PMID: 8955218Dec 15, 1996Paper

Protease-resistant L-selectin mutants. Down-modulation by cross-linking but not cellular activation

The Journal of Immunology : Official Journal of the American Association of Immunologists
J H StoddartJ W Mier

Abstract

The adhesion molecule L-selectin (CD62L) is rapidly shed from the plasma membrane during leukocyte activation as a result of proteolytic cleavage between Lys321 and Ser322 within the extracellular domain. L-selectin is also down-modulated from the surface in response to cross-linking, possibly through a similar mechanism. To further characterize the mechanism of down-modulation, several L-selectin mutants were generated and transfected into COS cells. Wild-type L-selectin as well as mutants with one or two amino acid substitutions at the cleavage site were nearly quantitatively shed into the culture supernatant. However, mutants in which a nine-amino acid stretch that included the protease-sensitive site was either deleted or replaced with a polyglycine spacer or a comparable region of E-selectin were retained on the cell surface and not detected in the supernatant. These results are consistent with other reports describing protease resistant L-selectin mutants. We also demonstrate that when expressed in L1-2 pre-B cells, the L-selectin nine-amino acid deletion mutant (321del.9), but not wild-type L-selectin, is resistant to down-regulation induced by PMA. However, both wild-type and mutant 321del.9 are completely lost from the...Continue Reading

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Adhesion Molecules in Health and Disease

Cell adhesion molecules are a subset of cell adhesion proteins located on the cell surface involved in binding with other cells or with the extracellular matrix in the process called cell adhesion. In essence, cell adhesion molecules help cells stick to each other and to their surroundings. Cell adhesion is a crucial component in maintaining tissue structure and function. Discover the latest research on adhesion molecule and their role in health and disease here.