimulated platelets from different clinical groups.
...
PMID:Modulative effects of cell adhesion peptide (Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser) on the aggregation of stimulated platelets from ophthalmic patients. 182 18
Altered T cell adherence after human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) infection may contribute to viral pathogenesis in the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. To address this hypothesis, we assessed mechanisms of T cell adherence to extracellular matrix proteins in vitro. We found that after HIV-1 infection, both chronically infected H9 CD4+ T cells and acutely infected primary peripheral blood lymphocytes acquired the ability to adhere to the extracellular matrix glycoprotein fibronectin, to a lesser extent to type IV collagen and laminin, but not to type I collagen. H9 cells chronically infected with two of the three HIV-1 strains studied showed approximately a sevenfold increase in attachment to fibronectin, while the same cells infected with the human retrovirus HIV-2 did not.
Adhesion
was accompanied by changes in morphology, including marked spreading and increased filopodia. These alterations were not blocked by the protein kinase C inhibitor H-7, which did inhibit TPA-induced T cell attachment to fibronectin. Monoclonal antibodies against both the alpha 5 and the beta 1 subunits of the classical fibronectin receptor as well as an Arg-Gly-
Asp
(RGD) peptide inhibited attachment, whereas anti-alpha 4 monoclonal antibodies and the CS1 peptide did not. Binding to collagen IV was also inhibited by the anti-beta 1 monoclonal antibody, but not the other antibodies. Cells metabolically labeled with [35S]methionine and analyzed by immunoprecipitation with polyclonal anti-beta 1 integrin antibody showed a 2.5-fold increase in integrin synthesis in infected cells compared to uninfected controls. This increase in synthesis was associated with an increase in cell surface expression of both alpha 5 and beta 1 integrins by FACS (registered trademark of Becton Dickinson for a fluorescence-activated cell sorter) analysis. Enhanced expression of integrins such as alpha 5 beta 1 may cause T cell adherence to a variety of tissues, where released viral gene products may induce some of the tissue-specific manifestations of HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:HIV-1 infection of human T lymphocytes results in enhanced alpha 5 beta 1 integrin expression. 183 Dec 4
Adhesion
between lymphocytes and antigen-presenting cells is necessary for the development of certain immune reactions. We have previously shown that fibronectin (FN) added to mixed lymphocyte cultures (MLC) can restore a decreased lymphocyte proliferation in immunocompromised individuals. Using highly purified cell populations from peripheral blood for depletion and adding back experiments we show here that exogenous FN enhanced proliferation only when allogeneic monocytes were co-cultured with responder lymphocytes. Although lymphocyte proliferation in MLC was augmented by FN, there was no preferential proliferation of any particular major lymphocyte subpopulation in cultures supplemented with FN as compared to control cultures lacking its addition. Antibody against the FN receptor (FN-R) of the beta 1 integrin family, as well as Arg-Gly-
Asp
containing peptide, could inhibit alloantigen-induced lymphocyte proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner. Anti-CD3-induced proliferation was inhibited by anti-FN-R antibody but not Arg-Gly-
Asp
peptide whereas no inhibition was seen with the phytohemagglutinin (PHA)-induced lymphocyte proliferation. This study presents further evidence that FN and its receptor (alpha 5 beta 1) are involved in the augmentation of T-cell responsiveness to proliferative stimuli.
...
PMID:Involvement of fibronectin and its receptor in human lymphocyte proliferation. 183 19
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