Adhesion and transcellular migration of neutrophils and B lymphocytes on fibroblasts


Autoria(s): Couture, Patrick; Paradis-Massie, Jérémie; Oualha, Nadia; Thibault, Gaétan
Data(s)

27/08/2009

27/08/2009

2009

Resumo

During tissue inflammation, infiltrated leukocytes may have physical contacts with fibroblasts. We observed that neutrophils and B lymphocytes adhered in a larger proportion than T cells on cultured fibroblasts. Microscopy showed that adhesion was also characterized by leukocyte engulfment by the fibroblasts. In migration assays, only neutrophils and B lymphocytes were selectively able to migrate through a fibroblast barrier. Adhesion and migration were increased by stimulation with tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA). Antibodies against ICAM-1/beta2 integrin blocked the interaction of neutrophils to fibroblasts. For B lymphocytes the couple VCAM-1/alpha4 integrin was also involved in this interaction. Human skin fibroblasts presented similar adhesion characteristics as rat cardiac fibroblasts. By measuring the distance between the border of migration holes and cadherin-positive adherens junctions, more than 65% of the holes correspond to the transcellular route over the paracellular route. Furthermore, vimentin staining revealed that the migration holes were highly nested by intermediate filaments in accordance with the transcellular route. Our results demonstrated that engulfment of neutrophils and B lymphocytes by fibroblasts resulted in selective passage by a transcellular route.

This work was supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

Identificador

Couture P, Paradis-Massie J, Oualha N, Thibault G. Adhesion and transcellular migration of neutrophils and B lymphocytes on fibroblasts. Exp Cell Res. 2009;315(13):2192-206.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkm970

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/2967

Idioma(s)

en

Palavras-Chave #Cell trafficking #Emperipolesis #B cells #Neutrophils #Adhesion molecules #Fibroblasts
Tipo

Article