» Articles » PMID: 2277085

Flow Cytometric Analysis and Modeling of Cell-cell Adhesive Interactions: the Neutrophil As a Model

Overview
Journal J Cell Biol
Specialty Cell Biology
Date 1990 Dec 1
PMID 2277085
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The immune function of granulocytes, monocytes, lymphocytes, and other specialized cells depends upon intercellular adhesion. In many cases the molecules mediating leukocyte cell adhesion belong to the Leu-CAM superfamily of adhesive molecules. To elucidate the events of homotypic aggregation in a quantitative fashion, we have examined the aggregation of neutrophils stimulated with formyl peptides, where aggregate formation is a transient reversible cell function. We have mathematically modeled the kinetics of aggregation using a linear model based on particle geometry and rates of aggregate formation and breakup. The time course was modeled as a three-phase process, each phase with distinct rate constants. Aggregate formation was measured on the flow cytometer; singlets and larger particles were distinguished using the intravital stain LDS-751. Aggregation proceeded rapidly after stimulation with formyl peptide (CHO-nle-leu-phe-nle-tyr-lys). The first phase lasted 30-60 s; this was modeled with the largest aggregation rate and smallest rate of disaggregation. Aggregate formation plateaued during the second phase which lasted up to 2.5 min. This phase was modeled with an aggregation rate nearly an order of magnitude less than that of the initial fast phase, whereas the disaggregation rate for this phase did not change significantly. A third phase where disaggregation predominated, lasted the remaining 2-3 min and was modeled with a four to fivefold increase of the disaggregation rate. The mechanism of cell-cell adhesion in the plateau phase was probed with the monoclonal antibody IB4 to the CD18 subunit of the adhesive receptor CR3. Based on these studies it appears that new aggregates do not form to a large degree after the first phase of aggregate formation is complete. However, new adhesive contact sites may form within the contact region of these adherent cells to keep the aggregates together.

Citing Articles

Neutrophils actively swell to potentiate rapid migration.

Nagy T, Strickland E, Weiner O Elife. 2024; 12.

PMID: 38953885 PMC: 11219036. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.90551.


Neutrophils actively swell to potentiate rapid migration.

Nagy T, Strickland E, Weiner O bioRxiv. 2023; .

PMID: 37292824 PMC: 10245588. DOI: 10.1101/2023.05.15.540704.


The Aminopeptidase CD13 Induces Homotypic Aggregation in Neutrophils and Impairs Collagen Invasion.

Fiddler C, Parfrey H, Cowburn A, Luo D, Nash G, Murphy G PLoS One. 2016; 11(7):e0160108.

PMID: 27467268 PMC: 4965216. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160108.


CD11c/CD18 Signals Very Late Antigen-4 Activation To Initiate Foamy Monocyte Recruitment during the Onset of Hypercholesterolemia.

Foster G, Xu L, Chidambaram A, Soderberg S, Armstrong E, Wu H J Immunol. 2015; 195(11):5380-92.

PMID: 26519532 PMC: 4655135. DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1501077.


Comparison of sample fixation and the use of LDS-751 or anti-CD45 for leukocyte identification in mouse whole blood for flow cytometry.

Maes M, Davidson L, McDonagh P, Ritter L J Immunol Methods. 2006; 319(1-2):79-86.

PMID: 17187818 PMC: 1896319. DOI: 10.1016/j.jim.2006.10.016.


References
1.
Chang H, ROBERTSON C . Platelet aggregation by laminar shear and Brownian motion. Ann Biomed Eng. 1976; 4(2):151-83. DOI: 10.1007/BF02363645. View

2.
Chatila T, Geha R, Arnaout M . Constitutive and stimulus-induced phosphorylation of CD11/CD18 leukocyte adhesion molecules. J Cell Biol. 1989; 109(6 Pt 2):3435-44. PMC: 2115914. DOI: 10.1083/jcb.109.6.3435. View

3.
Karino T, Goldsmith H . Aggregation of human platelets in an annular vortex distal to a tubular expansion. Microvasc Res. 1979; 17(3 Pt 1):217-37. DOI: 10.1016/s0026-2862(79)80001-1. View

4.
JACOB H, Hammerschmidt D . Complement-induced granulocyte aggregation. Importance in myocardial infarction and shock lung. JAMA. 1981; 245(20):2013-7. DOI: 10.1001/jama.245.20.2013. View

5.
Bell G . Estimate of the sticking probability for cells in uniform shear flow with adhesion caused by specific bonds. Cell Biophys. 1981; 3(3):289-304. DOI: 10.1007/BF02782629. View