PMID: 9427289Jan 14, 1998Paper

Changes in the distribution of LFA-1, catenins, and F-actin during transendothelial migration of monocytes in culture

Journal of Cell Science
M SandigK A Rogers

Abstract

To determine changes in the spatial and temporal distribution of cell-cell adhesion molecules during transendothelial migration of monocytes, we examined an in vitro model system of diapedesis using high resolution laser scanning confocal microscopy. Human arterial endothelial cells were cultured to confluence on coverslips coated with Matrigel and activated with IL-1beta before the addition of monocytic THP-1 cells. Seventy per cent of monocytes transmigrated through the endothelium within one hour. Diapedesis, but not adhesion and spreading, was inhibited 8-fold in co-cultures that contained endothelial cell conditioned medium, suggesting the release of an endothelial derived inhibitor. Double immunofluorescence labeling with antibodies to LFA-1, alpha- and beta-catenin, VE-cadherin and with Texas Red phalloidin, identified a circular transmigration passage in endothelial cell-cell contact regions. This passage was formed by an LFA-1-containing pseudopodium that penetrated between endothelial cells. Apical to the transmigration passage, monocytes remained round in shape, while underneath the endothelium, they spread along the Matrigel. The margins of the transmigration passage contained high levels of LFA-1 and F-actin, sugge...Continue Reading

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