Dynamic adhesion of CD8-positive cells to antibody-coated surfaces: the initial step is independent of microfilaments and intracellular domains of cell-binding molecules.
Open Access
- 15 May 1994
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 125 (4) , 945-953
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.125.4.945
Abstract
Cell adhesion is a multistep, metabolically active process usually requiring several minutes or even hours to complete. This results in the formation of strong bonds that cannot be ruptured by mechanical forces encountered by living cells in their natural environment. However, the first seconds after contact formation are much more sensitive to external conditions and may be the critical step of adhesion. This step is very difficult to monitor without disturbing the observed system. We addressed this problem by studying the interaction between anti-CD8-coated or control surfaces and murine lymphoid cell lines bearing wild-type CD8 molecules, or genetically engineered molecules bearing extracellular CD8 domains and transmembranar and intracytoplasmic domains of class I histocompatibility molecules, or with extensive deletion of intracytoplasmic domains. We used a new method that consisted of monitoring the motion of cells driven along adhesive surfaces by a hydrodynamic force weaker than the reported strength of single ligand-receptor bonds, but sufficient to make free cells move with an easily detectable velocity of several micrometers per second. Cells exhibited short-term (< or = 0.5 s) adhesions to the surface with a frequency of about one event per 30-s period of contact. These events did not require specific antigen-antibody bonds. However, when anti-CD8 were present, strong adhesion was achieved within < 1 s, since most arrests were longer than a standard observation period of 1 min. This bond strengthening was not affected by cytochalasin, and it did not require intact intracellular domains on binding molecules. It is concluded that the initial step in strong adhesion may be viewed as a passive, diffusion-driven formation of a new specific bonds.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Quantized velocities at low myosin densities in an in vitro motilityNature, 1991
- Leukocytes roll on a selectin at physiologic flow rates: Distinction from and prerequisite for adhesion through integrinsCell, 1991
- Attachment to fibronectin or vitronectin makes human neutrophil migration sensitive to alterations in cytosolic free calcium concentration.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Adhesion receptors of the immune systemNature, 1990
- T-cell receptor cross-linking transiently stimulates adhesiveness through LFA-1Nature, 1989
- Kinetics of granulocyte phagocytosis: Rate limited by cytoplasmic viscosity and constrained by cell sizeCell Motility, 1989
- The major histocompatibility complex-restricted antigen receptor on T cells. IV. An antiidiotypic antibody predicts both antigen and I-specificity.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1983
- Lymphoid Cell Surface Interaction Structures Detected Using Cytolysis‐Inhibiting Monoclonal AntibodiesImmunological Reviews, 1982
- Effects of immobilized immune complexes on Fc- and complement-receptor function in resident and thioglycollate-elicited mouse peritoneal macrophages.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1979
- Control of grip and stick in cell adhesion through lateral relationships of membrane glycoproteinsNature, 1977