Mansfield P J, Boxer L A, Suchard S J
Department of Pediatrics, Section of Hematology/Oncology, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor 48109.
J Cell Biol. 1990 Dec;111(6 Pt 2):3077-86. doi: 10.1083/jcb.111.6.3077.
Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) migrate to sites of inflammation or injury in response to chemoattractants released at those sites. The presence of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins at these sites may influence PMN accumulation at blood vessel walls and enhance their ability to move through tissue. Thrombospondin (TSP), a 450-kD ECM protein whose major proteolytic fragments are a COOH-terminal 140-kD fragment and an NH2-terminal heparin-binding domain (HBD), is secreted by platelets, endothelial cells, and smooth muscle cells. TSP binds specifically to PMN surface receptors and has been shown, in other cell types, to promote directed movement. TSP in solution at low concentrations (30-50 nM) "primed" PMNs for f-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP)-mediated chemotaxis, increasing the response two- to fourfold. A monoclonal antibody against the HBD of TSP totally abolished this priming effect suggesting that the priming activity resides in the HBD of TSP. Purified HBD retains the priming activity of TSP thereby corroborating the antibody data. TSP alone, in solution at high concentrations (0.5-3.0 microM), stimulated chemotaxis of PMNs and required both the HBD and the 140-kD fragment of TSP. In contrast to TSP in solution, TSP bound to nitrocellulose filters in the range of 20-70 pmol stimulated random locomotion of PMNs. The number of PMNs migrating in response to bound TSP was approximately two orders of magnitude greater than the number of cells that exhibited chemotaxis in response to soluble TSP or fMLP. Monoclonal antibody C6.7, which recognizes an epitope near the carboxyl terminus of TSP, blocked migration stimulated by bound TSP, suggesting that the activity resides in this domain. Using proteolytic fragments, we demonstrated that bound 140-kD fragment, but not HBD, promoted migration of PMNs. Therefore, TSP released at injury sites, alone or in synergy with chemotactic peptides like fMLP, could play a role in directing PMN movement.
多形核白细胞(PMNs)会响应炎症或损伤部位释放的趋化因子,迁移至这些部位。这些部位细胞外基质(ECM)蛋白的存在可能会影响PMNs在血管壁的聚集,并增强其在组织中移动的能力。血小板反应蛋白(TSP)是一种450-kD的ECM蛋白,其主要蛋白水解片段是一个COOH末端的140-kD片段和一个NH2末端肝素结合域(HBD),由血小板、内皮细胞和平滑肌细胞分泌。TSP特异性结合PMNs表面受体,并且在其他细胞类型中已显示可促进定向运动。低浓度(30 - 50 nM)溶液中的TSP“启动”PMNs对f-甲硫氨酸-亮氨酸-苯丙氨酸(fMLP)介导的趋化作用,使反应增加两到四倍。一种针对TSP的HBD的单克隆抗体完全消除了这种启动作用,表明启动活性存在于TSP的HBD中。纯化的HBD保留了TSP的启动活性,从而证实了抗体数据。单独的高浓度(0.5 - 3.0 microM)溶液中的TSP刺激PMNs的趋化作用,并且需要TSP的HBD和140-kD片段。与溶液中的TSP相反,结合在硝酸纤维素滤膜上的20 - 70 pmol范围内的TSP刺激PMNs的随机运动。响应结合TSP而迁移的PMNs数量比响应可溶性TSP或fMLP而表现出趋化作用的细胞数量大约高两个数量级。识别TSP羧基末端附近表位的单克隆抗体C6.7阻断了结合TSP刺激的迁移,表明活性存在于该结构域中。使用蛋白水解片段,我们证明结合的140-kD片段而非HBD促进了PMNs的迁移。因此,损伤部位释放的TSP单独或与fMLP等趋化肽协同作用,可能在引导PMNs运动中发挥作用。