Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium

Blood leukocytes have a remarkable capacity to bind to and stop on specific blood vessel areas. Many studies have disclosed a key role of integrin structural changes following the interaction of rolling leukocytes with surface-bound chemoattractants. However, the functional significance of structura...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Philippe eRobert, Dominique eTouchard, Pierre eBongrand, Anne ePierres
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Immunology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fimmu.2013.00108/full
id doaj-8a660f896ba64a4fb1c75675832034bd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8a660f896ba64a4fb1c75675832034bd2020-11-24T22:57:31ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Immunology1664-32242013-05-01410.3389/fimmu.2013.0010848752Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endotheliumPhilippe eRobert0Dominique eTouchard1Pierre eBongrand2Anne ePierres3Aix Marseille UniversiteAix Marseille UniversiteAix Marseille UniversiteAix Marseille UniversiteBlood leukocytes have a remarkable capacity to bind to and stop on specific blood vessel areas. Many studies have disclosed a key role of integrin structural changes following the interaction of rolling leukocytes with surface-bound chemoattractants. However, the functional significance of structural data and mechanisms of cell arrest are incompletely understood. Recent experiments revealed the unexpected complexity of several key steps of cell-surface interaction : i) ligand-receptor binding requires a minimum amount of time to proceed and this is influenced by forces. ii) Also, molecular interactions at interfaces are not fully accounted for by the interaction properties of soluble molecules. iii) Cell arrest depends on nanoscale topography and mechanical properties of the cell membrane, and these properties are highly dynamic. Here, we summarize these results and we discuss their relevance to recent functional studies of integrin-receptor association in cells from a patient with type III leukocyte adhesion deficiency. It is concluded that an accurate understanding of all physical events listed in this review is needed to unravel the precise role of the multiple molecules and biochemical pathway involved in arrest triggering.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fimmu.2013.00108/fulldynamicsAdhesionintegrinavidityclusteringligand-receptor interaction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Philippe eRobert
Dominique eTouchard
Pierre eBongrand
Anne ePierres
spellingShingle Philippe eRobert
Dominique eTouchard
Pierre eBongrand
Anne ePierres
Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium
Frontiers in Immunology
dynamics
Adhesion
integrin
avidity
clustering
ligand-receptor interaction
author_facet Philippe eRobert
Dominique eTouchard
Pierre eBongrand
Anne ePierres
author_sort Philippe eRobert
title Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium
title_short Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium
title_full Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium
title_fullStr Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium
title_full_unstemmed Biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium
title_sort biophysical description of multiple events contributing blood leukocyte arrest on endothelium
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Immunology
issn 1664-3224
publishDate 2013-05-01
description Blood leukocytes have a remarkable capacity to bind to and stop on specific blood vessel areas. Many studies have disclosed a key role of integrin structural changes following the interaction of rolling leukocytes with surface-bound chemoattractants. However, the functional significance of structural data and mechanisms of cell arrest are incompletely understood. Recent experiments revealed the unexpected complexity of several key steps of cell-surface interaction : i) ligand-receptor binding requires a minimum amount of time to proceed and this is influenced by forces. ii) Also, molecular interactions at interfaces are not fully accounted for by the interaction properties of soluble molecules. iii) Cell arrest depends on nanoscale topography and mechanical properties of the cell membrane, and these properties are highly dynamic. Here, we summarize these results and we discuss their relevance to recent functional studies of integrin-receptor association in cells from a patient with type III leukocyte adhesion deficiency. It is concluded that an accurate understanding of all physical events listed in this review is needed to unravel the precise role of the multiple molecules and biochemical pathway involved in arrest triggering.
topic dynamics
Adhesion
integrin
avidity
clustering
ligand-receptor interaction
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fimmu.2013.00108/full
work_keys_str_mv AT philippeerobert biophysicaldescriptionofmultipleeventscontributingbloodleukocytearrestonendothelium
AT dominiqueetouchard biophysicaldescriptionofmultipleeventscontributingbloodleukocytearrestonendothelium
AT pierreebongrand biophysicaldescriptionofmultipleeventscontributingbloodleukocytearrestonendothelium
AT anneepierres biophysicaldescriptionofmultipleeventscontributingbloodleukocytearrestonendothelium
_version_ 1725650517952036864