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Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
)
5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fertilization in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is initiated when gametes of opposite mating types adhere to each other via adhesion molecules (agglutinins) on their flagella.
Adhesion
leads to loss of active agglutinins from the flagella and recruitment of new agglutinins from a pool associated with the cell body. We have been interested in determining the precise cellular location of the pool and learning more about the relationship between agglutinins in the two domains. In the studies reported here we describe methods for purification of mt+ cell body agglutinins by use of ammonium sulfate precipitation, chromatography (molecular sieve, ion exchange, and hydrophobic interaction), and sucrose gradient centrifugation. About 90% of the total agglutinins were associated with the cell body and the remainder were on the flagella. Cell body agglutinins were indistinguishable from mt+ flagellar agglutinins by
SDS
-PAGE, elution properties on a hydrophobic interaction column, and in sedimentation properties on sucrose gradients. The nonadhesiveness of cell bodies suggested that the cell body agglutinins would be intracellular, but our results are not consistent with this interpretation. We have demonstrated that brief trypsin treatment of deflagellated gametes destroyed all of the cell body agglutinins and, in addition, we showed that the cell body agglutinins were accessible to surface iodination. These results indicated that C. reinhardtii agglutinins have a novel cellular disposition: active agglutinins, representing approximately 10% of the total cellular agglutinins, are found only on the flagella, whereas the remaining 90% of these molecules are on the external surface of the cell body plasma membrane in a nonfunctional form. This segregation of cell adhesion molecules into distinct membrane domains before gametic interactions has been demonstrated in sperm of multicellular organisms and may be a common mechanism for sequestering these critical molecules until gametes are activated for fusion. In experiments in which surface-iodinated cell bodies were permitted to regenerate new flagella, we found that the agglutinins (as well as the 350,000 Mr, major flagellar membrane protein) on the newly regenerated flagella were iodinated. These results indicate that proteins destined for the flagella can reside on the external surface of the cell body plasma membrane and are recruited onto newly forming flagella as well as onto preexisting flagella during fertilization.
...
PMID:Cell body and flagellar agglutinins in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii: the cell body plasma membrane is a reservoir for agglutinins whose migration to the flagella is regulated by a functional barrier. 217 Apr 24
Mesangial cells in culture change shape and become less adhesive in response to cAMP elevation (e.g., treatment with isoproterenol plus isobutylmethylxanthine (IM). Inhibitors of serine proteases inhibit cellular shape change in response to IM. To further examine the role of cell surface proteases in shape change, adhesion plaque proteins (i.e., preparations of ventral membranes and extracellular matrix) were separated in
SDS
-polyacrylamide gels containing gelatin with and without plasminogen. Four discrete zones of lysis were evident in plasminogen gels (indicative of activation of plasminogen) from control adhesion plaques: one inconspicuous zone with a Mr approximately 150 kD, another at approximately 115 kD, and a doublet at approximately 35-32 kD. Another diffuse zone of lysis centered around Mr approximately 70 kD and contained a defined band of approximately 56 kD.
Adhesion
plaques contained most of the plasminogen activators (PA). 5 min after IM treatment, the Mr approximately 150- and approximately 115-kD PA were increased in activity. Vasopressin (VP), which prevented shape change and adhesion loss when added along with IM, inhibited the increase in these PA. Preincubation with monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies to urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) totally inhibited the IM-inducible shape change and adhesion loss. Activation of plasminogen throughout the gels revealed multiple protease resistant bands that markedly increased with IM treatment (maximal at 45 min). These may represent focal control mechanisms. uPA thus may mediate focal proteolysis, which results in shape change and decreased adhesion.
...
PMID:Urokinase-dependent adhesion loss and shape change after cyclic adenosine monophosphate elevation in cultured rat mesangial cells. 246 65
In vitro attachment assays were carried out to assess adhesion between two basement membrane proteins, type IV collagen and laminin, and rat rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) cell lines with different metastatic potentials. Whereas cells did not adhere to type IV collagen, adhesion to laminin appeared to be very sensitive as maximal adhesion was achieved in dose-response assays with only nanograms of laminin.
Adhesion
was mediated by interactions between coated laminin and cell surface components, probably receptors, but not endogenous laminin. Laminin-mediated adhesion of RMS cell lines was compared with that of the MCF-7 (human mammary carcinoma) and the L6 (rat myoblast) cell lines. In dose-response assays, RMS cell lines required 10 times less laminin to reach half-maximal attachment rates than MCF-7 and L6 cell lines. Two laminin fragments, P1 and E8, which are structurally and immunologically distinct as shown by alpha-helix content,
SDS
-PAGE and monoclonal antibody mapping, supported adhesion by RMS cells and L6 myoblasts, but MCF-7 adhered only to P1. This fragment was 10 times less active than laminin in RMS cell lines. Attachment in dose-response assays and adhesion inhibition studies by antibodies revealed that E8 accounted for the activity of laminin in RMS cell adhesion.
Adhesion
in the RMS cell lines was dominated by interaction with E8 regardless of metastatic potential.
...
PMID:Laminin-mediated adhesion in metastatic rat rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines involves prominent interactions with the laminin E8 fragment. 252 68
The mechanism of adhesion of Lactobacillus fermentum strain 737 to mouse stomach squamous epithelium was investigated.
Adhesion
inhibition tests involving chelators, monosaccharides, periodate and concanavalin A and the use of bacteria grown in the presence of tunicamycin failed to clarify the adhesive mechanism. Washed bacterial cells had reduced adhesive capacity, except in the presence of spent broth culture supernatant fraction or cell washings. Spent culture supernatant fractions of erythrosine-supplemented broth did not enhance adhesion of washed cells. The adhesion-promoting factor(s) in the spent broth culture supernatant fractions and cell washings bound to both bacterial and epithelial cell surfaces, but did not promote adhesion of two other Lactobacillus strains which were not of mouse origin, thereby indicating host specificity for the adhesion-promoting activity. Chemical characteristics of the adhesion-promoting factor were determined by pretreatment of the dialysis retentate of spent broth culture supernatant fractions with proteolytic enzymes, concanavalin A-Sepharose or periodate before the adhesion assay. The adhesin was non-dialysable, pronase-sensitive, heat sensitive at 100 degrees C, had no affinity for concanavalin A-Sepharose and contained no carbohydrate groups active in the adhesion process. The protein profiles of dialysis retentates of spent broth culture supernatant fractions after bacterial growth in the absence and presence of erythrosine were determined by 2-dimensional
SDS
-PAGE. Gel filtration by HPLC was used for purification of an adhesion-promoting fraction. The host-specific adhesion of L. fermentum strain 737 was mediated by a protein, with an Mr of 12-13000, that was not detectable in cells grown in the presence of erythrosine. A model for the mode of binding of the adhesin to host epithelia and bacterial surfaces is proposed.
...
PMID:Protein-mediated adhesion of Lactobacillus fermentum strain 737 to mouse stomach squamous epithelium. 255 44
We have purified the platelet membrane glycoprotein Ia-IIa complex by detergent solubilization and sequential affinity chromatography on Concanavalin A-Sepharose and collagen-Sepharose. The complex, which is identical to the VLA-2 complex of lymphocytes and other cells and contains subunits of 160 and 130 kD on
SDS
-PAGE, was labeled with 125I and incorporated into phosphatidyl choline liposomes. The liposomes, like intact platelets, adhered to collagenous substrates in an Mg++-dependent manner with a K'a(Mg++) of 3.5 mM. Little adhesion of the liposomes to collagen occurred when Mg++ was replaced by Ca++ or EDTA. Calcium ions inhibited the Mg++-dependent adhesion with a K'i(Ca++) of 5.5 mM. Liposomes containing the Ia-IIa complex adhered to substrates composed of types I, II, III, and IV collagen, but did not effectively adhere to substrates composed of type V collagen or gelatin.
Adhesion
to collagen was specific. The liposomes did not adhere to fibronectin, vitronectin, laminin, thrombospondin, fibrinogen, or von Willebrand factor substrates. The monoclonal antibody P1H5, which specifically immunoprecipitated the Ia-IIa complex, also specifically inhibited the Mg++-dependent adhesion of both platelets and Ia-IIa-containing liposomes to collagen substrates. These findings provide additional evidence that the platelet membrane Ia-IIa complex is the mediator of Mg++-dependent platelet adhesion to collagen and suggest that the VLA-2 complex may also function as an Mg++-dependent collagen receptor in other cells.
...
PMID:The membrane glycoprotein Ia-IIa (VLA-2) complex mediates the Mg++-dependent adhesion of platelets to collagen. 271 83
Platelet membrane components adhering with high affinity to collagen fibers were studied by means of an affinity column in which fibrillar type I collagen was physically immobilized. Intact rabbit platelets in 1 mM EGTA adhered to the column but did not aggregate.
Adhesion
was dependent on the collagen concentration and on the number of platelets applied. Passage through the column without adhesion did not affect the potential for subsequent platelet binding. Surface-labelled whole platelets were passaged through this column, lysed in Triton and in
SDS
and labelled components adhering to the collagen were analysed on
SDS
-polyacrylamide gels. It was found that Triton lysis removed most of the major surface glycoproteins but left the cytoskeleton on the column. Subsequent
SDS
elution removed the cytoskeletal proteins along with the remaining major surface glycoproteins. The label left on the column could not be eluted with 8 M urea or up to 4 M NaCl. Collagenase digestion of the column collagen released a single surface glycoprotein of Mr 80,000. Limited chymotryptic digestion of the labelled platelets prior to their application to the column did not affect their binding. A radiolabelled band of the same molecular weight (MW) became bound to the collagen following passage of the chymotrypsin-treated platelets. This band was trypsin-sensitive following
SDS
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). These results, along with other published evidence, suggest that at least one platelet membrane component, expressed on the surface of the unstimulated platelet, binds with high affinity to fibrillar type I collagen and is probably involved in platelet collagen recognition.
...
PMID:Identification of a surface protein of the rabbit blood platelet with high affinity for collagen. 302 23
Intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) on the surface of cultured umbilical vein and saphenous vein endothelial cells was upregulated between 2.5- and 40-fold by rIL-1, rTNF, LPS and rIFN gamma corresponding to up to 5 X 10(6) sites/cell. Endothelial cell ICAM-1 was a single band of 90 kD in
SDS
-PAGE. Purified endothelial cell ICAM-1 reconstituted into liposomes and bound to plastic was an excellent substrate for both JY B lymphoblastoid cell and T lymphoblast adhesion.
Adhesion
to endothelial cell ICAM-1 in planar membranes was blocked completely by monoclonal antibodies to lymphocyte function associated antigen-1 (LFA-1) or ICAM-1.
Adhesion
to artificial membranes was most sensitive to ICAM-1 density within the physiological range found on resting and stimulated endothelial cells.
Adhesion
of JY B lymphoblastoid cells, normal and genetically LFA-1 deficient T lymphoblasts and resting peripheral blood lymphocytes to endothelial cell monolayers was also assayed. In summary, LFA-1 dependent (60-90% of total adhesion) and LFA-1-independent basal adhesion was observed and the use of both adhesion pathways by different interacting cell pairs was increased by monokine or lipopolysaccharide stimulation of endothelial cells. The LFA-1-dependent adhesion could be further subdivided into an LFA-1/ICAM-1-dependent component which was increased by cytokines and a basal LFA-1-dependent, ICAM-1-independent component which did not appear to be affected by cytokines. We conclude that ICAM-1 is a regulated ligand for lymphocyte-endothelial cell adhesion, but at least two other major adhesion pathways exist.
...
PMID:Lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1 (LFA-1) interaction with intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) is one of at least three mechanisms for lymphocyte adhesion to cultured endothelial cells. 313 64
In the present study we show that adhesion of normal rat liver epithelial cells (RL34) to substratum coated with type I collagen (collagen substratum) is promoted by a factor involved in 80% ammonium sulfate precipitated proteins from serum-free conditioned medium (PCM) of rat embryo fibroblasts.
Adhesion
of RL34 cells to collagen substratum was promoted dose dependently by whole PCM and the maximum effects on adhesion could be achieved by 200 micrograms/ml whole PCM. Kinetics studies with 100 micrograms/ml whole PCM showed that adhesion proceeded very slowly, taking 16 h to reach a plateau.
Adhesion
-promoting activity in whole PCM was sensitive to treatments with trypsin, acid, and heat but stable to dithiothreitol treatment. Further purification of whole PCM was performed using a combination of chromatography on blue Sepharose column, gel filtration column and heparin Sepharose column. The partially purified proteins, referred to as heparin PCM, are not bound or only weakly bound to heparin under physiological ion strength and pH, and the apparent molecular weight (Mr) range is estimated to be 40,000 to 60,000 from gel filtration chromatography and
SDS
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. When whole PCM or heparin PCM was used for coating on plastic or collagen substratum, they no longer exerted the promoting activity.
...
PMID:Adhesion-promoting factor from embryonic fibroblasts for normal liver epithelial cells. 359 33
Adhesion
of hepatocytes to collagenous substrates and their spreading have been shown to involve a specific recognition event, possibly mediated by membrane proteins with affinity for collagen. In the present communication, we describe the isolation of membrane components that are involved in the adhesion of rat hepatocytes to collagen. These components could be solubilized from liver microsomal membranes by treatment with detergents or papain--but not by treatment with EDTA, urea or high salt. The purification of detergent-solubilized components was monitored by an assay determining the ability of membrane components to neutralize antibody-mediated inhibition of hepatocyte adhesion to collagen. By affinity chromatography on lentil lectin-Sepharose it was found that the neutralizing activity resided within the glycoprotein fraction. These glycoproteins were purified further by affinity-chromatography on collagen type I linked to Sepharose. Antibodies raised against the glycoproteins with affinity for immobilized collagen, effectively inhibited hepatocyte adhesion to collagen. The bulk of the neutralizing activity migrated with an apparent molecular weight of 120 000-140 000 in preparative
SDS
-PAGE.
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PMID:Hepatocyte adhesion to collagen. Isolation of membrane glycoproteins involved in adhesion to collagen. 395 90
Cell-substratum adhesion of rat hepatocytes was inhibited by antisera raised against purified plasma membranes of rat liver (anti-liver-antiserum) and Morris hepatoma 7777 (anti-hepatoma-antiserum). It is assumed that substances which block the adhesion-inhibiting activity of the antisera are involved in cell-substratum adhesion.
Adhesion
-involved molecules of rat liver monitored as 'blocking activity' were compared with those of Morris hepatoma 7777 and 9121. They were found to be integral membrane glycoproteins, which could be solubilized only by detergents. Fractionation of plasma membrane extracts by size exclusion HPLC revealed two blocking activity peaks representing molecules involved in the adhesion to plastic (P-AIM) and collagen (C-AIM). In rat liver both adhesion-involved molecules were found; yet P-AIM seemed to be the major type of adhesion-involved molecule. In the relatively well differentiated Morris hepatoma 9121 also both types were detected. In membrane extracts of the high malignant and poorly differentiated Morris hepatoma 7777, however, no P-AIM but only C-AIM were found. Estimation by size exclusion HPLC revealed molecular weights of 120 kD for C-AIM and approx. 105 kD for P-AIM. On
SDS
gel electrophoresis proteins in the region of 95 kD were found in C-AIM containing fractions, whereas proteins of 105 kD are likely candidates for P-AIM.
...
PMID:Integral membrane antigens involved in cell-substratum adhesion of hepatocytes and hepatoma cells. 670 41
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