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Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
)
5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Human bone marrow-derived CD34+ cells were analyzed for the expression of the beta 1-family of integrin adhesion molecules. Integrin alpha 4 beta 1 was consistently expressed by greater than 90% of CD34+ cells, including essentially all assayable
granulocyte-macrophage
colony-forming cells (CFU-GM) and erythroid bursts (BFU-E) as shown by fluorescence-activated cell sorting studies.
Adhesion
of highly enriched CD34+ cells to cultured allogeneic marrow stromal cells was largely inhibited both by monoclonal antibody to alpha 4 beta 1 and to vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1), a ligand for alpha 4 beta 1. VCAM-1 was found to be expressed by bone marrow stromal elements in vitro both constitutively at low level and at high levels after treatment with cytokines. Induction of VCAM-1 was cytokine- and time-dependent with maximum levels being obtained after 4 hours of exposure to a combination of interleukin-4 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Cytokine-induced stromal cells bound threefold higher numbers of CFU-GM and BFU-E, this increase being abrogated by anti-alpha 4 beta 1 and anti-VCAM-1 antibodies. In addition, the adhesion to stroma of more immature progenitors, the long-term culture initiating cells, also occurred through an alpha 4 beta 1/VCAM-1-dependent mechanism. These studies identify an adhesion mechanism of potential importance in the localization of primitive progenitors within the hematopoietic microenvironment.
...
PMID:Vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 expressed by bone marrow stromal cells mediates the binding of hematopoietic progenitor cells. 137 18
Adhesion
of lymphocytes to high endothelial venule (HEV) cells is the first step in the migration of these cells from blood into lymph nodes and Peyer's patches (PP). In the present study, we isolated and cultured HEV cells from PP of the rat and assessed their capacity to interact with lymphocytes. Flow cytometric analysis with a rat HEV-specific mAb KJ-4 revealed that greater than 90% of the cultured cells were stained by the antibody. Furthermore, confluent monolayers of PP HEV cells retained the capacity to support the adhesion of lymphocytes from spleen, thoracic duct, and lymph nodes but not binding of immature cells from thymus and bone marrow, which are deficient in cells capable of binding to HEV in vivo. In addition, intraepithelial lymphocytes that preferentially migrated into mucosal lymphoid tissues were also enriched in cells that adhered to the endothelial monolayers. The binding process required energy, was calcium-dependent, and could be inhibited by cytochalasin D, trypsin, and mixed glycosidase. Interestingly, pretreatment of PP HEV cells with rTNF, IFN-gamma, or
granulocyte-macrophage
CSF significantly increased the endothelial adhesiveness for thoracic duct lymphocytes in a time- and dose-dependent manner. In contrast, stimulation of lymphocytes with phorbol ester or TNF resulted in the rapid modulation of the surface expression of the PP homing receptor and decrease in lymphocyte binding to normal or TNF-stimulated HEV cells. The adhesion of lymphocytes to normal or cytokine-stimulated HEV cells can be blocked by pretreatment of lymphocytes, but not HEV cells, with the PP homing receptor-specific 1B.2.6 antibody. Taken together, these experiments provide strong evidence that the interaction between lymphocytes and cultured HEV cells are mediated by adhesive mechanisms that regulate lymphocyte entry into PP in vivo and that cytokines can promote HEV adhesiveness for lymphocytes through increased expression of organ-specific ligands on HEV cells.
...
PMID:Lymphocyte adhesion to cultured Peyer's patch high endothelial venule cells is mediated by organ-specific homing receptors and can be regulated by cytokines. 212 24
The adhesive properties of clonogenic haemopoietic progenitor cells have been assessed by allowing them to bind to cultured marrow-derived stromal layers, stromal cell lines or bare plastic surfaces. We have compared the adhesive characteristics of murine marrow repopulating cells, spleen colony-forming cells (CFU-S) and
granulocyte-macrophage
colony-forming cells (GM-CFC) and of human blast colony-forming cells (Bl-CFC). The data indicate, first, that murine marrow repopulating cells bind to plastic and to stromal layers. Second, the CFU-S compartment contains three sub-populations: (a) CFU-S that bind to plastic and to stroma; (b) CFU-S that bind to stroma but not to plastic; (c) CFU-S that do not bind to stroma or plastic. Third, that more mature GM-CFC are not adhesive in these tests; and fourth, that recognitive events between stem cells and marrow stroma can operate across species barriers.
Adhesion
to both marrow-derived stroma and plastic appears to be a characteristic of haemopoietic stem cells that is lost or modulated as cells differentiate.
...
PMID:Adhesive properties distinguish sub-populations of haemopoietic stem cells with different spleen colony-forming and marrow repopulating capacities. 281 82
It is well known that adherence of monocytes (MO) to extracellular matrix substrates or tissue culture plastic activates these cells and induces the expression of a multitude of genes. Especially, it was described, that MO are primed by cell adhesion to produce higher amounts of some cytokines, e.g. interleukin (IL)-8 and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha). In order to investigate adherence-induced effects upon cytokine production, we seeded MO into tissue cultures and stimulated cells by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) simultaneously or at later time points. An increasing time-lag between cell adhesion and LPS-stimulation led to differential effects upon cytokine production: whereas TNF was upregulated (in accordance with reports by others), granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) was considerably down-regulated. In contrast, G-CSF production did not change, when cells were kept under non-adherent conditions in whole blood. In adherent cultures down-regulation of G-CSF could already be observed after two hours with a maximum after 24 h and was paralleled by a much lower abundance of G-CSF mRNA.
Adhesion
induced a significant suppression of G-CSF comparable to MO, if mature macrophages derived from MO in vitro were examined. Furthermore, two other cytokines,
granulocyte-macrophage
(GM)-CSF and IL-6, were also down-regulated following adhesion. In conclusion, activation of mononuclear phagocytes by adhesion can lead to "priming" for the production of some cytokines and at the same time to "silencing" for the production of others.
...
PMID:Differential effects of cell adherence on LPS-stimulated cytokine production by human monocytes and macrophages. 914 30
Leukocyte adhesion deficiency or LAD is a congenital immunodeficiency disease characterized by recurrent bacterial infections in which the leukocytes from affected children fail to adhere to endothelial cells and migrate to the site of infection due to heterogeneous defects in the leukocyte integrin CD18 subunit. To assess the feasibility of human gene therapy of LAD, we transduced granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-mobilized, CD34+ peripheral blood stem cells derived from a patient with the severe form of LAD using supernatant from the retroviral vector PG13/LgCD18. The highest transduction frequencies (31%) were found after exposure of the cells to retroviral vector on a substrate of recombinant fibronectin fragment CH-296 in the presence of growth factors interleukin-3 (IL-3), IL-6, and stem cell factor. When the phenotype of the transduced cells was monitored by fluorescence-activated cell sorting following in vitro differentiation with growth factors G-CSF and
granulocyte-macrophage
CSF (GM-CSF), CD11a surface expression was detected immediately after transduction. CD11b and CD11c were expressed at low levels immediately following transduction, but increased over 3 weeks in culture.
Adhesion
of the transduced cells was nearly double that of nontransduced cells in a cell adhesion assay using human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Transduced cells also demonstrated the ability to undergo a respiratory burst in response to opsonized zymosan, a CD11/CD18-dependent ligand. These experiments show that retrovirus-mediated gene transfer of the CD18 subunit complements the defect in LAD CD34+ cells resulting in CD11/CD18 surface expression, and that the differentiated myelomonocytic cells derived from the transduced LAD CD34+ cells display CD11/CD18-mediated adhesion function. These results indicate that ex vivo gene transfer of CD18 into LAD CD34+ cells, followed by re-infusion of the transduced cells, may represent a therapeutic approach to LAD.
...
PMID:Retroviral-mediated gene transfer of the leukocyte integrin CD18 into peripheral blood CD34+ cells derived from a patient with leukocyte adhesion deficiency type 1. 947 15