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The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling

Two mechanisms have been proposed for regulating rolling velocities on selectins. These are (a) the intrinsic kinetics of bond dissociation, and (b) the reactive compliance, i.e., the susceptibility of the bond dissociation reaction to applied force. To determine which of these mechanisms explains t...

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Autores principales: Alon, Ronen, Chen, Shuqi, Puri, Kamal D., Finger, Erik B., Springer, Timothy A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2136756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9281593
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author Alon, Ronen
Chen, Shuqi
Puri, Kamal D.
Finger, Erik B.
Springer, Timothy A.
author_facet Alon, Ronen
Chen, Shuqi
Puri, Kamal D.
Finger, Erik B.
Springer, Timothy A.
author_sort Alon, Ronen
collection PubMed
description Two mechanisms have been proposed for regulating rolling velocities on selectins. These are (a) the intrinsic kinetics of bond dissociation, and (b) the reactive compliance, i.e., the susceptibility of the bond dissociation reaction to applied force. To determine which of these mechanisms explains the 7.5–11.5-fold faster rolling of leukocytes on L-selectin than on E- and P-selectins, we have compared the three selectins by examining the dissociation of transient tethers. We find that the intrinsic kinetics for tether bond dissociation are 7–10-fold more rapid for L-selectin than for E- and P-selectins, and are proportional to the rolling velocities through these selectins. The durations of pauses during rolling correspond to the duration of transient tethers on low density substrates. Moreover, applied force increases dissociation kinetics less for L-selectin than for E- and P-selectins, demonstrating that reactive compliance is not responsible for the faster rolling through L-selectin. Further measurements provide a biochemical and biophysical framework for understanding the molecular basis of rolling. Displacements of tethered cells during flow reversal, and measurements of the distance between successive pauses during rolling provide estimates of the length of a tether and the length of the adhesive contact zone, and suggest that rolling occurs with as few as two tethers per contact zone. Tether bond lifetime is an exponential function of the force on the bond, and the upper limit for the tether bond spring constant is of the same order of magnitude as the estimated elastic spring constant of the lectin–EGF unit. Shear uniquely enhances the rate of L-selectin transient tether formation, and conversion of tethers to rolling adhesions, providing further understanding of the shear threshold requirement for rolling through L-selectin.
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spelling pubmed-21367562008-05-01 The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling Alon, Ronen Chen, Shuqi Puri, Kamal D. Finger, Erik B. Springer, Timothy A. J Cell Biol Article Two mechanisms have been proposed for regulating rolling velocities on selectins. These are (a) the intrinsic kinetics of bond dissociation, and (b) the reactive compliance, i.e., the susceptibility of the bond dissociation reaction to applied force. To determine which of these mechanisms explains the 7.5–11.5-fold faster rolling of leukocytes on L-selectin than on E- and P-selectins, we have compared the three selectins by examining the dissociation of transient tethers. We find that the intrinsic kinetics for tether bond dissociation are 7–10-fold more rapid for L-selectin than for E- and P-selectins, and are proportional to the rolling velocities through these selectins. The durations of pauses during rolling correspond to the duration of transient tethers on low density substrates. Moreover, applied force increases dissociation kinetics less for L-selectin than for E- and P-selectins, demonstrating that reactive compliance is not responsible for the faster rolling through L-selectin. Further measurements provide a biochemical and biophysical framework for understanding the molecular basis of rolling. Displacements of tethered cells during flow reversal, and measurements of the distance between successive pauses during rolling provide estimates of the length of a tether and the length of the adhesive contact zone, and suggest that rolling occurs with as few as two tethers per contact zone. Tether bond lifetime is an exponential function of the force on the bond, and the upper limit for the tether bond spring constant is of the same order of magnitude as the estimated elastic spring constant of the lectin–EGF unit. Shear uniquely enhances the rate of L-selectin transient tether formation, and conversion of tethers to rolling adhesions, providing further understanding of the shear threshold requirement for rolling through L-selectin. The Rockefeller University Press 1997-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC2136756/ /pubmed/9281593 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Alon, Ronen
Chen, Shuqi
Puri, Kamal D.
Finger, Erik B.
Springer, Timothy A.
The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling
title The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling
title_full The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling
title_fullStr The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling
title_full_unstemmed The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling
title_short The Kinetics of L-selectin Tethers and the Mechanics of Selectin-mediated Rolling
title_sort kinetics of l-selectin tethers and the mechanics of selectin-mediated rolling
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2136756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9281593
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