PMID: 8598477Jan 1, 1996Paper

Urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor reversibly dissociates from complement receptor type 3 (alpha M beta 2' CD11b/CD18) during neutrophil polarization

The Journal of Immunology : Official Journal of the American Association of Immunologists
A L KindzelskiiH R Petty

Abstract

Previous studies have shown that the leukocyte integrin CR3 (CD11b/CD18) is physically associated with the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR;CD87), a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked protein, in resting neutrophil membranes. We now show that uPAR-to-CR3 interactions are reversible, correlating with cell shape. Neutrophils were first labeled with fluorescein conjugates of anti-CR3 F(ab')2 fragments followed by capping using a second-step F(ab')2 directed against murine F(ab')2s. Cells were then probed using rhodamine-conjugated anti-uPAR F(ab')2s. Although uPAR co-caps with CR3 on resting cells, uPAR was found to dissociate or "uncap" coincident with spontaneous cell polarization for migration. CR3 caps transformed into uropods while uPAR accumulated at lamellipodia of polarized cells. Capping was unnecessary for the observed distribution of CR3 and uPAR since the anti-CR3 and anti-uPAR F(ab')2s traffic to the uropod and lamellipodium, respectively, during polarization of uncapped cells. These receptors reassociate when cells return to a spherical morphology. In contrast to uPAR, Fc gamma RIIIB did not dissociate from CR3 caps during cell polarization. Resonance energy transfer (RET) microscopy was us...Continue Reading

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