Ligation of endothelial alpha v beta 3 integrin increases capillary hydraulic conductivity of rat lung. Tsukada, H, et al. Circ. Res., 77: 651-9 (1995)
1994
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Complement-mediated pulmonary edema results from increases in lung capillary hydraulic conductivity (Lp), possibly by receptor-mediated mechanisms. We considered the Lp effects of vitronectin and the vitronectin-containing complement complex SC5b-9, which ligate the integrin alpha v beta 3. Vitronectin, SC5b-9, and SC5b-9-enriched zymosan-activated serum all rapidly increased Lp, as determined by the split-drop technique in single lung capillaries of rat lung. The Lp increases were inhibited by a monospecific (LM609) and a polyclonal (R838) antibody against the alpha v beta 3 integrin but not by an irrelevant monoclonal antibody isotype matched with LM609, by a monoclonal antibody against the alpha v beta 5 integrin, or by preimmune rabbit serum. Vitronectin monomers failed to increase Lp. The tyrosine kinase blockers genistein and methyl 2,5-dihydroxycinnamate caused significant concentration-dependent inhibitions of Lp increases due to vitronectin and zymosan-activated serum. By contrast, the protein kinase C blocker calphostin C had no major effect. We conclude that (1) multivalent ligation of the luminally located alpha v beta 3 integrin of lung capillary endothelium increases transcapillary liquid flux, and (2) the dominant signal transduction pathway for this effect occurs through tyrosine kinase activation. | 7554109
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Serum spreading factor (vitronectin) is present at the cell surface and in tissues. Hayman, E G, et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 80: 4003-7 (1983)
1982
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Monoclonal antibodies were prepared against a cell attachment-promoting protein, serum spreading factor, which had been partially purified from human serum by chromatography on glass bead columns. The antibodies selected were those that reacted with polypeptides that had cell attachment-promoting activity after sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Immunochromatography of human plasma on columns containing the monoclonal antibodies followed by affinity chromatography on heparin-Sepharose yielded material that in sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis gave polypeptides of molecular mass 65 and 75 kilodaltons. Both polypeptides bound each of three monoclonal antibodies and had cell attachment-promoting activity after transfer to nitrocellulose filters. Immunofluorescent staining of tissues with the monoclonal antibodies revealed a fibrillar pattern that was mostly associated with loose connective tissue and overlapped with fibronectin fibrils. Fetal membrane tissue, which showed strong staining with the antibodies in immunofluorescence, also gave 65- and 75-kilodalton polypeptides with cell attachment-promoting activity after chromatography on columns containing the monoclonal antibodies. One source of the tissue protein may be fibroblastic cells, because cultured human fibroblasts also stained with the monoclonal antibodies. The staining was fibrillar and appeared to be associated with the cell surface extracellular matrix. We propose the name "vitronectin" for the various forms of this protein, on the basis of its binding to glass and its adhesive properties. | 6191326
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Isolation of human serum spreading factor. Barnes, D W and Silnutzer, J J. Biol. Chem., 258: 12548-52 (1983)
1982
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Serum spreading factor (SF) was isolated from human serum by a four-step procedure employing affinity chromatography on glass beads, concanavalin A-Sepharose, DEAE-agarose, and heparin-agarose. The final product was purified approximately 260-fold from the starting material and was maximally active in assays of cell spreading-promoting activity at 300 ng/ml. The isolated human SF preparation consisted of two proteins of apparent molecular weights approximately 65,000 (SF65) and 75,000 (SF75). Both SF65 and SF75 have been shown previously to exhibit cell spreading-promoting activity and to bind monoclonal antibody to human serum SF. | 6630199
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