Bourguignon L Y, Lokeshwar V B, Chen X, Kerrick W G
Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, University of Miami Medical School, FL 33101.
J Immunol. 1993 Dec 15;151(12):6634-44.
The purposes of this study are to characterize the binding of hyaluronic acid (HA) to mouse T lymphoma cells, to measure changes in intracellular Ca2+ after HA binding, to elucidate the interaction between the HA receptor, GP85(CD44), and ankyrin in the membrane skeleton, and finally to correlate these events with HA receptor patching/capping and cell adhesion to HA. First, we established an in vivo assay using [3H]HA to measure the binding of HA to mouse T lymphoma cells, and found that the binding of [3H]HA to these cells is readily inhibited by the addition of anti-GP85(CD44) antibody suggesting that GP85(CD44) is the HA receptor. Next, we examined various signal transducing events that occur after HA binds to its receptor on mouse T lymphoma cells. The results of these studies indicate that the concentration of intracellular Ca2+ (as measured by Fura-2 fluorescence) begins to increase within seconds, and reaches a maximal level 5 min after the addition of HA to the cells. After this increase of intracellular Ca2+, HA induces both its receptors, GP85(CD44), to form patched/capped structures, and cell adhesion to HA-coated plates. Furthermore, we have determined that GP85(CD44) binds directly and specifically to ankyrin (Kd approximately 1.94 nM) in a saturable manner; and that ankyrin is preferentially accumulated underneath the HA-induced GP85(CD44) capped structures. The Ca2+ ionophore, ionomycin, was found to stimulate HA-induced receptor capping and adhesion while EGTA (a Ca2+ chelator), nefedipine/bepridil (Ca2+ channel blockers), W-7 (a calmodulin antagonist), and cytochalasin D (a microfilament inhibitor), but not colchicine (a microtubule disrupting agent), inhibit HA-induced receptor redistribution and adhesion to HA-coated plates. These findings strongly suggest that ankyrin plays an important role in linking the HA receptor, GP85(CD44), to the membrane-associated actomyosin contractile system during hyaluronic acid-mediated lymphocyte activation.
本研究的目的是表征透明质酸(HA)与小鼠T淋巴瘤细胞的结合,测量HA结合后细胞内Ca2+的变化,阐明HA受体GP85(CD44)与膜骨架中锚蛋白之间的相互作用,最后将这些事件与HA受体的斑块形成/帽化以及细胞与HA的黏附相关联。首先,我们建立了一种使用[3H]HA的体内测定法来测量HA与小鼠T淋巴瘤细胞的结合,发现加入抗GP85(CD44)抗体可轻易抑制[3H]HA与这些细胞的结合,这表明GP85(CD44)是HA受体。接下来,我们研究了HA与其在小鼠T淋巴瘤细胞上的受体结合后发生的各种信号转导事件。这些研究结果表明,细胞内Ca2+的浓度(通过Fura-2荧光测量)在数秒内开始增加,并在向细胞中加入HA后5分钟达到最高水平。细胞内Ca2+增加后,HA诱导其两个受体GP85(CD44)形成斑块/帽状结构,并使细胞黏附于HA包被的平板。此外,我们已确定GP85(CD44)以可饱和的方式直接且特异性地与锚蛋白结合(解离常数约为1.94 nM);并且锚蛋白优先聚集在HA诱导的GP85(CD44)帽状结构下方。发现Ca2+离子载体离子霉素可刺激HA诱导的受体帽化和黏附,而EGTA(一种Ca2+螯合剂)、尼福地平/苄普地尔(Ca2+通道阻滞剂)、W-7(一种钙调蛋白拮抗剂)和细胞松弛素D(一种微丝抑制剂),但不是秋水仙碱(一种微管破坏剂),可抑制HA诱导的受体重新分布和与HA包被平板的黏附。这些发现强烈表明,在透明质酸介导的淋巴细胞活化过程中,锚蛋白在将HA受体GP85(CD44)与膜相关的肌动球蛋白收缩系统连接方面发挥重要作用。