Frontiers in Immunology (Jul 2012)

Chemokines, selectins and intracellular calcium flux: temporal and spatial cues for leukocyte arrest

  • Neha eDixit,
  • Scott I Simon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2012.00188
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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Leukocyte trafficking to acute sites of injury or infection requires spatial and temporal cues that fine tune precise sites of firm adhesion and guide migration to endothelial junctions where they undergo diapedesis to sites of insult. Many detailed studies on the location and gradient of chemokines such as IL-8 and other CXCR ligands reveal that their recognition shortly after selectin-mediated capture and rolling exerts acute effects on integrin activation and subsequent binding to their ligands on the endothelium, which directs firm adhesion, adhesion strengthening and downstream migration.. In this process, GPCR signaling has been found to play an integral role in activating and mobilizing intracellular stores of calcium, GTPases such as Rap-1 and Rho and cytokeletal proteins such as Talin and F-actin to facilitate cell polarity and directional pseudopod formation. A critical question remaining is how intracellular Ca2+ flux from CRAC channels such as Orai1 synergizes with cytosolic stores to mediate a rapid flux which is critical to the onset of PMN arrest and polarization. Our review will highlight a specific role for calcium as a signaling messenger in activating focal clusters of integrins bound to the cytoskeleton which allows the cell to attain a migratory phenotype. The precise interplay between chemokines, selectins, and integrins binding under the ubiqutious presence of shear stress from blood flow provides an essential cooperative signaling mechanism for effective leukocyte recruitment.

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