Publication | Open Access
An Activated L-selectin Mutant with Conserved Equilibrium Binding Properties but Enhanced Ligand Recognition under Shear Flow
43
Citations
65
References
2000
Year
Proteinlipid InteractionProtein AssemblyCell AdhesionMolecular BiologyActivated L-selectin MutantShear FlowSoluble LigandsMatrix BiologyMolecular RecognitionBiophysicsMolecular SignalingShear StressBiochemistryMedicineCell TraffickingBiochemical InteractionVascular BiologyMembrane BiologyBiomolecular InteractionSurface-bound LigandsCell BiologyNatural SciencesEnhanced Ligand RecognitionCell-matrix InteractionCellular BiochemistryMolecular DockingExtracellular Matrix
Selectins mediate the initial tethering and rolling of leukocytes on vessel walls. Adhesion by selectins is a function of both ligand recognition at equilibrium and mechanical properties of the selectin-ligand bond under applied force. We describe an EGF domain mutant of L-selectin with profoundly augmented adhesiveness over that of native L-selectin but conserved ligand specificity. This mutant, termed LPL, was derived by a substitution of the EGF-like domain of L-selectin with the homologous domain from P-selectin. The mutant bound soluble carbohydrate L-selectin ligand with affinity comparable with that of native L-selectin but interacted with all surface-bound ligands much more readily than native L-selectin, in particular under elevated shear flow. Tethers mediated by both native and mutant L-selectin exhibited similar lifetimes under a range of shear stresses, but the rate of bond formation by the mutant was at least 10-fold higher than that of native L-selectin toward distinct L-selectin ligands. Enhanced rate of bond formation by the mutant was associated with profoundly stronger rolling interactions and reduced dependence of rolling on a threshold of shear stress. This is the first demonstration that the EGF domain can modulate the binding of the lectin domain of a selectin to surface-immobilized ligands under shear flow without affecting the equilibrium properties of the selectin toward soluble ligands.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1