## Abstract Aggregation of chick embryonic liver and kidney cells was completely abolished by a treatment with carboxypyridine disulfide which binds โSH groups. The effect could be reversed by a subsequent treatment with some thiols. Inhibition of RNA synthesis or respiratory metabolism did not pre
The structure of fibronectin and its role in cellular adhesion
โ Scribed by Akiyama, Steven K. ;Yamada, Kenneth M. ;Hayashi, Masao
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 850 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0275-3723
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Fibronectin is a large, adhesive glycoprotein which is found in a number of locations, most notably on cell surfaces, in extracellular matrixes, and in blood. Fibronectin has been detected in all vertebrates tested and in many invertebrates. Its presence in sponges is significant because this suggests that fibronectin may have appeared very early in evolution, possibly with the most primitive multicellular organisms. Cellular and plasma fibronectins have many striking similarities. However, the locations of the polypcptide chain differences between these two proteins indicate that plasma fibronectin cannot be derived from cellular fibronectin by means of simple postโtranslational proteolysis. Instead, these different types of fibronectin may be products of different genes or of differentially spliced messenger RNA molecules. Amniotic fluid fibronectin is possibly a third form of the protein. Cellular and plasma fibronectins are composed of at least six protcaseresistant domains which contain specific binding sites for actin, gelatin, heparin, Staphylococcus aureus, transglutarninase, fibrin, DNA, and a cell surface receptor. The relative locations of these domains have been mapped in the primary structure of fibronectin. The cell surface receptor for fibronectin has not been positively identified, but may be a glycoprotein, a glycolipid, or a complex of the two. Although cellโsubstratum adhesion is mediated by fibronectin, the locations of the areas of closest approach of the cell to the substratum (the adhesion plaques) and fibronectin are not coincident under conditions of active cell growth. Under conditions of cell growth arrest in low scrum concentrations, some fibronectin may become localized at the adhesion plaques. Models describing the domain structure of fibronectin and the molecular organization of the adhesion plaque area are presented.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Multilayered fibroblast sheets have applications as cell transplants for tissue engineering. One way to increase their therapeutic efficacy is to increase cell numbers in a graft, but the factors influencing multilayered growth remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated th
We refine an existing model of T lymphocyte recirculation, in order to incorporate a description of the adhesion between T cells and other cell types in the lymphoid tissue, such as dendritic cells. The new model is able to fit the animal experiments on lymphocyte recirculation. It also allows for t
Of the four common alkaline earth cations, only Ca+ + is able to protect Rana pipiens embryos from dissociation of the epidermis into isolated cells by EDTA. Presumably this is because only Ca++ is able to satisfy the divalent cation requirement for cellular adhesion in this tissue. Although early s
To probe the role of human plasma fibronectin in modulating human blood-derived macrophage adhesion and fusion to form multinucleated foreign-body giant cells (FBGC), a series of biomimetic oligopeptides based on the functional structure of fibronectin was designed and synthesized. Peptides incorpor
## Abstract Leukocyte infiltration is a hallmark of the atherosclerotic lesion. These cells are captured by cellular adhesion molecules (CAMs), including vascular cell adhesion moleculeโ1 (VCAMโ1), intercellular adhesion moleculeโ1 (ICAMโ1), plateletโendothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM), and