Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2022)

Spatiotemporal characteristics of P-selectin-induced β2 integrin activation of human neutrophils under flow

  • Xiaoxi Sun,
  • Bing Huang,
  • Bing Huang,
  • Yuping Pan,
  • Jinhua Fang,
  • Hefeng Wang,
  • Yanru Ji,
  • Yingchen Ling,
  • Pei Guo,
  • Jiangguo Lin,
  • Jiangguo Lin,
  • Quhuan Li,
  • Ying Fang,
  • Jianhua Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1023865
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Activation of integrins is crucial for recruitment of flowing leukocytes to inflammatory or injured vascular sites, but their spatiotemporal characteristics are incompletely understood. We discovered that β2-integrin activation over the entire surface of neutrophils on immobilized P-selectin occurred via mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) or non-MAPK signaling with a minute-level timescale in a force-dependent manner. In flow, MAPK signaling required intracellular Ca2+ release to activate integrin within 2 min. Integrin activation via non-MAPK signaling occurred first locally in the vicinity of ligated P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) within sub-seconds, and then over the entire cell surface within 1 min in an extracellular Ca2+ influx-dependent manner. The transition from a local (but rapid) to global (but slow) activation mode was triggered by ligating the freshly activated integrin. Lipid rafts, moesin, actin, and talin were involved in non-MAPK signaling. Fluid loads had a slight effect on local integrin activation with a second-level timescale, but served as enhancers of global integrin activation.

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