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Hydrodynamic shear and tethering through E-selectin signals phosphorylation of p38 MAP kinase and adhesion of human neutrophils
Authors:Hentzen Eric  McDonough Daniel  McIntire Larry  Smith C Wayne  Goldsmith Harry L  Simon Scott I
Affiliation:(1) Speros Martel Section of Leukocyte Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX;(2) Biomedical Engineering, University of California, Davis, CA;(3) Department of Biomedical Engineering, Rice University, Houston, TX;(4) Montreal General Hospital Research Institute, McGill University Medical Clinic, Montreal, Canada
Abstract:Recently, we reported that tethering and rolling of neutrophils in shear flow over a substrate of E-selectin signals activation of 
$$beta _2$$
-integrins and firm adhesion via an intracellular signaling pathway involving phosphorylation of p38 MAP kinase. In the current study the objective was to examine the molecular mechanisms and shear dependence underlying activation and adhesion of 
$$beta _2$$
-integrin during shear-induced collisions between human neutrophils and murine B cells (300.19) transfected to express either E-selectin or L-selectin. Three separate parameters of cell activation were assessed over the time course of application of a defined shear field to heterotypic cell suspensions in a cone–plate viscometer. These were the two-body collision doublet lifetime and capture efficiency, surface upregulation of CD11b/CD18, and tyrosine phosphorylation of p38 MAP kinase. The data indicate that neutrophil adhesion to E-selectin expressing 300.19 cells occurs with a fourfold higher efficiency of firm adhesion than do collisions with L-selectin or parent control cells. Visual analysis of aggregation in a transparent cone–plate rheoscope revealed that the lifetime and efficiency of doublet formation increased four-fold as the applied shear stress increased. Neutrophil tethering via E-selectin was associated with rapid activation as indicated by upregulation of surface CD11b/CD18 and phosphorylation of p38 MAP kinase within seconds of application of shear. Activation greatly exceeded that observed for neutrophils sheared alone or with B cells expressing L-selectin. A distinct dependence of activation on the magnitude of the shear rate suggests a coupling between the fluid mechanical effects of shear and signaling of neutrophil adhesion. © 2002 Biomedical Engineering Society.PAC2002: 8717-d, 8719Tt
Keywords:Neutrophils  Cell adhesion  Integrin  Selectin  Fluid shear  MAP kinase
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