Abstract
Abstract Adhesion of lymphocytes to vascular endothelium is the first event in the passage of lymphocytes into a chronic inflammatory reaction. To investigate molecular mechanisms of T-EC adhesion, monoclonal antibodies (Mab) against T cell surface antigens have been tested for inhibition of binding. Baseline and phorbol ester-stimulated adhesion were strongly inhibited by either Mab 60.3 (reactive with the beta-chain of the LFA-1, OKM1, and p150,95 molecules) or by Mab TS 1/22 (specific for the alpha-chain of LFA-1). Although the increased binding of phorbol ester-stimulated lymphocytes was inhibited by anti-LFA-1 antibody, there was no increased expression of LFA-1 on phorbol ester-stimulated T cells, as determined by FACS analysis. Maximal inhibition of unstimulated and phorbol ester-stimulated T-EC adhesion was seen at Mab concentrations of 1 microgram/ml. In contrast, LPS- and IL 1-enhanced T-EC adhesion were only weakly inhibited by these antibodies. Mab 60.3 and TS 1/22 did not stain either unstimulated EC or LPS- or IL 1-stimulated EC, as measured by FACS analysis; moreover, preincubation of EC alone with these antibodies did not lead to inhibition of T-EC binding. Adhesion was not affected by Mab against the sheep erythrocyte receptor (LFA-2), a nonpolymorphic HLA class 1 framework antigen, or against LFA-3, the alpha-chain of OKM1, or the alpha-chain of p150,95. These results suggest that the mechanism of binding of lymphocytes to unstimulated endothelium differs from that to stimulated endothelium. LFA-1 appears to be an important adhesion-related molecule for binding to unstimulated endothelium. However, the increased lymphocyte adhesion to IL 1- or LPS-stimulated EC observed in these experiments appears to be relatively independent of LFA-1. The increased adhesion to stimulated EC could be due either to an increase in the avidity or the density of the EC receptor molecules ordinarily involved in unstimulated T-EC binding or to the formation of alternative receptors on the stimulated EC that are not present on unstimulated cells.
Dates
Type | When |
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Created | 2 years, 8 months ago (Dec. 30, 2022, 11:28 p.m.) |
Deposited | 5 months ago (March 31, 2025, 4:57 p.m.) |
Indexed | 1 month, 3 weeks ago (July 7, 2025, 2:30 a.m.) |
Issued | 38 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1986) |
Published | 38 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1986) |
Published Online | 38 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1986) |
Published Print | 38 years, 10 months ago (Nov. 1, 1986) |
@article{Haskard_1986, title={T lymphocyte adhesion to endothelial cells: mechanisms demonstrated by anti-LFA-1 monoclonal antibodies.}, volume={137}, ISSN={1550-6606}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.137.9.2901}, DOI={10.4049/jimmunol.137.9.2901}, number={9}, journal={The Journal of Immunology}, publisher={Oxford University Press (OUP)}, author={Haskard, D and Cavender, D and Beatty, P and Springer, T and Ziff, M}, year={1986}, month=nov, pages={2901–2906} }