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Published in Volume
113, Issue 11 (June 1,2004)
J. Clin. Invest.
113(11):
1596-1606 (2004).
doi:10.1172/JCI20741.
Copyright © 2004,
The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Research Article
Leukocyte engagement of fibrin(ogen) via the integrin receptor
αMβ2/Mac-1 is critical for
host inflammatory response in vivo
Matthew J. Flick1,
XinLi Du1,
David P. Witte1,
Markéta Jiroušková2,
Dmitry A. Soloviev3,
Steven J. Busuttil3,
Edward F. Plow3 and
Jay L. Degen1
1Children’s Hospital Research
Foundation and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio,
USA. 2The Rockefeller University, New York, New York, USA.
3Joseph J. Jacobs Center for Thrombosis and Vascular Biology,
Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Address correspondence to: J.L. Degen, Children’s Hospital
Research Foundation, Developmental Biology - ML7007, Children’s
Hospital Research Foundation Room 2042, 3333 Burnet Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio
45229-3039, USA. Phone: (513) 636-4679; Fax: (513) 636-4317; E-mail:
degenjl@cchmc.org. Published June 1,
2004 Received for publication December 5,
2003, and
accepted in revised form March 30,
2004.
The leukocyte integrin αMβ2/Mac-1
appears to support the inflammatory response through multiple ligands, but local
engagement of fibrin(ogen) may be particularly important for leukocyte function.
To define the biological significance of
fibrin(ogen)-αMβ2 interaction
in vivo, gene-targeted mice were generated in which the
αMβ2-binding motif within the
fibrinogen γ chain (N390RLSIGE396) was
converted to a series of alanine residues. Mice carrying the Fibγ390–396A allele maintained normal levels of fibrinogen, retained normal clotting
function, supported platelet aggregation, and never developed spontaneous
hemorrhagic events. However, the mutant fibrinogen failed to support
αMβ2-mediated adhesion of
primary neutrophils, macrophages, and
αMβ2-expressing cell lines.
The elimination of the
αMβ2-binding motif on fibrin(ogen)
severely compromised the inflammatory response in vivo as evidenced by a
dramatic impediment in leukocyte clearance of Staphylococcus
aureus inoculated into the peritoneal cavity. This defect in bacterial
clearance was due not to diminished leukocyte trafficking but rather to a
failure to fully implement antimicrobial functions. These studies definitively
demonstrate that fibrin(ogen) is a physiologically relevant ligand for
αMβ2, integrin engagement of
fibrin(ogen) is critical to leukocyte function and innate immunity in vivo, and
the biological importance of fibrinogen in regulating the inflammatory response
can be appreciated outside of any alteration in clotting function.
Introduction
The β2 (CD18) subfamily of integrins serves a vital role in
leukocyte function and the development of an effective inflammatory response in vivo
(1). Genetic deficiency in
β2 results in the severe immunological disorder,
leukocyte adhesion deficiency type I (LAD I), that is characterized by a profound
reduction in neutrophil emigration at sites of inflammation and chronic infections
(2). Four members of the integrin
β2 subfamily have been recognized:
αMβ2 (Mac-1, CD11b/CD18, CR3),
αLβ2 (LFA-1, CD11a/CD18),
αXβ2 (p150,95, CD11c/CD18), and
αDβ2 (CD11d/CD18) (3, 4). Based in
part on the prominent expression of
αMβ2 and
αLβ2 on the surface of key
inflammatory cells, including neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages, and mast cells,
these integrins are generally thought to play a dominant role in inflammatory cell
function. The critical importance of
αMβ2 and
αLβ2 in leukocyte function in vivo
has been affirmed and clarified through detailed studies of mice with specific
genetic deficits in αM, αL, and
β2 (5–8). Working in
concert, αLβ2 and
αMβ2 appear to be instrumental in
(a) firm adhesion of leukocytes to the vessel wall that follows selectin-mediated
rolling events (b) transendothelial cell migration and leukocyte trafficking (c)
leukocyte activation, and (d) cell survival/apoptosis (1, 9–11).
Central to unraveling the precise biological roles of
αMβ2 and
αLβ2 is defining the biologically
relevant ligands for each of these integrins. While common ligands are known, these
integrins are clearly designed to engage a distinct repertoire of cell-surface and
ECM proteins (12).
αLβ2 specifically binds
intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM) family members, whereas
αMβ2 is capable of binding a
remarkable assortment of seemingly unrelated ligands, including ICAM-1, the
complement C3 derivative, iC3b, the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor
(uPAR), platelet membrane glycoprotein GP1bα, and immobilized
fibrin(ogen) (12). The physiological and/or
pathological significance of these and other possible ligands that might regulate
leukocyte function and innate immunity remains to be fully defined.
Given the increasingly persuasive evidence suggesting an important interplay between
hemostatic factors and inflammatory systems, fibrin(ogen) has gained increasing
attention as a possible biologically significant ligand for
αMβ2. As a symmetrical dimer that
is recognized by a variety of integrin and nonintegrin receptors on multiple cell
types, fibrinogen could serve as a bridging molecule between leukocytes and other
cells, including platelets. Furthermore, as a protein that is deposited in the form
of a provisional fibrin matrix at virtually any site of overt tissue damage, fibrin
could serve as a significant nondiffusible cue in regulating leukocyte targeting.
Consistent with this general theory, multiple in vitro studies have shown that
leukocyte engagement of fibrin(ogen) can profoundly alter leukocyte function,
leading to changes in cell migration, phagocytosis,
NF-κB–mediated transcription, production of chemokines and
cytokines, degranulation, and other processes (13–18).
These findings have driven efforts to better define the molecular details of the
interaction between fibrinogen and
αMβ2. One notable facet of the binding
interaction is that both fibrin and immobilized fibrinogen are bound with
high-affinity/avidity by αMβ2, whereas
soluble fibrinogen is a relatively poor ligand (19, 20). This conformation-dependent
binding implies that αMβ2 would
generally not be occupied when circulating leukocytes passively encounter plasma
fibrinogen. The integrin, however, would mediate avid cellular engagement of
immobilized fibrin(ogen) at sites of tissue damage, locations where copious fibrin
deposition would be universally observed. Multiple sequences in fibrinogen can
interact with αMβ2, but the most
compelling data point to a critical role of the γ chain in the region of
γ377–395 (P2 sequence; ref. 21, 22) and
particularly its carboxy-terminal region (P2-C). To definitively establish whether
the P2-C region of the fibrinogen γ chain constitutes the critical motif
for αMβ2 binding in the context of the
whole fibrinogen molecule, and to provide the means to evaluate the biological
importance of fibrin(ogen)-αMβ2
interactions in inflammatory processes in vivo, we employed a gene-targeting
approach to convert the mouse fibrinogen γ chain sequence
N390RLSIGE396 to a series of seven alanine residues. This
mutant form of fibrinogen (which we term fibrinogen
γ390–396A) maintained normal hemostatic
properties. Fibrinogen γ390–396A was unable to
support αMβ2-mediated cellular
adhesion in vitro, however, and mice constitutively expressing this mutant form of
fibrinogen exhibited a major impediment in inflammatory cell clearance of
Staphylococcus aureus in the context of acute peritonitis.
MethodsGeneration of gene-targeted mice.
The fibrinogen γ chain targeting vector was constructed using a
portion of the mouse gene cloned from a 129-strain genomic DNA library.
PCR-based mutagenesis was used to convert the exon 9 sequence encoding amino
acid residues 390–396 of the mature protein
(N390RLSIGE396) to a series of alanines. The selected
nucleotide substitutions also resulted in the introduction of a
PvuII site that served to flag the mutant allele in
establishing animal genotypes. All nucleic acid substitutions were confirmed by
DNA sequence analysis. HPRT and HSV-tk minigenes were introduced into the
γ chain targeting vector as described (23). E14TG2a (24) ES cells that had incorporated the targeting vector by homologous
recombination were initially identified by PCR analysis using primers
complementary to the HPRT minigene (primer 5:
5′-CCTGAAGAACGAGATCAGCAGCCTCTGTTC-3′) and the
γ chain gene (primer 6:
5′-ATACATGGATATTAGCCAGGCAGTAGTGAC-3′) that generated a
PCR product of 754 bp. Positive clones were confirmed using a second primer set
complementary to the HPRT minigene (primer 4:
5′-AAATGCTCCAGACTGCCTTG-3′) and the γ chain
gene (primer 3: 5′-ATTGACATGATCACCAAAATTGCTTATTG-3′),
which yielded a 5,735-bp PCR product. Homologous recombination of the targeting
vector was further confirmed by Southern blot analysis of
PvuII-digested genomic DNA. A hybridization probe was prepared
from a 320-bp NcoI/PvuII restriction enzyme
fragment located downstream of the fibrinogen γ chain gene. Mice
were routinely genotyped by PCR analysis using primers immediately upstream
(primer 1: 5′-ATTGACATGATCACCAAAATTGCTTATTG-3′) and
downstream (primer 2:
5′-CCATTTAAGGCTAGGTATCATCTTAAGAAAG-3′) of exon 9, which
yielded a PCR product of 527 bp. The PCR product from the mutant allele was
recognized by the generation of 304-bp and 223-bp fragments following
PvuII digestion. Founder mice were bred to NIH Black Swiss
females (Taconic Farms, Germantown, New York, USA) to generate heterozygous mice
that were then interbred to produce homozygous mutant animals. Animals carrying
the mutant allele were subsequently backcrossed six generations to C57Bl/6 mice,
and these C57Bl/6-inbred mice were used in all of the in vivo studies
presented.
Hematological analyses.
Hematological analyses of blood cells were done using a Cell-Dyn 4000 analyzer,
and plasma thrombin times were established as described previously (25). Fibrin polymerization was evaluated by
standard turbidity assays using both plasma and purified fibrinogen. Briefly,
citrate plasma (diluted tenfold in 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, containing 0.15 M NaCl
and 5 mM ε-amino caproic acid) or 0.15 mg/ml purified fibrinogen in
the same buffer was combined with bovine thrombin (final concentration 0.2 U/ml;
Enzyme Research Laboratories, South Bend, Indiana, USA), and
Ca2+ (10 mM), and OD350 measurements were
taken every 30 seconds. Western blot analysis of plasma fibrinogen was performed
using rabbit anti-mouse fibrinogen in conjunction with an ECL detection system
(Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA) (25). Covalent cross-linking of the fibrinogen
γ chain by factor XIIIa was analyzed using purified fibrinogen.
Briefly, 0.25 mg/ml fibrinogen was combined with 2 U/ml bovine thrombin, 0.15
mg/ml human factor XIII (Enzyme Research Laboratories), and 25 mM
Ca2+ and incubated for up to 10 minutes at
37°C. Reactions were terminated by addition of 2% SDS,
10% β-mercaptoethanol, and 0.1 M EDTA, and the fibrin
chains were analyzed by SDS-PAGE.
Platelet aggregation and flow cytometry.
Platelet aggregation was performed at 37°C using a ChronoLog 560
aggregometer as described (25). Briefly,
platelet suspensions in autologous plasma were prepared from WT, Fibγ390–396A, and
FibγØ5
mice (23) and adjusted to approximately
300,000 platelets per microliter. Aggregation was initiated with ADP (final
concentration of 10 ∝M). Flow-cytometric analyses of fibrinogen
binding to ADP-activated platelets by
αIIbβ3 were done using a
FITC-conjugated rabbit anti-human fibrinogen Ab (DAKO A/S, Glostrup, Denmark),
as previously described (23).
Purification of plasma fibrinogen.
Fibrinogen was isolated from citrated mouse plasma using Gly-Pro-Arg affinity
chromatography (26). The affinity matrix
was prepared using a Gly-Pro-Arg-Pro-Cys peptide (Invitrogen Corp. Carlsbad,
California, USA) conjugated to SulfoLink coupling gel (Pierce Biotechnology
Inc., Rockford, Illinois, USA). Purified fibrinogen was then dialyzed
exhaustively against 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, containing 0.15 M NaCl and 5 mM
ε-amino caproic acid. Fibrinogen concentration was determined
spectrophotometrically and its quality established by SDS-PAGE.
Thrombus formation following FeCl3 injury in vivo.
Thrombosis was induced in the carotid artery of anesthetized mice using
FeCl3 as described in detail elsewhere (27). Thrombus formation was recorded for up to 30
minutes using a miniature video camera (ProVideo CVC-514; CSI/SPECO, Amityville,
New York, USA). Blood flow through the carotid artery was monitored using a
Doppler flow probe (0.5VB307; Transonic Systems Inc., Ithaca, New York, USA)
connected to a flow meter (T106; Transonic Systems Inc.). After the 30-minute
recording period, anesthetized animals were perfused with 4%
paraformaldehyde in PBS, and the injured carotid arteries were collected for
electron microscopy and histology.
Cell adhesion assays using cell lines and primary phagocytes.
Human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cell lines expressing
β2 integrins were described previously (21, 28). THP-1
monocytoid cells were obtained from American Type Culture Collection (Manassas,
Virginia, USA). Human neutrophils were isolated from heparinized peripheral
blood from consenting volunteers by centrifugation though leukocyte separation
media (Histopaque-1119 and Histopague-1077; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, Missouri,
USA) according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. Human blood
monocytes were isolated from EDTA anticoagulated peripheral blood of consenting
volunteers according to an established protocol (29, 30). Mouse resident
peritoneal macrophages were isolated from lavage fluid by placing cell
suspensions in serum containing RPMI-1640 on uncoated Cellstar microtiter
plates. After incubation for 4 hours at 37°C, unbound cells were
aspirated, and the adherent macrophages were subsequently removed using ice-cold
PBS containing 2 mg/ml glucose and 0.5 mM EDTA. These preparations were shown to
be primarily macrophages by staining cytospin preparations with Diff-Quik (Dade
Behring Inc., Deerfield, Illinois, USA). Prior to use in adhesion assays, cell
preparations were suspended in either HBSS (HEK293 cells and monocytes)
containing 5 mM Ca2+ and 5 mM Mg2+
or serum-free RPMI-1640 (THP-1, neutrophils, and macrophages) at a concentration
of 0.5 ∞ 105/ml to 1 ∞ 106/ml. Cell adhesion assays were performed in 48-well or 96-well polystyrene plates
(Costar; Corning Inc., Corning, New York, USA) that were coated with purified
fibrinogen. Nonspecific binding was blocked using either 1%
polyvinylpyrrolidone (HEK293 cells, primary monocytes, and primary macrophages)
or 1% nonfat dry milk (THP-1 cells and primary neutrophils). HEK293
cells were harvested using cell-dissociation buffer (Invitrogen Corp.). Aliquots
of cells (200 ∝l) were added to wells and incubated at
37°C for 25 minutes and subsequently washed with buffered saline to
remove nonadherent cells. Inhibition experiments were performed using the
following Ab’s: M1/70 rat anti-mouse αM
(known to block both mouse and human
αMβ2; eBioscience, San Diego,
California, USA), IB4 anti-β2 (American Type Culture
Collection), or control rat anti-mouse IgG (Pierce Biotechnology Inc.).
Ab’s were incubated with cells at 20 μg/ml for 15
minutes at room temperature before transfer to coated wells. The number of
adherent cells was determined by either counting multiple high-powered
(∞100) fields or using a CyQuant (Molecular Probes Inc., Eugene,
Oregon, USA) fluorescence detection system. All analyses were performed in
triplicate.
Differential analysis of resident peritoneal cells.
Peritoneal lavage fluid was collected by injection of 5 ml of PBS into the
abdominal cavity of anesthetized mice. The total number of cells present within
the lavage fluid was determined manually using a hemocytometer. Differential
cell counts were made using cytospin preparations stained with Diff-Quik (Dade
Behring Inc.). The percentage of neutrophils was confirmed by Leder stain. Flow
cytometry was performed using fluorochrome-labeled rat anti-mouse CD3 (BD
Biosciences, San Jose, California, USA), rat anti-mouse CD19 (BD Biosciences),
and rat anti-mouse F4/80 (CalTag Laboratories Inc., Burlingame, California, USA)
to confirm the percentage of T cells, B cells, and macrophage/monocytes,
respectively.
Clearance of intraperitoneal S. aureus.
A WT Newman strain of S. aureus and a clumping factor
A–deficient (ClfA-deficient)
derivative (DU5852) (kindly provided by T.J. Foster, Trinity College, Dublin,
Ireland) were employed. Overnight cultures of bacteria were harvested by
centrifugation, washed, and then resuspended in cold sterile saline at 4
∞ 108/ml to 10 ∞ 108/ml. In
experiments using heat-killed bacteria, suspensions were boiled for 5 minutes
prior to injection. Bacterial kill was confirmed by plating dilutions of the
boiled suspensions on tryptic soy agar. Mice were given an intraperitoneal
injection with 1 ml of bacterial suspension, and the peritoneal lavage fluids
were later collected using ice-cold buffered saline as described above. Serial
dilutions were plated on tryptic soy agar to establish the bacterial CFUs.
ResultsSite-directed mutagenesis of the endogenous fibrinogen γ chain
gene.
To determine the physiological and pathological importance of fibrin(ogen) as a
ligand for αMβ2, we generated a
replacement-type gene-targeting vector to selectively eliminate the
αMβ2-binding site previously
identified within the carboxy-terminal portion of the fibrinogen γ
chain (21). The specific residues
selected for mutation, N390RLSIGE396, were chosen based on
four findings and/or criteria. First, this sequence was a consistent element
within P2 peptides, known to block
αMβ2 binding to immobilized
fibrinogen. Second, these amino acids were conserved between species (note that
the sequence is N390RLTIGE396 in
the human molecule). Third, these residues were largely exposed to solvent based
on the crystal structure of fibrinogen derivatives. Finally, this sequence was
spatially far removed from the γ chain
“hole” known to support fibrin polymerization (31). Thus, an alteration within residues
390–396 was not expected to alter clotting function. Using portions
of the cloned mouse γ chain gene and a PCR-based mutagenesis
strategy, a targeting vector was generated in which 12 nucleotide substitutions
were introduced within the exon 9 sequence (Figure 1, A and B). These substitutions simultaneously converted the codons
encoding γ chain residues 390–396 to a series of seven
alanine residues and introduced a diagnostic PvuII site.
Embryonic stem cell transfectants that had incorporated the targeting vector by
homologous recombination based on PCR analyses (see Figure 1A and Methods) were used to generate transgenic
founder mice. The introduction of the
Fibγ390–396A targeting vector into the mouse
genome by homologous recombination was confirmed by both PCR (see representative
data in Figure 1C) and Southern blot
analysis of genomic DNA purified from tail biopsies. Crosses between hemizygous
mice established that the Fibγ390–396A
mutation was compatible with Mendelian inheritance; of the first 235 pups
generated from hemizygous breeding pairs, 62 (26%) carried only the
WT allele (WT/WT), 107 (46%) were hemizygous (WT/γ390–396A), and 66 (28%) carried only the mutant allele (γ390–396A/γ390–396A, hereafter simply referred to as Fibγ390–396A mice). Unlike fibrinogen-null mice (25), Fibγ390–396A mice never developed overt spontaneous bleeding events, and the survival
profile of unchallenged Fibγ390–396A mice was indistinguishable from WT littermates. Furthermore, unlike
fibrinogen-null females, which uniformly develop fatal intrauterine bleeding
during pregnancy, Fibγ390–396A females exhibited excellent reproductive success and were capable of
supporting multiple pregnancies to term (data not shown). Finally, Fibγ390–396A offspring could be consistently raised from homozygous mutant parents,
indicating that neither reproduction nor development was compromised by the
mutant fibrinogen, regardless of its maternal and/or embryonic source.
Fib γ 390–396A mice carry normal levels of
fibrinogen and exhibit a normal hematological profile.
The seven amino acid substitutions introduced into the γ chain did
not alter the steady-state concentration or size of the component chains within
circulating fibrinogen based on Western blot analyses (see Figure 2). The overall structural integrity of the mutant
plasma fibrinogen was further established by comparative analysis of purified
fibrinogen (Figure 2). The component
fibrinogen chains were indistinguishable in both ratio and size in WT and
Fibγ390–396A mice. A more general hematological analysis of blood cells showed that
the complete blood cell counts, including red cells, white cells, and platelets,
were virtually identical in control (n = 6) and
Fibγ390–396A (n = 6) mice (Table 1). The fact that the mutant fibrinogen did not
alter blood platelet count is consistent with the view that fibrinogen
γ390–396A presents no hemorrhagic
consequences that might lead to inordinate platelet consumption.
Fibrinogen γ390–396A maintains normal coagulation properties.
One objective in generating the Fibγ390–396A mutation was to explore the potential role(s) of fibrinogen in innate
immunity in a context where clotting function was in no way compromised. To
confirm that the Fibγ390–396A mutation did not impede fibrin polymer formation, multiple coagulation
analyses were performed. Thrombin clotting time is sensitive to both fibrinogen
concentration and structure. As shown in Table 1, plasma samples from WT and Fibγ390–396A mice exhibited indistinguishable clotting times following addition of
bovine thrombin and Ca2+. As a second comparative
analysis of fibrin polymer formation, standard turbidity measurements were made
as a function of time following addition of thrombin and
Ca2+ to diluted plasma (see Figure 2C for representative polymerization profiles) or
purified fibrinogen (data not shown) prepared from control and Fibγ390–396A mice. No significant difference in polymerization profile was observed
using samples prepared from multiple WT and Fibγ390–396A mice. Both the lag phase (indicative of the time required for
fibrinopeptide release) and the subsequent fibrin monomer assembly rates were
indistinguishable using multiple preparations of WT and mutant fibrinogen.
Furthermore, detailed electrophoretic analyses of denatured and reduced fibrin
clots prepared using purified fibrinogen from control and mutant mice showed
that there was no apparent difference in factor XIIIa-catalyzed
(transglutaminase-catalyzed) cross-linking of the γ chain to form
γ-γ dimers (Figure 2D). The γ-γ dimers were also readily detected
within plasma clots from both WT and Fibγ390–396A mice (data not shown). These data infer that the overall structural
integrity of fibrinogen is maintained in the γ390–396A mutant and the most dramatic property of fibrinogen, the ability to
polymerize into an insoluble matrix, was preserved in fibrinogen
γ390–396A.
Fibrinogen γ390–396A supports platelet aggregation and normal thrombus formation.
By engaging the platelet integrin
αIIbβ3, fibrinogen supports
platelet aggregation and promotes formation of stable platelet thrombi at sites
of vascular damage. To determine if the
γ390–396A mutation altered the ability of
fibrinogen to engage αIIbβ3,
mutant and WT fibrinogen were compared for (a) their binding activity to
ADP-activated platelets (b) their ability support ADP-induced platelet
aggregation in vitro, and (c) their ability to support thrombus formation in
vivo. Using an established flow-cytometry approach, we found no quantitative
difference in WT and γ390–396A fibrinogen
binding to αIIbβ3 on ADP-activated
platelets (see supplemental material; available at
http://www.jci.org/cgi/content/full/113/11/1596/DC1). Furthermore, ADP-induced
platelet aggregation in vitro followed a similar pattern using platelet-rich
plasma from WT and Fibγ390–396A animals (Figure 3). To control for
the fibrinogen dependence of platelet aggregation in these experiments, parallel
studies were done using
FibγØ5
mice (23), a mutant line expressing a
form of fibrinogen lacking the
αIIbβ3-binding motif. As shown
previously, no ADP-induced platelet aggregation was observed (Figure 3). As a final test of the ability of
fibrinogen γ390–396A to support
platelet/fibrin deposition, thrombus formation within FeCl3-injured
carotid arteries was compared in WT and Fibγ390–396A mice by both real-time intravital videomicroscopy and scanning electron
microscopy of fixed tissues. No appreciable difference was observed in the time
to vessel occlusion (10.2 ± 0.9 minutes, n
= 4 for WT and 10 ± 2 minutes, n
= 3 for Fibγ390–396A animals) or thrombus stability/appearance (see supplemental material).
Therefore, in this model, thrombus formation in vivo appears to be unimpaired in
mice expressing fibrinogen γ390–396A.
Fibrinogenγ390–396A does not
supportαM β2-mediated
cell adhesion in vitro.
To test the central hypothesis that the
γ390–396A mutation would specifically
eliminate αMβ2 engagement of
fibrinogen, affinity-purified fibrinogen preparations from WT and Fibγ390–396A mice were immobilized on microtiter plates and compared for their ability
to support αMβ2-dependent cell
adhesion. Our initial studies focused on a cell type that plays a critical role
in the inflammatory response in vivo and that is known to engage immobilized
fibrin(ogen) almost exclusively through
αMβ2 in vitro —
primary neutrophils (7, 32). Consistent with earlier reports, isolated human
peripheral blood neutrophils were found to readily adhere to immobilized WT
fibrinogen (Figure 4A), and this adhesion
was largely αMβ2-dependent based
on inhibitor studies with the αM-specific mAb, M1/70
(Figure 4D). More significantly, purified
fibrinogen γ390–396A failed to support the
adhesion of primary human neutrophils (Figure 4, B and D). This profound difference in cell adhesion to WT and
γ390–396A fibrinogen was not a trivial
reflection of a difference in the amount of fibrinogen immobilized; quantitative
immunological analyses indicated that WT and mutant fibrinogen was absorbed onto
the surface of plastic wells with equal efficiency (data not shown). As a final
specificity control in these cell adhesion studies, we showed that another
fibrinogen derivative, fibrinogen γØ5,
lacking the carboxy-terminal γ chain residues 407–411,
supported αMβ2-dependent
neutrophil adhesion to the same extent as WT fibrinogen (Figure 4, C and D). These comparative studies of primary leukocyte adhesion to WT and
γ390–396A fibrinogen were also extended
to isolated peripheral blood human monocytes (Figure 5A) and mouse resident peritoneal macrophages (Figure
5B) with a similar outcome. As
expected, monocytes and macrophages exhibited excellent adhesion to WT
fibrinogen, and this adhesion was effectively blocked by
αMβ2-blocking Ab’s
to either the αM subunit (e.g., 44a or M1/70) or
β2 subunit (e.g., IB4), but not control
Ab’s. Neither primary monocytes nor macrophages were adherent to
fibrinogen γ390–396A, however (Figure 5, A and B). A similar pattern was also seen
with THP-1 cells, a human monocytic cell line known to express high levels of
αMβ2 and to adhere to
fibrinogen through αMβ2 (33). Robust, concentration-dependent
adhesion of THP-1 cells was observed for WT, but not
γ390–396A, fibrinogen (Figure 5, C and D). In agreement with previous
reports that αMβ2 engagement of
fibrinogen is conformation dependent (i.e., strong when fibrinogen is surface
immobilized or converted to fibrin, but weak with soluble fibrinogen), THP-1
cell adhesion to immobilized WT fibrinogen was not inhibited by either soluble
WT or γ390–396A fibrinogen, even at
concentrations that were orders of magnitude above the
Kd of
αMβ2 for other established
high-affinity ligands (data not shown). Taken together, these data suggest that
fibrinogen γ390–396A neither supports
αMβ2-dependent cell adhesion
in vitro nor results in a gain-of-function property whereby the soluble molecule
is bound with high affinity by
αMβ2. To more rigorously define the specific impact of the fibrinogen
γ390–396A mutation on interaction with
β2 integrin receptors, we evaluated the binding
potential of HEK293 transfectants expressing
αMβ2 or the related integrin,
αLβ2 (21, 28, 34). Consistent with the requirement for a
specific β2 integrin to support cell adhesion to
fibrinogen, mock transfectants (empty expression vector) or transfectants
expressing αLβ2 (an integrin known
not to bind fibrinogen) failed to adhere to any immobilized fibrinogen
preparation (Figure 6A), whereas HEK293
transfectants expressing αMβ2
displayed excellent adhesion to WT fibrinogen (Figure 6, A and B). More importantly, immobilized fibrinogen
γ390–396A failed to support HEK293 cell
adhesion regardless of the presence or absence of
αMβ2 or
αLβ2 (Figure 6, A and B). Similar results were observed in multiple
independent experiments.
Leukocyte clearance of peritoneal bacteria is strongly impeded in mice
expressing fibrinogen γ390–396A.
One important incentive for using a gene-targeting approach in mice was that it
provided an opportunity to readily define the biological significance, if any,
of αMβ2-mediated leukocyte
engagement of fibrin(ogen) in vivo. To begin to explore the in vivo consequences
of the fibrinogen γ390–396A mutation on the
innate immune system, we compared the ability of inflammatory cells to clear the
common gram-positive pathogen, S. aureus, following
intraperitoneal inoculation. Quantitative analysis of viable bacteria within the
peritoneal lavage fluid from cohorts of WT and mutant mice 1 hour after
infection revealed that Fibγ390–396A mice exhibited a profound impediment in bacterial clearance relative to
control animals in this acute peritonitis model (Figure 7A). This same pattern of inefficient bacterial
clearance in Fibγ390–396A mice was observed when mice were challenged with a mutant strain of
S. aureus lacking the bacterial fibrinogen receptor, termed
ClfA (Figure 7B). One inference of these
results is that host leukocyte engagement of fibrinogen through
αMβ2, rather than bacterial
engagement of fibrinogen through ClfA, is the key determinant of bacterial
clearance in the context of acute peritonitis. In this regard, it should be
noted that control studies showed that fibrinogen
γ390–396A, like WT fibrinogen, retained
the ability to support ClfA-dependent S. aureus adhesion in
vitro (see supplemental material). The genotype-dependent difference in bacterial clearance within the abdominal
cavity was evident even as early as 30 minutes after infection, but was more
pronounced at 3 hours as a consequence of the expansion of viable microbes
(Figure 8A). Consistent with a defect in
the activation of leukocyte antimicrobial functions in Fibγ390–396A mice, microscopic analysis of lavage fluid collected 3 hours after
S. aureus inoculation revealed few appreciable bacteria on
cytospin spreads from WT mice, whereas both free and leukocyte-associated
bacteria were prevalent in the mutant mice (Figure 8B). Many phagocytes appeared to be overwhelmed by bacteria and
seemed physically disrupted. A similar failure to effectively clear peritoneal
S. aureus has also been documented in fibrinogen-null mice
(Du et al., unpublished observations), further underscoring the fibrinogen
dependence of this clearance process. The difference in early bacterial
clearance was not due to any genotype-related difference in either the number or
composition of resident peritoneal leukocytes; quantitative analysis of
peritoneal lavage fluids collected from unchallenged WT and Fibγ390–396A mice indicated that the number of peritoneal macrophages, neutrophils,
and mast cells (all of which are known to express
αMβ2) was indistinguishable in
WT and Fibγ390–396A mice (Figure 8C). Similarly, whole
blood analyses showed that the total number and differential counts of
circulating white cells was not different in WT and Fibγ390–396A mice (data not shown). Furthermore, the impediment in bacterial clearance
in Fibγ390–396A was not due to any obvious impediment in leukocyte trafficking. A
significant increase in the neutrophil infiltrate was observed within the
peritoneal cavity of both control and Fibγ390–396A mice within 3 hours after infection (compare Figure 8, C and D). Although the neutrophil infiltrate tended
to be modestly diminished in Fibγ390–396A mice in these studies, the difference did not reach statistical
significance (P = 0.08 in the Mann-Whitney
U test). Given that phagocytes were clearly failing in
Fibγ390–396A mice, and often appeared to be themselves disrupted by engorged bacteria
in cytospin spreads (see Figure 8B), we
further explored leukocyte trafficking in WT and
Fibγ390–396A mice in response to
heat-killed S. aureus. Analyses of lavage fluids collected from
control and Fibγ390–396A mice 5 hours after introduction of nonviable bacteria showed that there
was a pronounced increase in total peritoneal neutrophils in challenged mice of
both genotypes (Figure 8E) relative to
unchallenged animals (Figure 8C). More
notably, Fibγ390–396A mice exhibited the same robust neutrophil efflux that was observed in WT
controls (Figure 8E). A similar increase in
the number of leukocytes present within the peritoneal cavity was observed in
control and mutant mice at 24 hours, with macrophages being a predictably higher
fraction of total leukocytes (Figure 8F).
Thus, neither neutrophil nor macrophage trafficking appears to be appreciably
impeded by the loss of the
αMβ2-binding motif on fibrinogen,
a finding that is consistent with the fact that leukocyte trafficking is
generally maintained in
αMβ2-deficient mice. Rather, the
loss of the fibrin(ogen)-αMβ2
interactions appear to compromise leukocyte activation pathways whereby host
inflammatory cells kill microbial pathogens.
Discussion
The leukocyte integrins αMβ2 and
αLβ2 are central mediators of
leukocyte adhesion, transmigration, activation, and the expression of specialized
functions. Despite the fact that these two integrins share an ability to bind
certain ligands (e.g., ICAM-1), it is increasingly clear that these receptors are
not functionally equivalent in their binding properties, both in terms of their
repertoire of ligands and in terms of their differential binding to shared ligands
(8, 10, 35, 36). These integrins seem to play complementary, albeit
partially overlapping, roles in regulating leukocyte function (7, 8, 10, 11,
37–39). One obvious distinction between
αMβ2 and
αLβ2 is that the former integrin
can engage immobilized fibrin(ogen) and other ligands that are not recognized by the
later receptor (36). To better understand the
interplay between hemostatic factors and the inflammatory response in vivo and to
specifically define the biological significance, if any, of
αMβ2 engagement of fibrin(ogen),
we genetically modified the endogenous fibrinogen γ chain gene in mice
to selectively eliminate the
αMβ2-binding motif in the
carboxy-terminal portion of the molecule. As an experimental approach to
specifically discern the functional importance of the
fibrinogen-αMβ2 interaction in
vivo, the generation of this fibrinogen variant offered the distinct advantage of
neither imposing any alteration in
αMβ2 itself nor precluding
αMβ2 interaction with other
potential ligands or crosstalk with other receptors. Here we show that homozygous
mice carrying the mutant fibrinogen γ390–396A
allele are viable to adulthood, never experience spontaneous bleeding events, carry
normal levels of circulating fibrinogen, maintain normal clotting function, retain
normal fibrinogen engagement by other integrin receptors (e.g.,
αIIbβ3), retain normal platelet
aggregation, and exhibit normal thrombus formation in vivo. Unlike WT fibrinogen,
however, immobilized fibrinogen γ390–396A failed
to support αMβ2-mediated adhesion of a
variety of cell types, including primary neutrophils and macrophages. Most
importantly, the disruption in αMβ2
engagement of fibrin(ogen) was found to have dramatic consequences on the
inflammatory response in vivo. Fibγ390–396A mice exhibited a remarkable impediment in the elimination of the microbial
pathogen, S. aureus, in an acute peritonitis model. Four major
conclusions are drawn from these studies. First, fibrin(ogen) is an important
regulator of inflammatory cell function and innate immunity. Second, fibrin(ogen)
constitutes a physiologically relevant ligand for the leukocyte integrin
αMβ2. Third, the biological
consequences of a loss in the
αMβ2-fibrin(ogen) interaction is not
(fully) compensated by the continued availability of all other potential ligands
(e.g., ICAM-1, iC3b, GPIbα, uPAR, etc). Finally, the biological
importance of fibrinogen in regulating the inflammatory response can be appreciated
outside of any alteration in either clotting function or platelet thrombus
formation.
The specific inflammatory processes that are impeded in mice expressing fibrinogen
γ390–396A remains to be fully defined, but a
few inferences can be drawn based on the present and previous studies. Consistent
with the observation that αMβ2 is not
strictly required for efficient leukocyte trafficking in many inflammatory settings
in vivo (7, 8), the loss of the
αMβ2-binding motif on fibrinogen did
not restrict leukocyte trafficking in response to intraperitoneal bacteria, live or
heat killed. A prevailing hypothesis consistent with the available data is that
αMβ2 primarily controls leukocyte
function upon arrival at sites of inflammatory challenge (7, 8, 11). A simple extension of this theory is that
in the context of soluble inflammatory mediators, leukocyte engagement of
immobilized fibrin(ogen) within inflamed and/or damaged tissues may be an important
cue in leukocyte target recognition, ultimately regulating the expression of
specialized functions. Consistent with this view, neutrophil engagement of
fibrin(ogen) through αMβ2 results in
dramatic cellular changes in vitro (15–18, 40–42), including calcium mobilization, activation of NF-κB,
increased phosphorylation events, degranulation, upregulation of cell surface
adhesion molecules, increased migration, and decreased apoptosis. The concept that
leukocyte interaction with immobilized fibrin(ogen) is an important event in target
recognition has two attractive features. First, fibrin could provide a unique,
nondiffusible or spatially defined signal modulating inflammatory cell function.
Second, fibrin would be found within the ECM at virtually any site of tissue damage,
regardless of the underlying insult, but would be distinctly absent within normal
tissues. Thus, fibrin could provide a universal cue flagging the precise site of any
challenge and provide another means to locally regulate leukocyte function. Of
course, this theory does not preclude the seminal contribution of soluble
inflammatory mediators (e.g., cytokines and chemokines) or a significant
contribution of other αMβ2 ligands
(e.g., iC3b). Nevertheless, the present studies show that even when the engagement
of all other ligands remains intact, the loss of
αMβ2 interaction with fibrin(ogen)
compromises leukocyte function, including the ability to efficiently clear an
infectious agent in vivo.
The present data show that in the context of intact fibrinogen the preeminent
αMβ2-binding motif is located in
the carboxy-terminal portion of the γ chain. This region may not
constitute the sole αMβ2-binding
element. Other regions, including the AαE splice variant
found in just 2% of plasma fibrinogen, might also contribute in vivo to
αMβ2 binding (43). Presuming, however, that the fraction of fibrinogen
carrying AαE remains a constant feature of both WT and
Fibγ390–396A mice, any αMβ2-binding
potential conferred by the AαE domain would appear to be
comparatively poor relative to the contribution of the far more abundant standard
γ chain.
Given that the αMβ2-binding motif on
fibrinogen is tied to the inflammatory response in vivo, then a question still
unresolved is the relative importance of the many distinct forms of fibrin(ogen) in
regulating leukocyte function, including (a) fibrin matrices (b) fibrinogen
immobilized on cell surfaces by other specific receptors (e.g.,
αvβ3,
α5β1,
αIIbβ3, ICAM-1), and (c) soluble
fibrinogen. The fact that circulating leukocytes would be constantly exposed to high
concentrations of fibrinogen would seem to preclude any obvious utility of the
soluble molecule in defining inflammatory processes. Furthermore, soluble fibrinogen
is a relatively poor ligand for αMβ2
(20). The fact that neutrophils avidly
engage surface-immobilized fibrinogen or fibrin by
αMβ2 implies that these forms of
fibrin(ogen) are likely to be the most instructive to inflammatory cells in vivo.
Regardless of the relative importance of fibrin polymer formation, the present
findings show that there are functional elements within fibrinogen that are relevant
to the inflammatory response distinct from those critical for generating a
provisional fibrin matrix.
While bacterial clearance is clearly inefficient in Fibγ390–396A mice relative to control animals, there appears to be a significant residual
capacity to eliminate microbes in the mutant animals. This residual capacity to
control S. aureus may be a reflection of either
αMβ2-independent leukocyte
activation pathways or αMβ2-dependent
signaling events mediated by alternative sites on fibrinogen and/or alternative
ligands (e.g., bacterial opsonization with iC3b) (16, 44). The residual capacity to
contain overt microbial challenges in Fibγ390–396A mice is not surprising based on two previous observations. First, spontaneous
infections are not commonplace in fibrinogen-null mice, at least when adaptive
immunity remains intact (25). Second, while
spontaneous infections are frequently observed in the absence of all
β2 integrins, these are not commonplace in the absence of
just αMβ2 (5, 7, 45). Nevertheless, like Fibγ390–396A mice, αMβ2-deficient mice have
been shown to exhibit a diminished ability to clear gram-positive pathogens (i.e.,
Streptococcus pneumoniae), and as a result
αMβ2-deficient mice exhibit
increased mortality relative to control mice (39). Interestingly, this increased sensitivity to infection in
αMβ2-deficient mice was apparent
despite the fact that these mice exhibited no diminution in leukocyte emigration in
response to intraperitoneal inoculation of bacteria. Thus, neither
αMβ2 nor its ligand, fibrin(ogen),
are strictly required for leukocyte efflux, but both are important for efficient
bacterial clearance.
Despite the fact that leukocyte emigration is generally maintained in
αMβ2-deficient mice following some
inflammatory challenges, both αMβ2 and
fibrin(ogen) may contribute to leukocyte trafficking in certain contexts,
particularly when there is direct endothelial damage (46). In the absence of endothelial damage,
αLβ2-mediated engagement of
endothelial cell ICAM-1 is likely to be dominant in supporting firm leukocyte
adhesion and trafficking (10, 11). On the other hand,
αMβ2 engagement of fibrin(ogen)
may supercede αLβ2 engagement of
ICAM-1 in supporting leukocyte trafficking in contexts involving frank endothelial
denudation and secondary platelet/fibrin(ogen) deposition on the vessel wall (e.g.,
following balloon angioplasty) (46).
Consistent with this view, αMβ2 is
known to support the firm adhesion of neutrophils to surface-bound platelets under
flow conditions in vitro, and this adhesion is fibrinogen dependent
(47). Furthermore, adherent neutrophils
have been shown to efficiently migrate through platelet monolayers in vitro (47). It seems likely that fibrinogen
γ390–396A bound to platelet
αIIbβ3 will not support neutrophil
adhesion to surface-bound platelets. If so, then local leukocyte emigration in vivo
may be significantly diminished in Fibγ390–396A
mice in the context of direct vascular injury.
One interesting facet of the finding that
αMβ2 engagement of fibrin(ogen)
supports host clearance of microbes is that bacterial pathogens have also evolved a
variety of secretory and cell surface proteins that are designed to disrupt integrin
function, engage fibrin(ogen), and/or promote fibrinolysis within vertebrate hosts.
These bacterial factors presumably serve a variety of purposes, but undoubtedly all
are designed to increase the success of the microbe at the expense of the host, and
many may have evolved as countermeasures to innate immune surveillance mechanisms.
In addition to expressing the bacterial fibrinolytic agent, streptokinase, group A
Streptococcus secrete a factor that is structurally similar to
the αM subunit of
αMβ2, termed GAS-Mac, which
increases bacterial virulence by inhibiting host phagocyte function (48). Similarly, S. aureus expresses an
extraordinary array of factors designed to subvert the hemostatic system, including
fibrinogen-binding proteins (e.g., ClfA), coagulase, and the fibrinolytic agent,
staphlyokinase (49, 50). Indeed, the expression of bacterial plasminogen
activators is a particularly common theme among both gram-positive and gram-negative
bacteria. Taken together, it appears that leukocyte engagement of fibrin(ogen) may
constitute an important nexus of inflammatory cell action that bacterial pathogens
seek to subvert through multiple mechanisms.
The finding that fibrin(ogen) can serve as a powerful inflammatory mediator has
potential clinical implications. First, the fibrinogen-integrin axis can now be
viewed as a potentially useful target in the development of new therapeutic
strategies for the treatment or prevention of inflammatory diseases such as sepsis
and inflammatory lung, bowel, and joint disease. Given that other hemostatic
factors, including activated protein C (51),
are also known to be promising focal points for controlling inflammatory processes,
fibrinogen may be one of many coagulation system components that stand at the
interface between the hemostatic and inflammatory systems. In fact, the potential
utility of fibrinogen as a target in inflammatory disease has already been
underscored in studies showing that the pharmacological depletion of fibrinogen in
mice can diminish the progression of arthritis (52). Of course, an important second implication of the present study is that
effective anti- or proinflammatory strategies focusing on fibrin(ogen)-leukocyte
interactions potentially could be devised that would not necessarily compromise
hemostatic function. Thus, in principle, inflammatory responses could be controlled
at the level of hemostatic factors without increasing the risk of bleeding or
thrombotic events.
Supplemental dataView Supplemental data
AcknowledgmentsWe thank Kathryn Talmage, Christine La Jeunesse, and Keith Kombrinck for their
excellent technical assistance. We thank Joseph Palumbo for his helpful advice. We
also thank Ronald E. Gordon and Norman Katz, Department of Pathology, Mount Sinai
School of Medicine, New York, USA, for their help with scanning electron microscopy.
Finally, we gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Heikki Vaananen, Department of
Physiology and Biophysics, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. This work was supported
by grants from the NIH to J.L. Degen (HL-63194), E.F. Plow (HL-66197), and M.J.
Flick (T32HL-00742).
Footnotes
Matthew J. Flick and XinLi Du contributed equally to this work. Nonstandard abbreviations used: clumping factor A (ClfA); human
embryonic kidney (HEK); intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM); leukocyte
adhesion deficiency type I (LAD I); urokinase-type plasminogen activator
receptor (uPAR). Conflict of interest: The authors have declared that no conflict of
interest exists.
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