Specific Phosphorylations Transmit Signals from Leukocyte β2 to β1 Integrins and Regulate Adhesion

0301 basic medicine Cytoplasm Filamins Integrin beta1 Integrin alphaXbeta2 Integrin alpha4beta1 Ligands Lymphocyte Function-Associated Antigen-1 03 medical and health sciences Gene Expression Regulation Cell Movement CD18 Antigens Cell Adhesion Leukocytes Humans Phosphorylation K562 Cells Cells, Cultured Signal Transduction
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m114.588111 Publication Date: 2014-10-03T01:18:26Z
ABSTRACT
The regulation of integrins expressed on leukocytes must be controlled precisely, and members of different integrin subfamilies have to act in concert to ensure the proper traffic of immune cells to sites of inflammation. The activation of β2 family integrins through the T cell receptor or by chemokines leads to the inactivation of very late antigen 4. The mechanism(s) of this cross-talk has not been known. We have now elucidated in detail how the signals are transmitted from leukocyte function-associated antigen 1 and show that, after its activation, the signaling involves specific phosphorylations of β2 integrin followed by interactions with cytoplasmic signaling proteins. This results in loss of β1 phosphorylation and a decrease in very late antigen 4 binding to its ligand vascular cell adhesion molecule 1. Our results show how a member of one integrin family regulates the activity of another integrin. This is important for the understanding of integrin-mediated processes.
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