Galectin-8 binds specific beta1 integrins and induces polarized spreading highlighted by asymmetric lamellipodia in Jurkat T cells.
Integrin-mediated encounters of T cells with extracellular cues lead these cells to adhere to a variety of substrates and acquire a spread phenotype needed for their tissue incursions. We studied the effects of galectin-8 (Gal-8), a beta-galactoside binding lectin, on Jurkat T cells. Immobilized Gal-8 bound alpha1beta1, alpha3beta1 and alpha5beta1 but not alpha2beta1 and alpha4beta1 and adhered these cells with similar kinetics to immobilized fibronectin ( FN). Function-blocking experiments with monoclonal anti-integrin antibodies suggested that alpha5beta1 is the main mediator of cell adhesion to this lectin. Gal-8, but not FN, induced extensive cell spreading frequently leading to a polarized phenotype characterized by an asymmetric lamellipodial protrusion. These morphological changes involved actin cytoskeletal rearrangements controlled by PI3K, Rac-1 and ERK1/2 activity. Gal-8- induced Rac-1 activation and binding to alpha1 and alpha5 integrins have not been described in any other cellular system. Strikingly, Gal-8 was also a strong stimulus on Jurkat cells in suspension, triggering ERK1/2 activation that in most adherent cells is instead dependent on cell attachment. In addition, we found that patients with systemic lupus erythematosus ( SLE), a prototypic autoimmune disorder, produce Gal-8 autoantibodies that impede both its binding to integrins and cell adhesion. These are the first function-blocking autoantibodies reported for a member of the galectin family. These results indicate that Gal-8 constitutes a novel extracellular stimulus for T cells, able to bind specific beta1 integrins and to trigger signaling pathways conducive to cell spreading. Gal-8 could modulate a wide range of T cell-driven immune processes that eventually become altered in autoimmune disorders.[1]References
- Galectin-8 binds specific beta1 integrins and induces polarized spreading highlighted by asymmetric lamellipodia in Jurkat T cells. Cárcamo, C., Pardo, E., Oyanadel, C., Bravo-Zehnder, M., Bull, P., Cáceres, M., Martínez, J., Massardo, L., Jacobelli, S., González, A., Soza, A. Exp. Cell Res. (2006) [Pubmed]
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