Abstract

Circulating lymphocytes are recruited from the blood to the tissue by rolling along the endothelium until being stopped by a signaling event linked to the G i α subunit of a heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein; that event then triggers rapid integrin-dependent adhesion. Four chemokines are now shown to induce such adhesion to intercellular adhesion molecule–1 and to induce arrest of rolling cells within 1 second under flow conditions similar to those of blood. SDF-1 (also called PBSF), 6-C-kine (also called Exodus-2), and MIP-3β (also called ELC or Exodus-3) induced adhesion of most circulating lymphocytes, including most CD4 + T cells; and MIP-3α (also called LARC or Exodus-1) triggered adhesion of memory, but not naı̈ve, CD4 + T cells. Thus, chemokines can regulate the arrest of lymphocyte subsets under flowing conditions, which may allow them to control lymphocyte–endothelial cell recognition and lymphocyte recruitment in vivo.

Keywords

ChemokineHeterotrimeric G proteinCell biologyAdhesionCell adhesion moleculeLymphocyteIntercellular adhesion moleculeIntegrinImmunologyChemistryCell adhesionBiologySignal transductionG proteinCellImmune systemBiochemistry

MeSH Terms

AntigensSurfaceCD4-Positive T-LymphocytesCell AdhesionChemokine CCL19Chemokine CCL20Chemokine CCL21Chemokine CXCL12ChemokinesCCChemokinesCXCHumansImmunologic MemoryIntercellular Adhesion Molecule-1LymphocytesMacrophage Inflammatory ProteinsMembrane ProteinsReceptorsCCR6ReceptorsChemokineRheology

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Publication Info

Year
1998
Type
article
Volume
279
Issue
5349
Pages
381-384
Citations
987
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

987
OpenAlex
38
Influential
754
CrossRef

Cite This

James J. Campbell, Joseph A. Hedrick, Albert Zlotnik et al. (1998). Chemokines and the Arrest of Lymphocytes Rolling Under Flow Conditions. Science , 279 (5349) , 381-384. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.279.5349.381

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.279.5349.381
PMID
9430588

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%