Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0001511 (Adhesion)
5,955 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

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.
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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.
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PMID:Involvement of fibronectin and its receptor in human lymphocyte proliferation. 183 19

Cell lines expressing varying levels of ganglioside GM3 at the cell surface show different degrees of adhesion and spreading on solid phase coated with such glycosphingolipids (GSLs) as Gg3 (GalNAc beta 1----4Gal beta 1----4Glc beta 1----1Cer), LacCer (Gal beta 1----4Glc beta 1----1Cer), or Gb4 (GalNAc beta 1----3Gal alpha 1----4Gal beta 1----4Glc beta 1----1Cer) (where Cer is ceramide), which may have structures complementary to GM3, but not on solid phase coated with various other GSLs. The degree of cell adhesion and spreading on Gg3 was correlated with the degree of cell-surface GM3 expression, as defined by reactivity with anti-GM3 monoclonal antibody (mAb) DH2. Only cells with high GM3 expression adhered on solid phase coated with LacCer or Gb4. Adhesion of GM3-expressing cells on Gg3-, LacCer-, and Gb4-coated solid phase is based on interaction of GM3 with Gg3 and, to a lesser extent, with LacCer and Gb4, as demonstrated by: (i) the interaction of the GM3 liposome with solid phase coated with Gg3, LacCer, and Gb4, respectively; (ii) the abolition of cell adhesion on each GSL-coated solid phase by treatment of cells with mAb DH2 or sialidase; and (iii) the inhibition of cell adhesion by treatment of GSL-coated solid phase with mAb specific to each GSL. Sialosyllactosyl-lysyllysine conjugate was bound to Gg3 adsorbed on a C18 silica gel column in the presence of bivalent cation, suggesting that the carbohydrate moiety of GM3 is involved in GM3-Gg3 interaction. Not only the adhesion and spreading of GM3-expressing cells, but also their cell motility was greatly enhanced on Gg3-coated solid phase, as determined by Transwell assay and phagokinetic track assay on a gold sol-coated surface. Spreading and motility of GM3-expressing cells on Gg3-coated solid phase were both inhibited by treatment of cells with mAb DH2 or sialidase. These results provide evidence that not only cell adhesion, but also spreading and motility in these cell lines are controlled by complementary GSL-GSL interaction.
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PMID:Cell adhesion, spreading, and motility of GM3-expressing cells based on glycolipid-glycolipid interaction. 189 38

We have examined integrin expression and function in the human colon carcinoma cell line HT29, and in clonal sublines derived from the HT29 line. These cells express several different integrin subunits including beta 1, alpha 2, 3, 6 and alpha v, but do not express the classic alpha 5/beta 1 fibronectin receptor. Clonal variation in the pattern of integrin expression was quite limited. The profile of integrin expression correlates well with the adhesive behavior of HT29 cells. Thus the cells adhere well to vitronectin, laminin and type IV collagen, but not at all to fibronectin. Adhesion to collagen was completely blocked by an anti-beta 1 monoclonal antibody, indicating that beta 1 integrins mediate this process. Adhesion to laminin was strongly blocked by anti-beta 1 monoclonal or anti-beta 6 monoclonal, suggesting that the alpha 6/beta 1 complex functions in attachment to laminin; this was somewhat surprising since immunoprecipitation experiments indicate that most of the alpha 6 subunit seems to be associated with the beta 4 subunit. Despite their strong adherence to laminin, collagen and vitronectin, HT29 cells are not very motile and, in response to gradients of these proteins, do not migrate nearly as well as CHO cells tested under similar conditions. Since HT29 cells can undergo an enterocyte-like differentiation in glucose-free medium, we compared integrin expression in HT29 and its subclones during the process of differentiation. There was no correlation between the state of differentiation, as assessed by expression of brush-border hydrolases, and the level of expression of any of the integrin subunits measured. Thus the pattern of integrin expression in these colonic tumor cells seems to be a characteristic of the cell line, and is not readily modified by changes in cell growth or differentiation.
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PMID:Expression and role of integrins in adhesion of human colonic carcinoma cells to extracellular matrix components. 203 21

A novel technique for modulating the spreading of ascites cells has been developed. Plasma membranes of Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells were modified in two different ways: 1) biotin residues were covalently coupled to membrane components; 2) biotinylated lipid was introduced into plasma membrane. Adhesion and spreading of modified cells on avidin-coated substrates were studied and compared to those of non-modified cells. Both types of membrane alteration were shown to induce specific (biotin-dependent) interaction with immobilized avidin with resultant cell spreading. Spread cells attained epithelioid-like morphology with the formation of wide thin lamellae, focal contacts with substrate, and circular actin bundles. The process of spreading was shown to be energy-dependent: it could be blocked by metabolic inhibitors and by low temperature. Formation of extended lamellae was prevented by preincubation of cells in the presence of cytochalasin B. The effects of metabolic poisons, low temperature, and microfilament--disruptive drugs were reversible and after the restoration of physiological conditions the cells resumed the spreading process. Immunoprecipitation of biotinylated cell lysates with antiserum to cytoplasmic domain of beta 1-integrin subunit revealed a major 110 kD avidin-binding component. We conclude that lack of spreading of ascites carcinoma cells may be explained by the lack of functionally active adhesion- and spreading-competent cell-surface receptors, but may not be attributed to the defects in intracellular function or organization. Intracellular machinery of cell spreading is preserved in these ascites cells and could be turned on by cell attachment to the substrate via artificial adhesive site incorporated into plasma membrane.
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PMID:Restoration of adhesive potentials of Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells by modification of plasma membrane. 203 21

The role of tumor cell adhesion in lymphatic metastasis of breast cancer was investigated in vitro using a rat mammary carcinoma model of four cell lines with different metastatic phenotypes, two human breast cancer cell lines, and cryostast sections of normal rat or human lymph nodes, respectively. A positive correlation was found between the adhesion levels obtained with three metastatic rat mammary cell lines (TMT-081 greater than MT-100M & TMT-50) and a non-metastatic line MT-W9B, the latter being 3-4 fold less adhesive to the lymph node sections than the metastatic tumors. This selective adhesion was specific, as it was not found with cryostat sections of rat liver and brain. Enzyme assays indicated that cell surface glycoproteins bearing terminal beta-galactoside residues were involved in the adhesion of the rat tumors. Adhesion of the human breast carcinoma cells Hs578T to sections of human lymph nodes was significantly higher than that of the normal breast epithelial cell line Hs578Bst, and comparable to adhesion of a second breast carcinoma line, MCF-7. Moreover, Hs578T cells isolated from regional lymph nodes of tumor-bearing nude mice were significantly more adhesive to human lymph node sections than the parental line. Adhesion of both human and rat tumors could be partially blocked by the addition of the synthetic peptide GRGDSPK and by antibodies directed to the beta 1 chain of integrin, suggesting that an integrin receptor may played a role in the adhesion. The results suggest that tumor cell adhesion to cryostat sections of lymph nodes is a correlate of the malignant phenotype in mammary tumors of diverse origins, and could be used to delineate the adhesion factors mediating lymphatic metastasis.
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PMID:Tumor cell adhesion to frozen lymph node sections--a correlate of lymphatic metastasis in breast carcinoma models of human and rat origin. 209 89

Adhesion of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (ECs) to various extracellular matrix proteins is mostly mediated by receptors of the integrin family. The interaction of ECs with extracellular matrix proteins is accompanied by cell spreading, cytoskeletal organization, and clustering of the specific integrin receptors in complex supramolecular structures known as adhesion plaques or focal contacts. Little is known on the functional role of focal contacts in EC adhesion and motility and on the possibility to modulate their organization. In this article we report that an increase in intracellular cAMP levels severely impaired focal contact formation. This process did not affect cell attachment, but increased cell adhesion and strongly inhibited cell motility. ECs were treated with the cAMP-increasing agents forskolin and 2-chloro-adenosine or with the cAMP analogue 8-bromo-cAMP. When treated cells were seeded on purified vitronectin, fibrinogen, or fibronectin little modification in the number of attached cell was observed. In contrast ECs showed impaired organization of microfilaments and poorly developed clusters of beta 3- and beta 1-integrin receptors. On a vitronectin substrate, vinculin followed the distribution of beta 3-receptors. It was typically enriched at the focal contacts in control cells but was fragmented in small dots at the cell periphery in treated cells, as were bundles of actin stress fibers. Similarly, when forskolin was added to ECs spread on vitronectin or on fibrinogen, there was a progressive but reversible disruption of actin microfilaments and diffusion of beta 3 receptors. This was accompanied by a tighter adhesion of the cells to substrata. Migration of ECs in response to different matrix proteins was severely inhibited by cAMP-increasing agents. These data indicate that EC adhesion can occur very efficiently in the absence of fully developed beta 3- or beta 1-integrin receptor-containing focal contacts but suggest that the capacity to normally assemble focal contacts and cytoskeletal proteins is required for full cell spreading and migration.
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PMID:Endothelial cell motility, integrin receptor clustering, and microfilament organization are inhibited by agents that increase intracellular cAMP. 217 48

Microvascular endothelial cells (MEC) must use a set of surface receptors to adhere not only to the vascular basement membrane but, during angiogenic stimulation, to the interstitium. We examined how cultured MEC isolated from human foreskin interact with their subendothelial matrix. MEC were able to attach to diverse extracellular matrix proteins, including fibronectin (Fn), vitronectin (Vn), laminin (Ln), type I and IV collagen, as well as to fibrinogen and gelatin. Adhesion to Fn, but not to laminin or collagens, was specifically blocked in the presence of Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-containing peptides. When surface radioiodinated MEC were solubilized and subjected to affinity chromatography on Fn-Sepharose columns, two polypeptides of 150 and 125 kD, corresponding to the integrin heterodimer alpha 5 beta 1, were identified. MEC also express a complex of 150 (alpha) and 95 kD (beta 3) that is related to the Vn receptor. Immunofluorescent staining of MEC cultures with antibodies to the integrin beta 1 subunit demonstrated receptors on the basolateral surface at focal adhesion plaques that co-localized with vinculin and with Fn-positive matrix fibers. Occasionally, antibodies to the Vn receptor stained the vinculin-positive focal adhesion plaques that frequently co-localized with the beta 1 complex. However, in cultures of MEC that were attached to substrates coated with alternating strips of Fn and Vn, the beta 1 complex was preferentially localized to the Fn substrate, while the Vn receptor was concentrated on the Vn substrate. The results indicate that MEC express at least two different heterodimer adhesion receptors that belong to the integrin super-family and appear to have distinct ligand specificities: the Fn receptor and the Vn receptor. These receptors mediate cell adhesion to the extracellular matrix and presumably have an important role in hemostasis and neovascularization.
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PMID:Human microvascular endothelial cells express integrin-related complexes that mediate adhesion to the extracellular matrix. 246 86

The receptors for fibronectin (FN-R) and vitronectin (VN-R) belong to a family of integral membrane glycoproteins known to be involved in cell-extracellular matrix and cell-cell interactions named integrins (FN-R = beta 1 integrin and VN-R = beta 3 integrin). Adhesion studies using FN-coated plastic dishes and highly purified subpopulations of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) showed a strong binding of monocytes and T lymphocytes to FN but virtually no binding of B cells to FN. Binding of monocytes and T cells to FN could be partially inhibited by a hexapeptide (GRGDSP) containing the adhesive peptide sequence Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) as well as by an anti-FN-R antibody. The distribution of beta 1 and beta 3 integrin complexes on PBMCs was characterized by immunoprecipitation of detergent extracts of 125I-labeled cells using polyclonal antibodies against these two receptors. Two surface polypeptides corresponding to the alpha and beta chains of FN-R and VN-R were found on all three cell types. To characterize these receptors further, monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) against the very late antigens (VLAs) 1, 3, and 5 were used for immunoprecipitation studies. Monocytes and T cells reacted with VLA 5 that was previously identified as the human FN receptor, whereas no labeling with anti-VLA 5 could be shown for B cells. When cell populations were cultured in 10% human serum for 24 hours, an increase in beta 1-integrin+ monocytes and T cells was observed. The number of beta 3-integrin+ cells remained essentially unchanged. The presence of beta 1 and beta 3 integrins on monocytes as well as on T and B lymphocytes may be of significance in the ability of these cells to interact with each other and participate in hematopoiesis and certain immune reactions.
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PMID:Distribution of integrins on human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. 247 87

Cells of the rat neuronal line, PC12, adhere well to substrates coated with laminin and type IV collagen, but attach poorly to fibronectin. Adhesion and neurite extension in response to these extracellular matrix proteins are inhibited by Fab fragments of an antiserum (anti-ECMR) that recognizes PC12 cell surface integrin subunits of Mr 120,000, 140,000, and 180,000 (Tomaselli, K. J., C. H. Damsky, and L. F. Reichardt. 1987. J. Cell Biol. 105:2347-2358). Here we extend our study of integrin structure and function in PC12 cells using integrin subunit-specific antibodies prepared against synthetic peptides corresponding to the cytoplasmic domains of the human integrin beta 1 and the fibronectin receptor alpha (alpha FN) subunits. Anti-integrin beta 1 immunoprecipitated a 120-kD beta 1 subunit and two noncovalently associated integrin alpha subunits of 140 and 180 kD from detergent extracts of surface-labeled PC12 cells. Immunodepletion studies using anti-integrin beta 1 demonstrated that these two putative alpha/beta heterodimers are identical to those recognized by the adhesion-perturbing ECMR antiserum. Anti-alpha FN immunoprecipitated fibronectin receptor heterodimers in human and rat fibroblastic cells, but not in PC12 cells. Thus, low levels of expression of the integrin alpha FN subunit can explain the poor attachment of PC12 cells to FN. The PC12 cell integrins were purified using a combination of lectin and ECMR antibody affinity chromatography. The purified integrins: (a) completely neutralize the ability of the anti-ECMR serum to inhibit PC12 cell adhesion to laminin and collagen IV; (b) have hydrodynamic properties that are very similar to those of previously characterized integrin alpha/beta heterodimeric receptors for ECM proteins; and (c) can be incorporated into phosphatidylcholine vesicles that then bind specifically to substrates coated with laminin or collagen IV but not fibronectin. Thus, the ligand-binding specificity of the liposomes containing the purified PC12 integrins closely parallels the substrate-binding preference of intact PC12 cells. These results demonstrate that mammalian integrins purified from a neuronal cell line can, when incorporated into lipid vesicles, function as receptors for laminin and type IV collagen.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of mammalian integrins expressed by a rat neuronal cell line (PC12): evidence that they function as alpha/beta heterodimeric receptors for laminin and type IV collagen. 284 50


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