CD31 Signaling Promotes the Detachment at the Uropod of Extravasating Neutrophils Allowing Their Migration to Sites of Inflammation

Social Science Research Network(2022)

引用 1|浏览16
暂无评分
摘要
Effective neutrophil migration to sites of inflammation is crucial for host immunity. A coordinated cascade of steps allows intravascular leukocytes to counteract the shear stress, transmigrate through the endothelial layer and move towards the extravascular, static environment. Those events are tightly orchestrated by integrins but, while the molecular mechanisms leading to their activation have been characterized, the regulatory pathways promoting their detachment remain elusive. In light of this, it has long been known that Platelet-Endothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule (, also known as CD31) deficiency blocks leukocyte transmigration at the level of the outer vessel wall, yet the associated cellular defects are controversial. In this study, we combined an unbiased proteomic study with and single-cell tracking in mice to study the dynamics and role of CD31 during neutrophil migration. We found that CD31 localizes to the uropod of migrating neutrophils along with closed β-integrin and is required for essential neutrophil actin/integrin polarization. Accordingly, the uropod of neutrophils is unable to detach from the extracellular matrix, while antagonizing integrin binding to extracellular matrix components rescues this migratory defect. Conversely, we showed that sustaining CD31 co-signaling actively favors uropod detachment and effective migration of extravasated neutrophils to sites of inflammation . Altogether, our results suggest that CD31 acts as a molecular rheostat controlling integrin-mediated adhesion at the uropod of egressed neutrophils thereby triggering their detachment from the outer vessel wall to reach the inflammatory sites.
更多
查看译文
关键词
neutrophils
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要