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Blood, 15 April 2007, Vol. 109, No. 8, pp. 3544-3551. Prepublished online as a Blood First Edition Paper on December 7, 2006; DOI 10.1182/blood-2006-07-035139.
RED CELLS
Endothelial Lu/BCAM glycoproteins are novel ligands for red blood cell
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| Abstract |
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5 chain. In addition to red blood cells, Lu/BCAM proteins are highly expressed in endothelial cells. Abnormal adhesion of red blood cells to the endothelium could potentially contribute to the vaso-occlusive episodes in sickle cell disease. Considering the presence of integrin consensus-binding sites in Lu/BCAM proteins, we investigated their potential interaction with integrin
4ß1, the unique integrin expressed on immature circulating sickle red cells. Using cell adhesion assays under static and flow conditions, we demonstrated that integrin
4ß1 expressed on transfected cells bound to chimeric Lu-Fc protein. We showed that epinephrine-stimulated sickle cells, but not control red cells, adhered to Lu-Fc via integrin
4ß1 under flow conditions. Antibody-mediated activation of integrin
4ß1 induced adhesion of sickle red cells to primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells; this adhesion was inhibited by soluble Lu-Fc and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1)Fc proteins. This novel interaction between integrin
4ß1 in sickle red cells and endothelial Lu/BCAM proteins could participate in sickle cell adhesion to endothelium and potentially play a role in vaso-occlusive episodes. | Introduction |
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5 chain (present in laminin-10/11 isoforms) and represent the unique receptors for this laminin in normal (AA) and sickle (SS) red blood cells (RBCs) of patients with sickle cell anemia.13 These gp's have been also recognized as laminin
5 receptors in kidney epithelial cells, in smooth muscle cells, and endothelial cell lines.46 Lu/BCAM gps bind to the G3 domain of laminin
57 by their first 3 Ig-like domains.3,8 The specific cytoplasmic domain of Lu gp isoform includes serine phosphorylation sites, which is consistent with a receptor signaling function.9
In sickle cell disease, RBCs are 2 to 10 times more adherent to components that line the blood vessel wall or circulate in the plasma than normal RBCs, and this may impair the blood flow and dramatically impact vaso-occlusion.1012 Lu/BCAM gp's are overexpressed in SS RBCs; this correlates with increased adhesion to laminin
5.1,2 Lee and collaborators suggested that SS RBCs adhere to endothelial basement membrane by binding to laminin
5.13 More recently, Hines and collaborators showed that the physiologic stress mediator epinephrine, acting through the ß2-adrenergic receptor, increased the Lu/BCAM-mediated adhesion of SS RBCs to laminin
5 via a cAMP and protein kinase A (PKA)dependent signaling pathway.14 Accordingly, we recently demonstrated that the long isoform of Lu/BCAM proteins was phosphorylated in epinephrine-stimulated SS RBCs. Our results indicated that PKA-mediated phosphorylation of the Lu gp positively regulates the adhesion function to laminin and suggested that enhanced adhesion of epinephrine-stimulated RBCs to laminin
5 is mediated by a PKA-phosphorylated serine of Lu gp.9
Abnormal adhesion of SS RBCs to endothelial cells could potentially contribute to the vaso-occlusive crises in sickle cell disease.10,15 It has been recently shown that human SS RBCs adhered in vivo to activated rat mesocecum vasculature, leading to frequent blockage of small-diameter venules, and that this adhesion was inhibited by blocking the interaction between erythroid ICAM-4 and endothelial integrin
vß3.16 Considering the expression of Lu/BCAM on the surface of endothelial cells in blood vessels,17 we postulated that they could be involved in the binding of ligands on SS RBCs, contributing to their reinforced adhesiveness to vascular endothelium. Integrins are expressed on erythrocyte precursors and play a role in normal erythrocyte development.1823 Integrin
4ß1 (CD49d/CD29), or very late antigen 4 (VLA-4), is the only integrin maintained in a population of circulating SS RBCs, mainly in the population of young reticulocytes.24,25 A pathologic role for this integrin has been suggested in sickle RBC adhesion, through its interaction with vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1), fibronectin, and thrombospondin.12,24,26,27 Interaction of integrin
4ß1 with its endothelial and/or matrix ligands could play a role in the adhesion of SS RBCs to the blood vessel wall and could slow or stop blood flow.12 As several members of the Ig superfamily are known to bind integrins, we hypothesized that endothelial Lu/BCAM might interact with erythroid integrin
4ß1. Our hypothesis is supported by the presence of
4ß1 consensus-binding motifs28 in the extracellular domain of Lu/BCAM gp's.
In the present study, we investigated the potential interaction between integrin
4ß1 and Lu/BCAM proteins using adhesion assays under static and flow conditions. We provide evidence for a novel interaction between
4ß1 integrin expressed in SS RBCs and endothelial Lu/BCAM proteins that could promote SS RBC adhesion to endothelium and potentially contribute to vaso-occlusive episodes.
| Patients, materials, and methods |
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All adhesion assays were performed with 5 mL freshly drawn EDTA-anticoagulated venous blood from 2 healthy donors (AA1 and AA2), 7 adult patients with sickle cell disease (SS1-SS7) who were diagnosed by standard methods and family testing, and 3 patients with a high reticulocyte count (C1 to C3) suffering from different types of hemoglobinopathy: C1 is a woman with unsplenectomized hemoglobin H (HbH) disease; C2 is a man with splenectomized Heinz body hemolytic anemia due to an unstable
globin variant; and C3 is a man with splenectomized and untransfused ß thalassemia intermedia. Blood was collected more than 3 months after either transfusion or hydroxyurea treatments, at least 1 month after and 2 weeks before a clinical vaso-occlusive event, and after informed consent was obtained in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. The study has been approved by the Scientific Committee of the Institut National de la Transfusion Sanguine.
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) used were mouse antihuman ß1 integrin (clone TS2/16; Endogen, Woburn MA), rat antihuman ß1 integrin (clone mAb 13; BD/Pharmingen, San Diego, CA), mouse antihuman
3 integrin (clone ASC-1; Chemicon, Temecula, CA), mouse antihuman
4 integrin (clone HP2/1; Serotec, Oxford, United Kingdom), rat antihuman
6 integrin (clone GoH3; BD/Pharmingen, San Diego, CA), and mouse antihuman VCAM-1 (clone 4B2; R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN). Mouse antihuman Lu mAb, clone F241, was produced in our institute (in collaboration with Dr D. Blanchard, Etablissement Français du Sang, Nantes, France).
Soluble human Lu-Fc and ICAM-1-Fc were obtained as described.2,29 Lu-Fc was also purchased with human VCAM-1Fc from R&D Systems Europe (Lille, France).
Wild-type (WT) L929 cells and L929 cells expressing human recombinant integrin
4ß1 (10 200 copies per cell),
Lß2 (32 000 copies per cell), or
Mß2 (46 000 copies per cell) were obtained and grown as previously described.29,30 Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were isolated from umbilical vein cords (Dr Marie-Christine Boulanger, Centre Hospitalier Robert Ballanger, Aulnay sous Bois, France) as described.31
Flow cytometry analyses
The percentage of reticulocytes in whole-blood samples and expression of integrin
4ß1 were determined using thiazole orange dye (Retic-Count; Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA), antiintegrin
4 mAb HP2/1, and a FACScan flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson) as described.32 Expression of Lu/BCAM, integrin
4, and VCAM-1 in HUVECs was tested using F241 anti-Lu, HP2/1 anti-
4, and 4B2 antiVCAM-1 mAbs as described.2 For VCAM-1 analysis, HUVECs were incubated for 16 hours with recombinant human tumor necrosis factor
(TNF-
; Sigma, St Louis, MO) at 5 ng/mL. Specific antibody-binding capacity (SABC) for Lu/BCAM (on HUVECs) and integrin
4 (on RBCs) was determined by flow cytometry using Qifikit with the appropriate antibodies (Dako, Trappes, France).
Immunoprecipitation of Lu/BCAM proteins from HUVECs
Lu/BCAM proteins were immunoprecipitated from HUVECs after biotinylation of cell-surface proteins. Cells were biotinylated with 0.3 mg/mL NHS-LC-biotin (Pierce, Brebières, France) diluted in 10 mM HEPES, 150 mM NaCl, 0.2 mM CaCl2, and 0.2 mM MgCl2 (pH 7.5) at 4°C for 30 minutes. Cells were lysed in situ with 750 µL of lysing buffer (150 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris [pH8.5], 2 mM EDTA, and 1% Triton X-100) containing protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche, Indianapolis, IN) and 1 mM PMSF (Sigma) at 4°C for 40 minutes. After a preclearing step with goat serum, Lu gp's were immunoprecipitated with anti-Lu mouse mAb F241 and analyzed by SDS-PAGE, membrane transfer, and chemoluminescence after incubation with horseradish-biotinylated streptavidin (Amersham Biosciences. Freiburg, Germany).
Adhesion assays under static conditions
Purified Lu-Fc or fibronectin (Sigma) diluted in 25 mM Tris (pH 8.0), 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM MgCl2, and 2 mM CaCl2 were adsorbed onto flat-bottomed 96-well microtiter plates overnight at 4°C at different concentrations (50 µL/well in duplicate). Adhesion of L929 WT and recombinant cells (105 cells/well) was carried as described2 with a 30- to 45-minute incubation time at 22°C in serum-free RPMI 1640 medium (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) with or without 1 mM EDTA. Each experiment was performed at least 3 times.
Cell-substrate adhesion under flow conditions
Adhesion of RBCs and L929 cells to Lu-Fc, VCAM-1Fc, or intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1)Fc was measured under physiologic flow conditions using a plate flow chamber as described.33 Soluble proteins (0.1-0.3 mg/mL) were immobilized into rectangular glass capillaries (microslides; 50 mm length, 3 mm internal width, 0.3 mm depth, and 3.5 cm2 surface; Cam Lab, Cambridge, United Kingdom) at 4°C overnight and microslides were mounted as described.9 L929 cells (107 cells/mL) or RBCs (hematocrit, .005 [0.5%]) were washed 3 times and suspended in Hanks buffer, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM CaCl2, and 0.4% human albumin. When 2 populations of L929 cells were injected simultaneously, 1 population was labeled with calcein. The cell suspension was injected at a final concentration of 107 cells/mL (1:1). Cells were injected for 10 minutes at shear stress of 0.2 dyne/cm2, and 5-minute washouts were carried out with Hanks buffer at 0.2, 0.4, 1, 2, and 4 dyne/cm2. After each washing step, adherent cells were quantified in 6 representative areas along the centerline of the microslide by microscopy using the Optimas 6.1 image analysis system (Media Cybernetics, Silver Spring, MD). When mAb antiß1 TS2/16 was used, cells were incubated for 20 minutes at room temperature with 1 µg/mL antibody before the injection step. For inhibition assays, cells were preincubated for 15 minutes on ice with 10 µg/mL blocking or isotype-matched control antibody. Activation with epinephrine was obtained by preincubating the cells for 1 minute at room temperature with 20 nM of epinephrine. Each adhesion experiment using L929 cells was performed a minimum of 3 times.
Cell-cell adhesion under flow conditions
HUVECs (4.5 x 106 cells/mL) were grown on microslides coated with 2% gelatin as described.33 Growing endothelial cells on gelatin does not modify the surface expression of endothelial markers.34,35 Adhesion of RBCs (.005 [0.5%] hematocrit) on the HUVEC monolayer under flow conditions was analyzed as described for Lu-Fccoated miscroslides. RBCs were either untreated or incubated with 1 µg/mL antiß1 TS2/16 at room temperature for 20 minutes. For inhibition assays, RBCs were preincubated or not for 5 minutes at room temperature with 1 µg/mL antiß1 TS2/16 followed by incubation with soluble Lu-Fc or VCAM-1Fc at 10 µg/mL for 20 minutes.
Statistical analysis
Results are presented as the mean ± standard deviation. Statistical significance was determined using an unpaired Wilcoxon rank-sum test.
| Results |
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4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc recombinant protein under static conditions
To determine whether Lu/BCAM gp's could interact with integrin
4ß1, we performed static adhesion assays using Lu-Fc protein coated on plastic wells and stably transfected L929 mouse fibroblasts expressing human integrin
4ß1. L-WT cells were used as negative control. As shown in Figure 1A, L-
4ß1 cells, but not L-WT cells, adhered to coated Lu-Fc in the presence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ (21 600 ± 2700 cells/mm2 vs 1800 ± 900 cells/mm2). Adhesion was totally abolished when 1 mM EDTA was added, indicating that the interaction is dependent on divalent cations. As a positive control, L-
4ß1 cells adhered to fibronectin, a known ligand for integrin
4ß1.
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4ß1 cells adhered to coated Lu-Fc in a dose-dependent manner (Figure 1B). When 2 µg or more of Lu-Fc were immobilized, a plateau was reached as the totality of the added cells adhered to the well (100% of adhesion). L cells expressing 2 other integrins,
Lß2 or
Mß2, were used to test the specificity of the interaction between Lu-Fc and L-
4ß1 cells. As shown in Figure 1C, adhesion experiments using L-WT, L-
4ß1, L-
Lß2 and L-
Mß2 cells indicated that only L-
4ß1 cells interact with Lu-Fc.
Adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc under flow conditions
To approach physiologic conditions, we examined the interaction between L-
4ß1 cells and Lu-Fc under flow conditions. Lu-Fc protein was immobilized on a glass microslide and cells were injected over the coated surface. L-
4ß1 cells were injected at 0.2 dyne/cm2 simultaneously with calcein-labeled L-WT or L-
Lß2 cells. After this adhesion step, washouts were performed at increasing shear stress of 0.4, 1, 2, and 4 dyne/cm2, and the number of adherent cells was determined after each wash. As shown in Figure 2A, L-
4ß1 cells adhered to Lu-Fc and resisted to high levels of shear stress, exceeding the physiologic postcapillary shear stress of 1 dyne/cm2,36 in contrast to L-WT and L-
Lß2 cells (P < .01). Human VCAM-1Fc and ICAM-1Fc were used as positive controls for adhesion of L-
4ß1 and L-
Lß2 cells, respectively. L-
4ß1 but not L-
Lß2 cells adhered to VCAM-1Fc, indicating that integrin
4ß1 was functional at the L-
4ß1 cell surface (Figure 2B). Similarly, L-
Lß2 but not L-
4ß1 cells adhered to the
Lß2 ligand ICAM-1Fc, indicating that the L-
Lß2 cell line also expressed a functional integrin; labeling these cells with calcein did not impede their adhesive function (Figure 2C). Furthermore, adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc or to VCAM-1Fc was not affected by calcein labeling. These data indicated that adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells in the presence of immobilized Lu-Fc was due to a specific interaction of these cells with the extracellular domain of Lu/BCAM gp's.
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4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc is specifically inhibited by anti-
4ß1 antibodies
Adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc could be due either to the interaction of Lu-Fc with recombinant integrin
4ß1 or to its interaction with an endogenous surface protein that is expressed or activated by the presence of recombinant human integrin
4ß1 in L cells. To explore this issue, adhesion assays were performed under flow conditions using blocking antibodies directed against
4 or ß1 integrin chains. A mixture of L-
4ß1 and calcein-labeled L-
Lß2 cells was incubated with antiintegrin
4 (HP2/1; mouse IgG1) or antiintegrin ß1 (mAb 13; rat IgG2a)blocking mAbs, before injection into the Lu-Fccoated microslide at 0.2 dyne/cm2. Isotype-matched control antibodies antiintegrin
3 (ASC-1; mouse IgG1) and antiintegrin
6 (GoH3; rat IgG2a) were used separately. Antiintegrin
6 mAb GoH3 cross-reacts with mouse
6 and binds to the L-
4ß1 cell surface as determined by flow cytometry. Anti-
4 antibody strongly inhibited the adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc, while isotype-matched control anti-
3 antibody did not have any effect (Figure 3; 32 ± 8 versus 98 ± cells/mm2 at 4 dyne/cm2) (P < .01). The background adhesion level of control L-
Lß2 cells was not modified by either of the 2 antibodies (data not shown). Similarly, antiintegrin ß1 mAb 13 inhibited L-
4ß1 cell adhesion to Lu-Fc compared with the adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells incubated with isotype-matched control antibody anti-
6 (Figure 3; 37 ± 16 vs 84 ± 17 cells/mm2 at 4 dyne/cm2) (P < .01). All these results indicated that the inhibition of L-
4ß1 cell adhesion to Lu-Fc was due to the specific interaction of anti-
4 and anti-ß1 mAbs with
4ß1 and that adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc was the consequence of a direct interaction between recombinant integrin
4ß1 and the extracellular domain of Lu gp's.
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4ß1 enhances L-
4ß1 cell adhesion to Lu-Fc
Integrin
4ß1 is known to exhibit multiple activation states37,38 that may be regulated by several factors, including divalent cation concentration and agonist-induced "inside-out" signaling events.39,40 We examined the adhesion state of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc in the presence of 1 mM Mn2+ and 1 µg/mL of the activating anti-ß1 mAb TS2/16.41,42 L-WT, L-
4ß1, and L-
Lß2 cells were incubated for 20 minutes with TS2/16 and Mn2+, then injected into an Lu-Fccoated microslide at 0.2 dyne/cm.2 L-
4ß1 cells were injected simultaneously with either L-WT or L-
Lß2 cells. L-
4ß1 cells showed enhanced adhesion to Lu-Fc upon incubation with TS2/16/Mn2+ when compared with untreated cells, with a stimulation factor of 3 to 4 depending on the shear stress (Figure 4A, P < .01). Conversely, incubation of control L-WT or L-
Lß2 cells with the same components did not lead to any adhesion above background.
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4ß1 cell adhesion to Lu-Fc were investigated by incubating the cells with epinephrine before injection. Epinephrine induces several signaling pathways, including PKA and small G proteindependent pathways known to activate integrin
4ß1.43,44 When L-
4ß1 and L-
Lß2 cells were incubated with 20 nM epinephrine for 1 minute, only L-
4ß1 cells showed an enhanced adhesion to Lu-Fc by 1.5- to 2-fold compared with that of untreated cells (Figure 4B; P < .01). L-
Lß2 cells did not adhere when incubated with epinephrine, suggesting that the increase of L-
4ß1 cell adhesion to Lu-Fc was not due to the activation of an endogenous surface protein in these cells (Figure 4B). To test whether the increased adhesion of epinephrine-treated L-
4ß1 cells was directly mediated by integrin
4ß1, cells were incubated with anti-ß1 blocking mAb 13 before stimulation with epinephrine. As shown in Figure 4B, incubation with mAb 13 prevented the increase of cell adhesion to Lu-Fc in the presence of epinephrine (P < .01). Isotype-matched control antibody antiintegrin
6 (GoH3) was used and did not influence adhesion of epinephrine-treated L-
4ß1 cells (data not shown). Thus, blocking the extracellular domain of integrin
4ß1 with mAb 13 impeded the "inside-out" effect of the signaling events triggered by epinephrine, indicating that the increase of cell adhesion induced by epinephrine was mediated by integrin
4ß1. Adhesion of AA and SS RBCs to Lu-Fc under flow
Integrin
4ß1 is the only integrin expressed on circulating immature RBCs of patients with sickle cell disease.24,25 To determine whether SS RBCs could bind to Lu-Fc through
4ß1 interaction, adhesion experiments were performed under flow conditions as described in "Adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc under flow conditions." When AA and SS RBCs were used without any prior treatment, no significant difference was detected between the 2 populations (Figure 5A). AA and SS RBCs were treated with epinephrine, as activation of L-
4ß1 cells with epinephrine stimulated the integrin
4ß1mediated adhesion to Lu-Fc (Figure 4B). Incubation of RBCs with 20 nM epinephrine induced SS but not AA RBC adhesion (Figure 5A; P < .01). RBCs from 6 independent patients with sickle cell disease, SS1 to SS6 (Table 1), were analyzed. Figure 5B shows the number of adherent RBCs at the physiologic shear stress of 1 dyne/cm2. A significant activation of cell adhesion was obtained with all SS RBCs after incubation with epinephrine (1.5- to 2.8-fold; P < .01). In order to test whether integrin
4ß1 was involved in the interaction of epinephrine-stimulated SS RBCs with Lu-Fc, cells from patients SS3, SS4, SS5, and SS6 were preincubated with blocking anti-ß1 mAb 13 before adding epinephrine. Blocking integrin
4ß1 with mAb 13 significantly decreased the activating effect of epinephrine, as the number of adherent RBCs was diminished for all patients when compared with RBCs treated with epinephrine alone (Figure 5B; P < .01). On the other hand, selective activation of integrin
4ß1 by antiß1 TS2/16 antibody induced SS RBC adhesion to Lu-Fc for all patients (Figure 5B; P < .01). These results clearly indicated that activation of
4ß1 either by epinephrine or by antiß1 TS2/16 antibody stimulates SS RBCs adhesion to Lu/BCAM proteins. Adhesion to Lu-Fc of 3 control RBCs with high reticulocyte count (C1, C2, and C3) was tested in order to determine whether the adhesion of SS RBCs to Lu-Fc was "sickle-hemoglobin"dependent or a consequence of any circulating reticulocyte expressing
4ß1. Control RBCs with high reticulocyte counts showed the same adhesion level when compared with AA RBCs, and no activation was detected after incubation with epinephrine.
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4ß1 induces SS RBC adhesion to endothelial cells through Lu/BCAM binding
Since epinephrine-stimulated SS RBCs interacted with Lu-Fc proteins in an integrin
4ß1dependent manner, we analyzed the interaction of RBCs with primary HUVECs to approach physiologic conditions. Lu gp's expression in HUVECs was tested by flow cytometry and immunoprecipitation. Lu/BCAM proteins were immunoprecipitated from HUVECs using F241 anti-Lu mAb after biotinylation of cell-surface proteins. Epithelial A498 kidney cells were used as control since they express both Lu and Lu(v13) isoforms. As shown in Figure 6A, HUVECs express only the Lu gp isoform. Flow cytometry analysis (Figure 6B) showed that HUVECs exhibited a high copy number of Lu gp compared with RBCs (SABC per cell: 22 000 vs 1000-4000, respectively). It has been previously shown that integrin
4ß1 was not expressed in endothelial cells of quiescent vessels.45 This absence of expression was confirmed on HUVECs by flow cytometry (Figure 6B), thus excluding any interaction between Lu/BCAM expressed on SS RBCs and potential
4ß1 on HUVECs. VCAM-1 expression was also tested in HUVECs and was close to
4ß1 background level (16% of positive cells; mean fluorescence intensity [MFI] = 21.8) (Figure 6B). This was not due to the inability of the cells to express VCAM-1, as activation of HUVECs by TNF-
induced a strong expression of this protein (90% of positive cells; MFI = 466) (Figure 6B). This result was consistent with our previous study using radiolabeled antibodies in specific binding assays and showed that following our isolation procedure, resting HUVECs do not express significant amounts of VCAM-1.46
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4ß1 was capable of stimulating SS RBCs adhesion to endothelial cells (Figure 7A; P < .01). In order to test the potential role of Lu gp's expressed on HUVECs in this adhesion, SS RBCs activated by TS2/16 were incubated with soluble Lu-Fc. Lu-Fc significantly inhibited adhesion of TS2/16-activated SS RBCs to HUVECs (P < .01), indicating that the increase of adhesion after activation of integrin
4ß1 was in part mediated by the interaction of SS RBCs with Lu/BCAM gp's on the surface of endothelial cells. RBCs from 5 patients (SS3-SS7; Table 1) were analyzed in order to confirm these results. Adhesion of all SS RBCs was activated by TS2/16 (1.4- to 2.7-fold; P < .01) and inhibited after incubation with soluble Lu-Fc (P < .01 and P < .05 depending on the sample; Figure 7B). We then used soluble human VCAM-1Fc, a specific ligand for
4ß1, as a competitor to endothelial Lu/BCAM. Activated RBCs from all patients were incubated with VCAM-1Fc. This treatment significantly inhibited their adhesion to HUVECs (P < .01 and P < .05 depending on the sample), indicating that the adhesion increase of activated SS RBCs to HUVECs was mediated by integrin
4ß1 (Figure 7B). The adhesion level of 3 control RBCs with high reticulocyte counts (C1, C2, and C3) was similar to the level of AA RBCs; no activation was detected after incubation with activating antibody TS2/16.
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| Discussion |
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4ß1 as a new ligand for Lu/BCAM proteins. We used recombinant human integrin
4ß1 expressed in L929 mouse fibroblasts and immobilized chimeric Lu-Fc proteins to demonstrate that
4ß1 binds specifically to Lu-Fc, leading to cell adhesion under static and flow conditions. Since L929 cells were cotransfected with human integrin
4 and ß1, we cannot exclude that mouse
5,
6, or
v subunits could pair with ß1 and lead to interaction with Lu-Fc. Nevertheless, L-
4ß1 cell adhesion was similarly inhibited by human anti-
4 and anti-ß1 antibodies, indicating that it was mainly mediated by the human heterodimer
4ß1. "Outside-in" signaling by integrin
4ß1 can be initiated by clustering
4ß1 with mAb, which triggers a tyrosine phosphorylation pathway.47,48 Indeed, integrin
4ß1 is known to present activation states37,38 that can be regulated by extracellular factors such as divalent cations or antibodies,42 or by "inside-out" cell signaling induced by agonists.39,40 We investigated both pathways, using TS2/16 anti-ß1 mAb and epinephrine, and showed that activation of
4ß1 led to an enhanced adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells to Lu-Fc. The adhesion increase mediated by
4ß1 in epinephrine-treated L-
4ß1 cells illustrates an "inside-out" cell-signaling mechanism that will be further investigated.
Integrin
4ß1 and several other integrins are expressed in erythroid precursors and disappear during normal erythroid maturation. Integrin
4ß1 is the unique integrin expressed in a population of circulating sickle RBCs.24,25 To investigate the biological relevance of Lu/BCAMintegrin
4ß1 interaction, we explored adhesion of normal and sickle RBCs to Lu-Fc and HUVECs under flow conditions. Untreated SS as well as AA RBCs did not adhere to Lu-Fc under flow conditions, but a significant adhesion was observed when SS RBCs were treated with epinephrine. This adhesion was inhibited by the anti-ß1blocking antibody, indicating that it was mainly mediated by a direct interaction of activated
4ß1 and Lu-Fc through an "inside-out" activation of
4ß1. On the other hand, the increase of SS RBCs adhesion after incubation with the anti-ß1activating antibody TS2/16 indicated that this adhesion can also be stimulated by an "outside-in" signaling mechanism. Vaso-occlusion is associated with various types of physiologic stress, and epinephrine is known to elevate cAMP in SS RBCs through stimulation of adrenergic receptors.14 This elevation in intracellular cAMP leads to activation of signaling pathways involving PKA and small GTPases.14,49 Adhesion of epinephrine-treated SS RBCs to Lu-Fc was most likely induced by PKA and/or small GTPases like Rap-1, as they are known to activate integrin
4ß1.43,44
There was a clear difference in the adhesion level between untreated L-
4ß1 cells and SS RBCs. This could arise from the difference in the percentage of cells expressing
4ß1 and from its density at the cell surface. All (100%) L-
4ß1 cells express 20 to 25 copies/µm2 of integrin
4ß1 (10 200 copies/cell in average, 450 µm2 of cell-surface area) compared with only 4.5% to 10% of SS RBCs expressing 4 to 16 copies/µm2 (660-2260 copies/RBC, 145 µm2 of RBC surface area; Table 1). In addition, L929 are adherent cells that express a wide range of adhesion molecules that could reinforce the adhesion of L-
4ß1 cells once they attach to the Lu-Fc substrate.
To approach physiologic conditions we tested the adhesion of RBCs to HUVECs under flow. In contrast to AA RBCs, untreated SS RBCs showed a basal adhesion to HUVECs, but this adhesion was independent of endothelial Lu/BCAM as it was not inhibited by soluble Lu-Fc (data not shown). It is well documented that resting HUVECs do not express VCAM-1 in the absence of stimulating factors like TNF-
, phorbol esters, or epinephrine, yet we cannot totally exclude that this expression could be induced by the flow during the adhesion assay. However, adhesion of untreated SS RBCs to HUVECs at low shear stress was not diminished by soluble VCAM-1 (data not shown), suggesting that the observed adhesion was most likely not due to a potential
4ß1VCAM-1 interaction. A similar adhesion, called "transport-controlled," has been reported to occur at low shear stress in the absence of stimulating factors, and is partially due to terminal sialic acid residues on erythrocyte membranes and to endothelial fibronectin.50 In addition, this basal adhesion could be due to the interaction of erythroid Lu/BCAM with the laminin
5 chain that is secreted and present on HUVECs during cell culture.51 Our results indicated that SS RBCs from all patients showed significant adhesion to HUVECs after selective activation of erythroid
4ß1 by the specific TS2/16 mAb. We chose to target
4ß1 activation by TS2/16 and not by epinephrine, as epinephrine activates other adhesion molecules on SS RBCs, like LW/ICAM-4, which interacts with integrin
vß3 on endothelial cells,52 as well as Lu/BCAM gp's, which enhance RBC adhesion by binding to the laminin
5 chain.9,14 After activation with TS2/16 mAb, we used the highly avid
4ß1 ligand VCAM-1 as a competitor and showed that it inhibited the activated SS RBCs adhesion to HUVECs. On the endothelial side, we could state that this adhesion was mainly mediated by Lu/BCAM proteins, as it was inhibited by incubating the activated SS RBCs with soluble Lu-Fc. Finally, using the high-reticulocyte controls, we showed that the adhesion of SS RBCs to Lu-Fc and to HUVECs was dependent on the sickle phenotype and was not the result of the presence of any circulating reticulocyte expressing integrin
4ß1.
We recently showed that the Lu/BCAM long isoform named Lu gp was phosphorylated by glycogen synthase 3 beta, casein kinase II, and PKA, and that its adhesion to the laminin
5 chain was modulated by PKA.9 In the present study, we show that the cytoplasmic tail of Lu gp was not necessary for the interaction with
4ß1 since it was absent from the Lu-Fc protein. Nevertheless, Lu gp binding to integrin
4ß1 could also be modulated by phophorylation in a cellular context, as is the case for binding to laminin. One can assume that under stress conditions, elevation of intracellular cAMP by epinephrine could activate both endothelial Lu and SS RBC
4ß1 and reinforce their interaction. This hypothesis, as well as the signaling pathway that activates integrin
4ß1 binding to Lu proteins, will be investigated.
The interaction between Lu/BCAM proteins and integrin
4ß1 could occur independently of the sickle cell disease context, opening new fields of investigation. For example, endothelial Lu/BCAM proteins could participate in the transendothelial leukocyte migration during the inflammatory process where integrin
4ß1 on leukocytes plays a key role by inte