Haynes B F, Telen M J, Hale L P, Denning S M
Immunol Today. 1989 Dec;10(12):423-8. doi: 10.1016/0167-5699(89)90040-6.
The study of cell surface molecules that are involved in interactions between immune and non-hematopoietic cells in various microenvironments is currently an area of great interest. One molecule that appears to be involved in multiple steps of normal immune cell function is now called CD44 and has been known previously as Pgp-1, In(Lu)-related p80, Hermes, ECM-III and HUTCH-I. Within the past year, the co-identity of all of these independently discovered molecules has become apparent, and the role of the CD44 molecule in T-cell activation has been discovered. In this review, Barton Haynes and his colleagues bring together numerous divergent lines of investigation on the CD44 molecule, review the many functional roles attributed to it, and present a unifying view of how, with numerous ligands, it may participate in several areas of normal immune cell function.
对参与各种微环境中免疫细胞与非造血细胞相互作用的细胞表面分子的研究,目前是一个备受关注的领域。一种似乎参与正常免疫细胞功能多个步骤的分子,现在被称为CD44,它之前被称为Pgp-1、In(Lu)相关p80、Hermes、ECM-III和HUTCH-I。在过去的一年里,所有这些独立发现的分子的共同身份已经明确,并且CD44分子在T细胞激活中的作用也已被发现。在这篇综述中,巴顿·海恩斯及其同事汇集了对CD44分子的众多不同研究方向,回顾了归因于它的许多功能作用,并提出了一个统一的观点,即它如何与众多配体一起参与正常免疫细胞功能的多个领域。