Dual role of the CD44 molecule in T cell adhesion and activation.
Open Access
- 15 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 143 (8) , 2457-2463
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.143.8.2457
Abstract
Studies of T cell adhesion and activation reveal two new functions of the CD44 molecule, a molecule now recognized to be identical to three molecules of functional interest: Pgp-1, Hermes, and extracellular matrix receptor type III (ECMRIII). By screening for mAb which inhibit T cell adhesion to E, we have identified a functionally unique CD44-specific mAb, NIH44-1, which partially inhibits T cell rosetting by binding to CD44 on the E. NIH44-1, which immunoprecipitates a protein of 85 to 110 kDa with broad tissue distribution, was determined to be specific for CD44 based on comparison of its tissue distribution with multiple CD44-specific reference mAb and sequential immunoprecipitation with such mAb. Anticipating a role for many adhesion molecules in signal transduction, we studied the effect of CD44 mAb on T cell activation and observed that CD44 mAb dramatically augments T cell proliferation induced by CD3- and CD2-receptor-mediated activation. The augmentation of the response to immobilized CD3 mAb by exhaustively monocyte-depleted T cells indicates that augmentation can be mediated by binding to the T cell. Thus, our studies demonstrate specific new roles for CD44 in T cell adhesion and activation. Furthermore, we suggest that: 1) CD44 has a role in adhesion of cells of multiple lineages; and 2) CD44 may participate in adhesion not (only) by functioning as an adhesion receptor but rather by serving as an anchorage site for other adhesion molecules.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
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