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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Mobilizing lipocortin 1 in adherent human leukocytes downregulates their transmigration.

Polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) migration into sites of inflammation is fundamental to the host defense response. Activation of endothelial cells and PMNs increases the expression or activation of adhesion molecules, culminating in rolling and subsequent adherence of these cells to the vascular wall. Further activation of adherent PMNs, possibly by endothelial cell ligands, leads, within a few minutes, to extravasation itself. This process is not clearly understood, but adhesion molecules or related proteins, as well as endogenous chemokines, may play an important role. The anti-inflammatory glucocorticoids delay extravasation, which implies that an inhibitory regulatory system exists. Resting PMNs contain abundant cytoplasmic lipocortin 1 ( LC1, also called annexin I)', and the activity profile of this protein suggests that it could reduce PMN responsiveness. To investigate this we have assessed neutrophil transmigration both in vivo and in vitro and examined the content and subcellular distribution of LC1 in PMNs by fluorescence-activated cell-sorting (FACS) analysis, western blotting and confocal microscopy. We report that LC1 is mobilized and externalized following PMN adhesion to endothelial monolayers in vitro or to venular endothelium in vivo and that the end point of this process is a negative regulation of PMN transendothelial passage.[1]

References

  1. Mobilizing lipocortin 1 in adherent human leukocytes downregulates their transmigration. Perretti, M., Croxtall, J.D., Wheller, S.K., Goulding, N.J., Hannon, R., Flower, R.J. Nat. Med. (1996) [Pubmed]
 
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