Leukocyte Structural Adaptations in Response to Hemodynamic Forces: Tension Transmitted Through VLA-4 Activates Upstream Rap1, PI3K, and Rac-Dependent Actin Polymerization

During inflammation, leukocytes modulate α4β1(VLA-4) integrin avidity in order to rapidly stabilize nascent adhesive contacts to VCAM-1-expressing endothelial cells and resist detachment forces imparted by the flowing blood. Linkage to the actin cytoskeleton is critical for integrin function, yet th...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rullo, Jacob
Other Authors: Cybulsky, Myron
Language:en_ca
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/34870
Description
Summary:During inflammation, leukocytes modulate α4β1(VLA-4) integrin avidity in order to rapidly stabilize nascent adhesive contacts to VCAM-1-expressing endothelial cells and resist detachment forces imparted by the flowing blood. Linkage to the actin cytoskeleton is critical for integrin function, yet the exact role of the actin cytoskeleton in leukocyte adhesion stabilization under conditions of fluid flow remains poorly understood. We modeled leukocyte (U937 cell, mouse lymphocyte and human monocyte) arrest and adhesion stabilization through the use of a parallel plate flow chamber and visualized cells by phase contrast or fluorescent confocal microscopy. Live cell imaging with Lifeact-transfected U937 cells revealed that mechanical forces imparted by fluid flow induced formation of upstream tension-bearing anchors attached to the VCAM-1-coated surface. Scanning electron microscopy confirmed that flow-induced mechanical force culminates in the formation of structures that anchor monocyte adhesion. These structures are critical for adhesion stabilization, since disruption of actin polymerization dramatically inhibited VLA-4-dependent resistance to detachment, but did not affect VLA-4 expression, affinity modulation, and clustering or constitutive linkage to F-actin. Transfection of dominant-negative constructs and inhibition of kinase function or expression revealed key signaling steps required for upstream actin polymerization and adhesion stabilization. Rap1 was shown to be critical for resistance to flow-induced detachment and accumulated in its GTP form at the sites of anchor formation. A key mediator of force-induced Rac activation and actin polymerization is PI3K. Live cell imaging revealed accumulation of PIP3 within tension-bearing anchors and blockade of PI3K or deficiency of PI3Kγ isoform reproduced the adhesion defect produced by inhibition of actin polymerization. Thus, rapid signaling and structural adaptations enable leukocytes to stabilize adhesion and resist detachment forces; these included activation of Rap1, phosphoinositide 3-kinase γ-isoform and Rac, but not Cdc42.