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Activation of sickle red blood cell adhesion via integrin-associated protein/CD47–induced signal transduction
Julia E. Brittain, … , Eugene P. Orringer, Leslie V. Parise
Julia E. Brittain, … , Eugene P. Orringer, Leslie V. Parise
Published June 15, 2001
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2001;107(12):1555-1562. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI10817.
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Article

Activation of sickle red blood cell adhesion via integrin-associated protein/CD47–induced signal transduction

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Abstract

Peripheral human red blood cells (RBCs) are not generally known to become activated and adhesive in response to cell signaling. We show, however, that soluble thrombospondin via integrin-associated protein (IAP; CD47) increases the adhesiveness of sickle RBCs (SS RBCs) by activating signal transduction in the SS RBC. This stimulated adhesion requires occupancy of IAP and shear stress and is mediated by the activation of large G proteins and tyrosine kinases. Reticulocyte-enriched RBCs derived from sickle-cell disease (SCD) patients are most responsive to IAP-induced activation. These studies therefore establish peripheral SS RBCs as signaling cells that respond to a novel synergy between IAP-induced signal transduction and shear stress, suggesting new therapeutic targets in SCD.

Authors

Julia E. Brittain, Kathryn J. Mlinar, Christopher S. Anderson, Eugene P. Orringer, Leslie V. Parise

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Figure 2

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IAP stimulation of SS RBC adhesion is shear-dependent. (a) Preincubation...
IAP stimulation of SS RBC adhesion is shear-dependent. (a) Preincubation (30 minutes) of SS RBCs with anti-IAP mAb B6H12 (1 μg/ml) increases SS RBC adhesion under flow conditions (n = 5 patients, ± SD). (b) B6H12 (1 μg/ml) blocks SS RBC adhesion to TSP under static conditions (n = 3 patients). Basal, nonstimulated SS RBC adhesion is set at 100%. Identical treatment with an isotype-matched control antibody (1 μg/ml) has no effect on adhesion under flow (a) or static (b) conditions. (c) Agonist peptide 4N1K blocks SS RBC adhesion to immobilized TSP under static conditions (squares), whereas 4NGG control peptide (ovals) has little effect on static SS RBC adhesion (n = 3 patients, ± SD).

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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