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CD166 Expression, Characterization, and Localization in Salivary Epithelium: Implications for Function During Sialoadenitis
Authors:Syed M. A. Abidi  Mohammad K. Saifullah  Marie D. Zafiropulos  Cara Kaput  Michael A. Bowen  Calvin Cotton  Nora G. Singer
Affiliation:(1) Department of Pediatrics, CASE School of Medicine and Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio;(2) Department of Zoology, AMU, Aligarh, India;(3) Medimmune, Gaithersburg, Maryland;(4) Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospitals, Cleveland, Ohio;(5) 504 Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital, 11100 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio, 44106
Abstract:
CD166 is an Ig superfamily molecule that binds homotypically to itself and heterotypically to CD6. Interactions between CD6 and CD166 are important during immune development and in alloreactivity. CD166 is expressed at increased levels in selected cancers and in rheumatoid arthritis synovium. Knowledge that CD166 was expressed in normal human salivary epithelium led to these studies of CD166 and CD6 in diseased mouse salivary glands, that resemble pathology seen in the human disease, Sjögren's syndrome. We showed that in mouse salivary epithelium CD166 was expressed but that expression of CD166 did not necessarily predict its function. Recombinant soluble CD6-Ig bound to CD6 ligands (CD6L) on transformed and freshly isolated salivary epithelial cells. Cross-blocking studies showed that binding of CD6-Ig to salivary epithelium was in part dependent on CD166, but that CD6-Ig binding may also involve additional CD6L. Binding of CD6-Ig was sensitive to trypsin digestion but resistant to digestion by collagenase and sialidase. Anti-CD166 ab precipitated CD166 from salivary epithelium pre- and post-treatment with the pro-inflammatory cytokine IFN-γ. In contrast CD6-Ig only precipitated CD166 from IFN-γ treated cells. More extensive colocalization between CD166 and the actin cytoskeleton was observed in sialoadenitis epithelium compared to control. We conclude that during sialoadenitis, CD166 undergoes a gain of function, resulting in closer association with the actin cytoskeleton and increased capacity to bind CD6. We suggest that altered CD166 function may contribute to the pro-inflammatory milieu during sialoadenitis seen in Sjögren's syndrome.
Keywords:Salivary gland epithelial cells  Sj?gren's syndrome  CD6 ligand  CD166  NOD mice
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