Mechanisms Involved in the Binding of Thymocytes to Rat Thymic Dendritic Cells

Author:

Čolić Miodrag1,Ilić Vesna1,Pavlović Miloš D.1ORCID,Tamatani Takuya1,Miyasaka Masayuki2

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Medical Research, Military Medical Academy, Crnotravska 17, Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro

2. Department of Immunology, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, 3-18-22, Hon-Komagome, Bun Kyo, Tokyo 113, Japan

Abstract

The effects of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to cell-surface molecules, divalent cations, and various cell-signaling and metabolic inhibitors on the binding of thymocytes to rat thymic dendritic cells (TDC) were studied using a rosette assay. It was found that TDC/thymocyte adhesion was stronger and faster at 37℃ than at 4℃. Flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that bound thymocytes were predominantly CD4+CD8+and CD4+CD8-, but in comparison to the phenotype of whole thymocytes, they were enriched in the mature TCRαβhisubset. The binding of thymocytes to TDC at 37℃ was almost completely dependent on Ca2+and Mg2+and partly on an intact cytoskeleton and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase. The adhesion was independent of new protein synthesis and the activities of protein kinases A and C, tyrosine kinases, as well as phosphotyrosine protein phosphatases. The TDC/thymocyte adhesion at 37℃ was partly blocked by anti-LFA-1 (WT.1), anti-CD18 (WT.3), and anti-ICAM-1 (1A29) mAb. MAbs to class II MHC (OX-3 and OX-6), CD4 (W3/25), CD8 (OX-8), and αβTCR (R73) stimulated the adhesion via an LFA-1-dependent pathway, whereas an anti-CD45 mAb (G3C5) stimulated the rosette formation independently of LFA-1. MAbs to CD2 (OX-34), CD11b (ED7), CD11b/c (OX-42), and class I MHC (OX-18) were without significant effects on the adhesion process.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Developmental Biology,Immunology

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