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Immunology Research Group and Departments of Physiology and Biophysics and Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1
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ABSTRACT |
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Although known for its role
in hemostasis, there is a growing body of evidence that thrombin can
induce leukocyte recruitment and contribute to the inflammatory
response. An in vitro parallel-plate flow chamber was used to
systematically examine thrombin-induced neutrophil interactions with
human endothelium. Stimulation of endothelial cells with thrombin (1 U/ml) resulted in an immediate, P-selectin-dependent increase in
neutrophil rolling and adhesion that was comparable in magnitude to
optimal levels of histamine (the classical inducer of P-selectin).
However, thrombin, but not histamine, induced a delayed (4 h)
E-selectin-dependent rolling similar to that of tumor
necrosis factor-
, suggesting that thrombin has the unique ability to
recruit neutrophils by an early P-selectin and a delayed E-selectin
pathway. Surprisingly, inhibition of E-selectin expression with the
general protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide induced P-selectin
expression 4 h after thrombin stimulation. Cycloheximide and thrombin
(4 h) induced sufficient P-selectin-dependent rolling to recruit as
many neutrophils as were recruited with 4 h of stimulation with
thrombin alone. Histamine in the presence of cycloheximide or
cycloheximide alone did not evoke the P-selectin response at 4 h,
suggesting that this was not due to direct cycloheximide induction of
P-selectin. Treatment of endothelium with tumor necrosis factor-
(an
E-selectin inducer) and cycloheximide also eliminated E-selectin
expression but, much like thrombin, induced P-selectin expression and
neutrophil recruitment. In conclusion, inhibition of E-selectin via
protein synthesis inhibition activates the protein
synthesis-independent pathway of P-selectin expression to support
adequate leukocyte recruitment.
leukocytes; endothelium; adhesion molecules; thrombin; tumor necrosis factor
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE RECRUITMENT OF LEUKOCYTES to the site of inflammation is a series of sequential steps beginning with initial contact of leukocytes with the endothelium termed tethering and rolling, which appears to be absolutely critical for subsequent adhesion and emigration of leukocytes out of the vasculature (1, 17, 20). Leukocyte rolling is mediated by two endothelial selectins: P-selectin and E-selectin. P-selectin exists in a prestored pool in Weibel-Palade bodies of endothelial cells and is rapidly mobilized (within minutes) to induce acute leukocyte recruitment, but its expression disappears by 60 min (5, 11). On the other hand, E-selectin is not presynthesized and requires de novo protein synthesis for its upregulation, so that leukocyte recruitment begins after ~90-120 min of endothelial stimulation (2, 3). Whether any cross talk exists between these pathways, whether the induction of E-selectin causes the downregulation of P-selectin, or even whether interruption of one pathway can impact on the other pathway remains entirely unknown. Inasmuch as two very distinct nonoverlapping groups of inflammatory mediators regulate the early P-selectin expression and delayed E-selectin expression, it is conceivable that the two pathways work in isolation of each other. Histamine, thrombin, and cysteinyl leukotrienes induce rapid P-selectin expression, whereas tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interleukin-1 induce the synthesis of E-selectin (3, 5, 14, 20). However, a recent study has demonstrated that thrombin-treated endothelium may also induce E-selectin expression (8), placing this serine protease into a separate and perhaps exclusive class of mediators able to induce rapid P-selectin mobilization and E-selectin protein synthesis.
There is no evidence to suggest that the expression of E-selectin and P-selectin is interrelated, inasmuch as P-selectin is thought to be reinternalized as E-selectin begins to be expressed at the endothelial surface in the human system. There may be some evidence of cross talk between E-selectin and P-selectin in the murine system. Antigen-induced leukocyte recruitment at 4 h in mouse muscle microvessels was entirely dependent on P-selectin, inasmuch as an antibody completely inhibited rolling and subsequent adhesion. However, when the same experiment was conducted in a P-selectin-deficient mouse where the gene for P-selectin was deleted through homologous recombination, E-selectin was produced in sufficient quantities to support rolling and recruit adequate numbers of leukocytes (6). Although this is a classic example of a compensatory mechanism in the P-selectin knockout mice, it hints at the possibility that inhibiting the production of one endothelial selectin may prompt expression of the other endothelial selectin. Because thrombin activates the endothelium to induce expression of P-selectin and E-selectin, we used this serine protease to examine the interrelationship between P-selectin and E-selectin expression and/or function.
In this study we used a systematic approach, including measurement of selectin expression as well as a parallel-plate flow chamber to obtain functional rolling data, and detailed the ability of thrombin to induce both endothelial selectin pathways of neutrophil recruitment in a human system under flow conditions. Our data reveal that thrombin induces rapid, P-selectin-dependent neutrophil rolling and adhesion over the first 30 min and delayed E-selectin-dependent leukocyte recruitment at 4 h. Surprisingly, inhibition of E-selectin protein synthesis inhibited the induction of the E-selectin pathway but invoked the protein synthesis-independent pathway of P-selectin expression that ensured adequate leukocyte recruitment. This was not the effect of protein synthesis inhibition per se, inasmuch as cycloheximide alone or in the presence of histamine (another P-selectin inducer) did not induce leukocyte recruitment at 4 h. This endothelial selectin switch from E-selectin to P-selectin was also observed for TNF, suggesting that the human system can overcome the inhibition of E-selectin with rapid mobilization of P-selectin and, for the first time, that there is intracellular cross talk for the two pathways.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Antibodies. The blocking anti-P-selectin (G1) and the nonblocking anti-P-selectin (S12) antibodies were generously provided by Dr. R. P. McEver. The blocking anti-E-selectin antibody was purified from the supernatant of an antibody-secreting hybridoma (HB-10135, American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD). A second E-selectin antibody (EL-246) was used to measure E-selectin expression in ELISA (kindly provided by Dr. M. A. Jutila). The supernatant was first concentrated by centrifugation, and the antibody was purified using an IgG purification kit [ImmunoPure (A), Pierce, Rockford, IL].
Cell culture. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were harvested from freshly obtained umbilical cords, as previously described (7, 12, 13). Briefly, umbilical cord veins were rinsed of formed blood products with warm PBS, then the vein was filled with collagenase (320 U/ml in PBS; Worthington Biochemical, Freehold, NJ). After 20 min of incubation in warm PBS, the cords were gently massaged to ensure detachment of endothelial cells from the vessel wall. The digest was collected into centrifuge tubes containing heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum to inactivate the collagenase and centrifuged (400 g for 10 min). The pellet was resuspended in medium 199 (GIBCO BRL, Grand Island, NY) supplemented with 20% fetal bovine serum and an antibiotic cocktail, but no endothelial cell mitogen. The cells were then seeded into fibronectin-coated T25 culture flasks and grown to confluence (2-5 days). On confluence, the HUVEC were rapidly detached with trypsin-EDTA (GIBCO BRL) and seeded heavily onto fibronectin-coated glass coverslips. The heavy seeding and lack of mitogen in the media minimize cell growth and, thereby, permit cells to express P-selectin, which is otherwise lost (7). Consequently, only first-passage HUVEC were used for all experiments.
Neutrophil isolation. Human neutrophils were harvested from acetate-citrate-dextrose-anticoagulated venous blood collected from healthy donors. All isolation steps were performed at room temperature. Neutrophils were purified by dextran sedimentation, then centrifuged through a Ficoll-Hypaque density gradient. Isolated neutrophils were resuspended in Hanks' balanced salt solution buffer with Ca2+ and Mg2+ and used at a density of 106 cells/ml. The neutrophil suspensions were warmed in a 37°C water bath for 5 min before all flow chamber experiments.
Flow chamber assay. To study selectin-dependent neutrophil-endothelial cell interactions under shear conditions, a flow chamber assay was used as previously described (13). Glass coverslips with confluent monolayers of HUVEC were mounted into a polycarbonate chamber with parallel-plate geometry. The flow chamber was placed onto an inverted microscope stage, which was enclosed in a warm air cabinet, and the temperature was maintained at 37°C. A syringe pump (Harvard Apparatus) was used to draw the freshly isolated neutrophils over monolayers at a shear of 2 dyn/cm2. Neutrophil interactions with the endothelium were visualized and recorded using phase-contrast microscopy (×10 objective, ×10 eyepiece).
ELISA for cell surface adhesion molecule expression. Briefly, HUVEC were seeded at confluence into fibronectin-coated wells, treated with the appropriate stimuli, fixed, and blocked with 1% BSA. The endothelial cells were then labeled with 2 µg/ml of S12 [a nonblocking P-selectin monoclonal antibody (MAb)] or with 50 µg/ml of EL-246 (an E-selectin antibody) (15). Endothelial cells were then washed and labeled with a peroxidase-labeled goat anti-mouse IgG (1 µg/ml; Dako), washed a final time, and color developed with a tetramethyl benzidine one-step substrate system (Dako). The color reaction was stopped with 0.18 M H2SO4, and color was read on a plate reader at 450 nm.
Experimental protocol. The immediate (30 min) and prolonged (4 h) effects of thrombin on the endothelium were tested. To test the immediate effects of thrombin, neutrophils were perfused in buffer over unstimulated endothelial cell monolayers for a control period of 6 min. Then, at 6 min, thrombin (1 U/ml) was added to the neutrophil perfusion and was continually drawn over the HUVEC monolayers for the duration of the 30-min experiment. To test the prolonged effects of thrombin, HUVEC monolayers were kept in petri dishes, gently washed once with warm sterile PBS, stimulated with thrombin (1 U/ml) for 3 min, washed with PBS, and incubated in HUVEC media for 4 h. HUVEC monolayers were assembled into the flow chamber 4 h after stimulation, and then neutrophils were perfused across the monolayers. Preliminary experiments revealed that 1 U/ml of thrombin for 3 min elicited optimal neutrophil rolling and adhesion at 4 h, whereas higher concentrations of thrombin and/or longer exposure times of the endothelium to thrombin were cytotoxic. To ensure that endotoxin contamination was not mediating the thrombin-induced E-selectin effect, thrombin was mixed with polymyxin B cone before stimulation of endothelial cell monolayers. Polymyxin B was also present in HUVEC media for the 4-h period after HUVEC stimulation with thrombin. All flow chamber experiments were carried out for 30 min.
Protein synthesis was inhibited with cycloheximide (5-50 µg/ml) with and without thrombin, with histamine (a P-selectin but not an E-selectin inducer), and with TNF-
(an
E-selectin but not a P-selectin inducer) and then examined at 4 h. This
concentration of cycloheximide was used, inasmuch as it effectively
inhibited TNF-
-induced E-selectin expression. For thrombin, 5 µg/ml of cycloheximide was sufficient to block E-selectin expression.
Statistics. All flow chamber data are reported as mean ± SE and run a minimum of three separate times on three separate cords. Most experiments were run at least eight times. Means were compared using the Mann-Whitney U test. Statistical significance was set at P < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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Thrombin stimulation of HUVEC rapidly induces neutrophil rolling.
Figure 1 demonstrates that, under flow
conditions, neutrophils perfused over unstimulated endothelial cell
monolayers did not roll, whereas neutrophils began to roll within
minutes of thrombin (1 U/ml) introduction into the perfusion
buffer. Neutrophil rolling persisted for the duration of the
experimental period. The rolling was completely P-selectin dependent,
inasmuch as it was rapidly and completely inhibited by a blocking
anti-P-selectin MAb (G1, 2 µg/ml) administered 20 min after thrombin
stimulation of the endothelium (Fig. 1). If P-selectin antibody was not
added, the number of rolling leukocytes did not decrease over the next 10 min (data not shown). We chose to stimulate the endothelium with 1 U/ml of thrombin, inasmuch as this concentration caused optimal
neutrophil rolling, whereas higher concentrations caused endothelial
injury. The induction of leukocyte rolling by thrombin was not due to
the injurious effect of thrombin on the endothelial cell, inasmuch as
addition of anti-thrombin III (an endogenous inhibitor of thrombin) to
thrombin-treated endothelium, but not histamine-treated endothelium,
reversed the rolling process (data not shown). Noteworthy was the very
significant accumulation of cells on the thrombin-treated monolayer
(Fig. 1B). In fact, most of the rolling neutrophils adhered
over time rather than rolling through the field of view. Thrombin
induced a rolling and adhesion profile similar to that of other
rapid inducers of P-selectin, including histamine (Fig.
2). Neutrophil rolling velocity (15-20 µm/s) did not significantly differ between histamine and thrombin stimulation (data not shown).
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HL-60 cells also roll on thrombin-stimulated endothelial cells.
To ensure that the rolling was not a result of platelet contamination
in neutrophil suspensions, we examined whether HL-60 cells, a
myelomonocytic cell line, could also roll on thrombin-stimulated endothelium. As shown in Fig. 3, there were
no HL-60-endothelial cell interactions on unstimulated endothelium
during the control period. However, after thrombin stimulation, HL-60
cells began to roll within minutes, in a platelet-free system. The
number of HL-60 cells rolling increased with time in a manner similar to that seen with neutrophils.
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Prolonged endothelial stimulation with thrombin causes
E-selectin-dependent neutrophil rolling.
We next examined whether thrombin stimulation of endothelium would
support neutrophil-endothelium interactions at 4 h. Figure 4A demonstrates a significant
increase in neutrophil rolling 4 h after thrombin stimulation. The
thrombin data in Fig. 4 are at the high end of the number of rolling
cells observed at 4 h after thrombin stimulation, but generally the
levels ranged between as few as 200 and as many as 1,600 cells per
field of view. Figure 4B demonstrates that a significant number
of neutrophils also adhered firmly to endothelium treated for 4 h.
Because of the day-to-day variability, each experiment was completed
with its own control.
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Translational inhibition of thrombin-induced E-selectin
upregulates P-selectin.
Figure 5 is a summary of data for
E-selectin and P-selectin expression during stimulation with thrombin
or with thrombin and the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide.
Elevated levels of E-selectin expression but little P-selectin were
noted on the endothelial surface 4 h after thrombin stimulation. The
level of P-selectin was not different from baseline levels and failed to support rolling in flow chamber experiments. When protein synthesis was inhibited with cycloheximide, E-selectin expression was inhibited to baseline levels, whereas P-selectin expression was greatly increased. The adhesion molecule expression data paralleled the rolling
results. At 4 h after thrombin stimulation, an anti-P-selectin MAb (G1)
had absolutely no effect on neutrophil rolling (Fig. 6). The anti-E-selectin antibody (7A9, 10 µg/ml) completely inhibited all neutrophil rolling at 4 h on
endothelium treated with thrombin. When neutrophils were perfused over
thrombin- and cycloheximide-treated endothelium, there was a 50%
inhibition of neutrophil rolling, but there was still more than twice
the amount of rolling as with acute thrombin treatment. However, in the
presence of cycloheximide at a concentration that inhibited E-selectin
synthesis (Fig. 5), anti-P-selectin antibody completely inhibited all
rolling (Fig. 6). Cycloheximide on its own did not stimulate any
rolling (Fig. 6).
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Adhesion molecule switching does not occur with histamine.
Figure 7 demonstrates that histamine (25 µM) caused a rapid (within minutes) increase in neutrophil rolling on
endothelium. When neutrophils were perfused over endothelium 4 h after
histamine stimulation, no interactions were observed, consistent with
the view that the histamine-induced P-selectin effect is only short term. Moreover, because no neutrophil-endothelial interactions were
noted, the data also suggest that histamine does not activate the
E-selectin pathway. Under these conditions, when histamine was given
with cycloheximide for 4 h, no rolling was noted at 4 h. These data
support the view that cycloheximide does not impair the ability of
P-selectin to be reinternalized from the surface of endothelium.
Cycloheximide alone caused no leukocyte recruitment. Moreover,
cycloheximide did not appear to have any detrimental effect on
P-selectin expression, inasmuch as addition of histamine or thrombin 4 h after cycloheximide induced a normal rapid P-selectin response (data
not shown).
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Adhesion molecule switching occurs with TNF-
.
To test the possibility that activation of the E-selectin
synthesis pathway was necessary to induce rapid
P-selec- tin expression in the presence of cycloheximide, we
chose TNF-
, which induces E-selectin, but not
P-selectin, expression. As shown in Fig.
8, control experiments, performed in the
absence of cycloheximide, induced neutrophil rolling and adhesion on
the endothelium that was inhibited by 7A9, an anti-E-selectin MAb. The
remaining few cells rolled via a P-selectin-independent, unidentified
mechanism. An L-selectin-dependent mechanism may be responsible for the
residual leukocyte rolling. Neutrophils still rolled on HUVEC and
adhered to HUVEC monolayers that were stimulated with TNF along with
cycloheximide (Fig. 8). This rolling was completely inhibited by an
anti-P-selectin antibody (Fig. 8).
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DISCUSSION |
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Neutrophil recruitment to the site of injury is a stepwise process
dependent on a cascade of events initiated by selectin-dependent rolling. The rolling interaction has been shown to be induced by
various proinflammatory mediators and is critical for subsequent leukocyte adhesion and infiltration into tissues (9, 10, 19). Thrombin
is a serine protease generated at sites of vascular injury and is
primarily thought to play a key role in coagulation. It has received
far less attention as an inflammatory mediator. However, there is a
growing body of evidence that thrombin is also important in recruiting
leukocytes in various inflammatory conditions, including
ischemia-reperfusion and sepsis (4, 13). In this study we have
demonstrated that thrombin induced immediate (minutes) and delayed
(hours) neutrophil rolling and adhesion under flow conditions. The
early neutrophil rolling was entirely mediated by P-selectin, whereas
neutrophil rolling at 4 h was entirely mediated by E-selectin. There
appeared to be no overlap between the two molecules, inasmuch as there
was absolutely no E-selectin-dependent rolling at the early time point
and no P-selectin-dependent rolling at 4 h after thrombin stimulation.
The thrombin-induced E-selectin production was protein synthesis
dependent, inasmuch as protein synthesis inhibition completely
prevented E-selectin adhesion molecule expression and
E-selectin-dependent neutrophil rolling. Surprisingly, when E-selectin
upregulation was inhibited after thrombin stimulation, neutrophil
recruitment was not prevented and was entirely mediated by P-selectin.
This was not seen with another P-selectin inducer, histamine, but
was observed with the E-selectin inducer TNF-
. To our
knowledge, this is the first demonstration that translational
inhibition of E-selectin leads to rapid P-selectin expression,
suggesting potential cross talk between the endothelial selectins.
It is clear that, in humans, at least two endothelial selectin pathways for capturing neutrophils to the vessel surface have evolved, but the two pathways were thought not to overlap temporally to any significant degree. The first pathway is a rapid mobilization of presynthesized P-selectin from Weibel-Palade bodies that occurs within the first few minutes of endothelial stimulation but diminishes within 60-90 min. The second pathway is entirely dependent on protein synthesis and begins to express E-selectin on the surface of the endothelium at ~90-120 min. Therefore, as E-selectin expression is increased, P-selectin is reinternalized from the endothelial surface into endosomes and ultimately back into Weibel-Palade bodies. The exact reason for the evolution of two temporally distinct pathways remains unclear, inasmuch as both selectins recruit neutrophils (16). From a purely teleological view, the endothelium generates an early, temporary neutrophil recruitment mechanism before the body can synthesize sufficient protein to recruit leukocytes in a more prolonged fashion. Inasmuch as neutrophil recruitment from the circulation is the first line of defense against bacterial infiltration, it is conceivable that a very early and a delayed neutrophil recruitment system are required for optimal bacterial killing. However, our data demonstrate that the temporal relationship can be altered. Protein synthesis inhibition of the E-selectin pathway invokes the rapid mobilization of P-selectin at 4 h, which can recruit neutrophils in a very effective manner. The data demonstrate that the P-selectin pathway, in addition to being an early recruitment pathway, can also serve as a compensatory mechanism if the E-selectin pathway fails.
Another clear distinction between the P-selectin and the E-selectin
pathway in humans is that very different mediators induce the two
endothelial selectin pathways. P-selectin is expressed in response to
histamine, cysteinyl leukotrienes, and oxidants, whereas E-selectin
is synthesized in response to cytokines such as TNF-
and
interleukin-1
. However, it would appear that thrombin could induce
early P-selectin and later E-selectin expression (5, 8). In this study
we extend these observations to demonstrate that both pathways are
expressed in functional quantities in human systems, such that
P-selectin and E-selectin can recruit neutrophils in response to
thrombin under flow conditions. This permitted us to use thrombin
as a tool to demonstrate that the two pathways are not
entirely distinct from each other. Inhibition of E-selectin expression in thrombin-treated endothelium resulted in prolonged P-selectin expression well beyond the normal 60-min time frame. One
potential explanation is cross talk between P-selectin and E-selectin
in the human system. Evidence to support cross talk between P-selectin
and E-selectin has been reported in mice (6). Antigen-induced leukocyte
recruitment at 4 h in wild-type mice was entirely dependent on
P-selectin on the basis of antibody inhibition studies. However, when
the same experiment was performed in P-selectin-deficient mice,
E-selectin was produced in sufficient quantities to recruit adequate
numbers of leukocytes. Clearly, the system compensates in the
P-selectin knockout mice, such that deletion of one endothelial
selectin may activate the expression of the other endothelial selectin.
Although the data do support the view that cross talk exists between the two endothelial selectin pathways in the human system, there may be a number of alternative explanations unrelated to thrombin. First, protein synthesis inhibition is known to activate the stress kinase pathway (21), which may cause the ongoing P-selectin expression. However, this is unlikely, inasmuch as cycloheximide alone did not induce P-selectin expression at 4 h. Alternatively, cycloheximide blocks all protein synthesis, and so it is possible that, in addition to inhibiting E-selectin synthesis, this compound may inhibit synthesis of proteins required for the final internalization and processing of P-selectin. However, this is also an unlikely possibility, inasmuch as exposure of endothelium to cycloheximide and histamine for 4 h did not cause P-selectin expression at 4 h, despite the fact that histamine was as effective as thrombin at inducing early P-selectin expression. Clearly, activation of the endothelium or stimulation with histamine was not sufficient to induce delayed P-selectin expression after protein synthesis inhibition.
An alternative explanation is that translational inhibition
of E-selectin was sufficient to activate the P-selectin pathway. To
test this possibility, we used a mediator (TNF-
) that
activated E-selectin, not P-selectin. Indeed, when TNF-
was used to stimulate the endothelium in the presence of protein
synthesis inhibition, neutrophil recruitment was still visible at 4 h
and was almost entirely mediated by P-selectin. These data demonstrate
for the first time that inhibition of E-selectin induces the P-selectin pathway to allow for neutrophil recruitment. The data also suggest that
this observation is not particular for thrombin, which has the
distinctive characteristic of stimulating P-selectin and E-selectin, but may be a general phenomenon for any E-selectin inducer.
The reduction in P-selectin expression with time is not due to
depletion of P-selectin stores, inasmuch as within 10-20 min of
expression of P-selectin to the surface of endothelium, P-selectin is
reinternalized into endosomes and then to the Golgi region and,
finally, is recycled into Weibel-Palade bodies for further reexpression
(18). Therefore, a mechanism must be in place that interrupts the
reexpression of P-selectin. One possibility is that the induction of
E-selectin automatically signals a turn-off mechanism for the
P-selectin pathway. Our data suggest that if E-selectin expression is
inhibited, then P-selectin expression remains elevated on endothelium;
however, the converse is unlikely to be true. For example, P-selectin
is downregulated after histamine stimulation, despite the fact that
histamine does not induce E-selectin. Moreover, we have induced
E-selectin expression with TNF-
and at 4 h still obtain P-selectin
with histamine (unpublished observations), suggesting that E-selectin
can be produced and yet rapid mobilization of P-selectin can still
occur. Clearly, induction of E-selectin does not automatically
translate into inhibition of P-selectin production.
In conclusion, our data reveal potential redundancy among the selectins in human endothelium. Although the redundancy was only apparent after protein synthesis inhibition, this is not trivial, inasmuch as many of the anti-inflammatory drugs (e.g., glucocorticoids, cyclosporin A), as well as newly developed therapeutic agents specifically designed to target transcription factors, impact on protein synthesis and, therefore, could conceivably still induce P-selectin expression. With this in mind, optimal inhibition of leukocyte recruitment may not be achieved by these and other anti-inflammatory drugs and may require targeting of both endothelial selectins for complete inhibition of leukocytes.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors thank Nursing Unit 51 of the Foothills Hospital for providing the umbilical cords from which endothelial cells were obtained.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This study was supported by a grant from the Bayer Inc. of Canada/Canadian Red Cross Society Research and Development Fund. J. Carvalho-Tavares is supported by a Heart and Stroke Foundation Fellowship. P. Kubes is a Medical Research Council Scientist. P. Kubes and R. C. Woodman are scholars of the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: P. Kubes, Immunology Research Group and Dept. of Physiology and Biophysics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada T2N 4N1.
Received 26 July 1999; accepted in final form 28 October 1999.
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