Uropod elongation is a common final step in leukocyte extravasation through inflamed vessels

Author:

Hyun Young-Min1,Sumagin Ronen1,Sarangi Pranita P.1,Lomakina Elena1,Overstreet Michael G.1,Baker Christina M.1,Fowell Deborah J.1,Waugh Richard E.1,Sarelius Ingrid H.1,Kim Minsoo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, David H. Smith Center for Vaccine Biology and Immunology, Department of Pharmacology and Physiology; and Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY 14642

Abstract

The efficient trafficking of immune cells into peripheral nonlymphoid tissues is key to enact their protective functions. Despite considerable advances in our understanding of cell migration in secondary lymphoid organs, real-time leukocyte recruitment into inflamed tissues is not well characterized. The conventional multistep paradigm of leukocyte extravasation depends on CD18 integrin–mediated events such as rapid arrest and crawling on the surface of the endothelium and transmigration through the endothelial layer. Using enhanced three-dimensional detection of fluorescent CD18 fusion proteins in a newly developed knockin mouse, we report that extravasating leukocytes (neutrophils, monocytes, and T cells) show delayed uropod detachment and become extremely elongated before complete transmigration across the endothelium. Additionally, these cells deposit CD18+ microparticles at the subendothelial layer before retracting the stretched uropod. Experiments with knockout mice and blocking antibodies reveal that the uropod elongation and microparticle formation are the result of LFA-1–mediated adhesion and VLA-3–mediated cell migration through the vascular basement membrane. These findings suggest that uropod elongation is a final step in the leukocyte extravasation cascade, which may be important for precise regulation of leukocyte recruitment into inflamed tissues.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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