Abstract
Adhesion between platelets and neutrophils is mediated through the interaction of P-selectin on activated platelets with a carbohydrate- containing structure on neutrophils, and occurs under both static and shear conditions. Recent studies using flow chambers have shown that neutrophils become activated after binding to surface-adherent platelets expressing P-selectin. The objective of the present study was to investigate the effect of such activation on the interactions of platelet P-selectin with its ligand on neutrophils. Flow cytometric analyses using P-selectin chimeras revealed that activation induced a rapid and marked reduction in chimera binding, with levels of binding decreased by 71% after 15 minutes of stimulation with the chemotactic agent, FMLP. Using a visual assay of platelet-neutrophil rosetting, we showed that the P-selectin ligand was translocated and clustered at the uropod of neutrophils following the shape changes and polarization induced by chemotactic stimulation. Activated neutrophils bound to surface-adherent platelets also displayed the clustering of P-selectin ligand at the uropod, and these neutrophils detached from the platelets when a shear stress (2 dynes/cm2) was applied through the adhesion chamber. These results indicate that chemotactic stimulation of neutrophils induces changes in the surface expression and distribution of a biologically relevant ligand for P-selectin, and that these changes might influence the adhesive interactions occurring between neutrophils and activated platelets.
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