Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2827720 | Blood Cells, Molecules, and Diseases | 2009 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Substituting the medium chloride with glucuronate or glutamate causes a rapid, 10 to 30-fold, increase in the binding of the monoclonal antibody, CBRM1/5, which recognizes the high-affinity conformation of the Mac-1 integrin. This change is reflected in functional adhesion assays that show increased adhesion to ICAM-1 coated beads. Blocking antibodies indicate that the increased adhesion is almost entirely due to Mac-1. The inhibitor NPPB (100 μM) reduces Clâ efflux into low Clâ medium by 75%, and blocks increased CBRM1/5 binding after stimulation with fMLP or TNF-α, but has no effect on the anion substitution induced increase in CBRM1/5 binding or adhesion to immobilized ICAM-1. Thus, changes in external anion composition, not internal chloride or increases in Clâ efflux, are responsible for Mac-1 activation. This effect is substantial. The percentage of Mac-1 in the high affinity state approaches 100% in glutamate and 50% in glucuronate, a far greater response than what is observed after stimulation with fMLP.
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Authors
Elena Lomakina, Philip A. Knauf, Joanne B. Schultz, Foon-Yee Law, Matthew D. McGraw, Richard E. Waugh,