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1
Transepithelial Migration of Human Neutrophils: An in vitro Model System
1980-07-01

An in vitro model system for studying transepithelial migration of human neutrophils has been developed. Canine kidney epithelial cells grown on micropore filters form a confluent, polarized monolayer with an average transepithelial electrical resistance of 181 ohms\\cdot cm2. Neutrophils in a chemotactic chamber are stimulated to undergo random migration, ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

2
Epithelial Rho-GTPases and the trans-epithelial migration of lymphocytes
2008-01-01

Tissue injury and inflammation leads to leukocyte recruitment from the blood stream into the inflamed organ. Leukocytes in excessive numbers and over prolonged periods can cause tissue damage, and so it is important that the trafficking of leukocytes is regulated. Although much attention has focussed on leukocyte ...

PubMed Central

3
Tre1, a G Protein-Coupled Receptor, Directs Transepithelial Migration of Drosophila Germ Cells
2003-12-22

In most organisms, germ cells are formed distant from the somatic part of the gonad and thus have to migrate along and through a variety of tissues to reach the gonad. Transepithelial migration through the posterior midgut (PMG) is the first active step during Drosophila germ cell migration. Here we report the identification of a novel G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), Tre1, ...

PubMed Central

4
Resolution of cell-mediated airways diseases
2010-06-11

"Inflammation resolution" has of late become a topical research area. Activation of resolution phase mechanisms, involving select post-transcriptional regulons, transcription factors, 'autacoids', and cell phenotypes, is now considered to resolve inflammatory diseases. Critical to this discourse on resolution is the elimination of inflammatory cells through apoptosis and phagocytosis. For major ...

PubMed Central

5
Leukocyte rolling is exclusively mediated by P-selectinin colonic venules
2002-04-01

The objective of the present study was to examine the role of the endothelial selectins (i.e. P- and E-selectin) in leukocyte-endothelium interactions in colonic venules by use of intravital microscopy.Balb/c mice were exposed to dextran sodium sulphate (DSS) in the drinking water for 5 days or treated intraperitoneally (i.p.) with tumour necrosis factor-? (TNF-?) for 3?h.In ...

PubMed Central

6
Correlation of leukocyte adhesiveness, adhesion molecule expression and leukocyte-induced contraction following balloon angioplasty
2000-05-01

The aim of this study was to examine the changes in leukocyte adhesion and leukocyte-induced contraction in balloon-injured rabbit subclavian artery and to correlate these changes with vessel morphology and expression of adhesion molecules on the injured arteries.Rabbits were anaesthetized and their left subclavian arteries were injured by balloon ...

PubMed Central

7
Leukocyte transepithelial migration in lung induced by DMSA functionalized magnetic nanoparticles.
2011-01-01

Magnetic nanoparticles surface-covered with meso-2,3-dimercaptosuccinic acid (MNPs-DMSA) constitute a promising approach for tissue- and cell-targeted delivery of therapeutic drugs in the lung. However, they can also induce a transient transendothelial migration of leukocytes in the organ as a side effect after endovenous administration of MNPs-DMSA. We demonstrated that ...

PubMed

8
Activation of extracellular regulated kinases is required for the increase in airway epithelial permeability during leukocyte transmigration.
2003-07-03

The goal of this study was to determine whether the extracellular regulated kinases (ERK1/2) are involved in leukocyte transmigration across airway epithelium and the associated changes in epithelial permeability. In vitro, we used formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (fMLP) to induce migration of HL-60 cells (a human leukocyte cell line) across sheets of ...

PubMed

9
A separate role for ICAM-1 and fluid shear in regulating leukocyte interactions with straight regions of venular wall and venular convergences
2009-05-26

ObjectiveVariation in expression of adhesion molecules plays a key role in regulating leukocyte behavior, but the contribution of fluid shear to these interactions cannot be ignored. Here we dissected the effects of each of these factors on leukocyte behavior in different venular regions.MethodsLeukocyte behavior was quantified in ...

PubMed Central

10
Evidence for NHE3-mediated Na transport in sheep and bovine forestomach.
2011-05-25

Na absorption across the cornified, multilayered, and squamous rumen epithelium is mediated by electrogenic amiloride-insensitive transport and by electroneutral Na transport. High concentrations of amiloride (>100 ?M) inhibit Na transport, indicating Na(+)/H(+) exchange (NHE) activity. The underlying NHE isoform for transepithelial Na absorption was characterized by ...

PubMed

11
Identification of the Salmonella enterica serotype typhimurium SipA domain responsible for inducing neutrophil recruitment across the intestinal epithelium.
2007-05-18

In human intestinal disease induced by Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium (S. typhimurium) transepithelial migration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) rapidly follows attachment of the bacteria to the epithelial apical membrane. Previously, we have shown that the S. typhimurium effector protein, SipA, plays a pivotal role in signalling ...

PubMed

12
Neutrophil Migration across Tight Junctions Is Mediated by Adhesive Interactions between Epithelial Coxsackie and Adenovirus Receptor and a Junctional Adhesion Molecule-like Protein on Neutrophils
2005-06-01

Neutrophil (polymorphonuclear leukocytes [PMN]) transepithelial migration during inflammatory episodes involves a complex series of adhesive interactions and signaling events. Previous studies have shown that key adhesive interactions between leukocyte CD11b/CD18 and basally expressed fucosylated glycoproteins followed by binding to ...

PubMed Central

13
Interleukin-8 Controls Bacterial Transepithelial Translocation at the Cost of Epithelial Destruction in Experimental Shigellosis
1999-03-01

In shigellosis, the network of cellular interactions mediated by a balance of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines or chemokines is clearly tipped toward acute destructive inflammation of intestinal tissues by the bacterial invader. This work has addressed the role played by interleukin-8 (IL-8) in a rabbit model of intestinal invasion by Shigella flexneri. IL-8, which is largely produced by the ...

PubMed Central

14
A secreted Salmonella protein induces a proinflammatory response in epithelial cells, which promotes neutrophil migration
2000-10-01

In response to Salmonella typhimurium, the intestinal epithelium generates an intense inflammatory response consisting largely of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (neutrophils, PMN) migrating toward and ultimately across the epithelial monolayer into the intestinal lumen. It has been shown that bacterial-epithelial cell interactions elicit the production of inflammatory regulators ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

15
Kindlin-3 is required for beta2 integrin-mediated leukocyte adhesion to endothelial cells.
2009-02-22

Integrin activation is essential for the function of all blood cells, including platelets and leukocytes. The blood cell-specific FERM domain protein Kindlin-3 is required for the activation of the beta1 and beta3 integrins on platelets. Impaired activation of beta1, beta2 and beta3 integrins on platelets and leukocytes is the hallmark of a rare autosomal ...

PubMed

16
Polarized Localization of Epithelial CXCL11 in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Mechanisms of T Cell Egression1
2008-02-01

The exit of lymphocytes from the interstitium of the lung, across the bronchial epithelium and into the airway lumen, is known as egression, or luminal clearance. Egression is important for immune surveillance and the resolution of inflammation, but the mechanisms involved are unknown. We show that egression of human T cells across the bronchial epithelium is a multistep process, driven in part by ...

PubMed Central

17
Development and polarization of the Na+/H+ antiport system during reorganization of LLC-PK1A cells into an epithelial membrane.
1988-05-25

Changes in Na+/H+ antiport activity and transepithelial electrical resistance were analyzed in a clone of LLC-PK1 cells as the dispersed cells became organized into an epithelial membrane. The clone designated LLC-PK1A showed a 250% increase in Na+/H+ exchange activity as compared with the parent cell line. Na+ influx induced by an outwardly oriented H+ gradient is almost ...

PubMed

18
Bidirectional transepithelial water transport: measurement and governing mechanisms.
1999-02-01

In the search for the mechanisms whereby water is transported across biological membranes, we hypothesized that in the airways, the hydration of the periciliary fluid layer is regulated by luminal-to-basolateral water transport coupled to active transepithelial sodium transport. The luminal-to-basolateral (JWL-->B) and the basolateral-to-luminal (JWB-->L) ...

PubMed Central

19
Sodium-phosphate symport by Aplysia californica gut.
2002-02-01

Phosphate transport across plasma membranes has been described in a wide variety of organisms and cell types including gastrointestinal epithelia. Phosphate transport across apical membranes of vertebrate gastrointestinal epithelia requires sodium; whereas, its transport across the basolateral membrane requires antiport processes involving primarily chloride or bicarbonate. To decipher the ...

PubMed

20
Chloride permeability regulation via a cyclic AMP pathway in cultured human sweat duct cells.
1990-02-01

1. Isolated coiled reabsorptive sweat ducts from normal subjects and patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) were cultured in vitro. Cells were harvested and plated onto permeable supports to form confluent cell sheets. The Ussing chamber technique was used to study pharmacological regulation of the transepithelial ion transport in these membranes. 2. Addition of a stable cyclic ...

PubMed Central

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21
ATP is released from rabbit urinary bladder epithelial cells by hydrostatic pressure changes--a possible sensory mechanism?
1997-12-01

1. The responses of rabbit urinary bladder to hydrostatic pressure changes and to electrical stimulation have been investigated using both the Ussing chamber and a superfusion apparatus. These experiments enabled us to monitor changes in both ionic transport across the tissue and cellular ATP release from it. 2. The urinary bladder of the rabbit maintains an electrical potential difference across ...

PubMed

22
Structure and function of L-selectin.
1992-04-01

The selectins are a newly described family of carbohydrate-binding adhesion molecules involved in the regulation of leukocyte traffic. Selectins are composed of an N-terminal C-type lectin domain, a single EGF domain, a variable number of short consensus repeat (SCR) domains, a transmembrane region and a cytoplasmic tail. L-selectin (LAM-1/LECAM-1/LECCAM-1) is the only ...

PubMed

23
Rap1a activation by CalDAG-GEFI and p38 MAPK is involved in E-selectin-dependent slow leukocyte rolling.
2011-06-07

Rolling leukocytes are exposed to different adhesion molecules and chemokines. Neutrophils rolling on E-selectin induce integrin ?L?2-mediated slow rolling on ICAM-1 by activating a phospholipase C (PLC)?2-dependent and a separate PI3K?-dependent pathway. E-selectin-signaling cooperates with chemokine signaling to recruit neutrophils into inflamed tissues. However, the distal ...

PubMed

24
Enhanced interaction of L-selectin with the high endothelial venule ligand via selectively oxidized sialic acids.
1993-02-01

The selectins are adhesion receptors that play key roles in leukocyte trafficking. Each has an N-terminal C-type lectin domain that binds to specific carbohydrates in a calcium-dependent manner. L-selectin recognizes sulfated, sialylated ligands on lymph node high endothelial venules. This recognition is abolished by strong periodate oxidation under ...

PubMed

25
What causes spasm of atherosclerotic arteries? Is regression of plaques beneficial?
1990-01-01

We would like to emphasize three points. First, atherosclerosis produces a profound alteration of vascular responses, which may lead to spasm in several vascular beds. Second, we have proposed that leukocytes as well as platelets may play a critical role in the pathophysiology of vasospasm. Third, there is bad news and good news in relation to regression of atherosclerosis. ...

PubMed Central

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