1. Junctional adhesion molecule-A-deficient polyrnorphonuclear cells show reduced diapedesis in peritonitis and heart ischemia-reperfusion injury
- Author
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Corada, M, Chimenti, S, Cera, M, Vinci, M, Salio, M, Fiordaliso, F, De Angelis, N, Villa, A, Bossi, M, Staszewsky, L, Vecchi, A, Parazzoli, D, Motoike, T, Latini, R, Dejana, E, Cera, MR, Staszewsky, LI, Dejana, E., VILLA, ANTONELLO, BOSSI, MARIO, Corada, M, Chimenti, S, Cera, M, Vinci, M, Salio, M, Fiordaliso, F, De Angelis, N, Villa, A, Bossi, M, Staszewsky, L, Vecchi, A, Parazzoli, D, Motoike, T, Latini, R, Dejana, E, Cera, MR, Staszewsky, LI, Dejana, E., VILLA, ANTONELLO, and BOSSI, MARIO
- Abstract
Junctional Adhesion Molecule-A (JAM-A) is a transmembrane adhesive protein expressed at endothelial junctions and in leukocytes. Here we report that JAM-A is required for the correct infiltration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) into an inflamed peritoneum or in the heart upon ischemia-reperfusion injury. The defect was not observed in mice with an endothelium-restricted deficiency of the protein but was still detectable in mice transplanted with bone marrow from JAM-A(-/-) donors. Microscopic examination of mesenteric and heart microvasculature of JAM-A(-/-) mice showed high numbers of PMN adherent on the endothelium or entrapped between endothelial cells and the basement membrane. In vitro, in the absence of JAM-A, PMN adhered more efficiently to endothelial cells and basement membrane proteins, and their polarized movement was strongly reduced. This paper describes a nonredundant role of JAM-A in controlling PMN diapedesis through the vessel wall
- Published
- 2005