4.8 Article

Endothelial Focal Adhesions Are Functional Obstacles for Leukocytes During Basolateral Crawling

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.667213

Keywords

transmigration; focal adhesions; small GTPase; RhoJ; Tiam1; endothelium; inflammation

Categories

Funding

  1. ZonMW NWO Vici grant [91819632]
  2. NWO ALW-OPEN grant [ALWOP.306]

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In an inflammatory response, leukocytes need to cross the endothelial monolayer to enter tissue and clear pathogens. Focal adhesions mark the migration path of neutrophils, which recognize and navigate around them to continue their movement. The manipulation of focal adhesion quantity affects the basolateral crawling of neutrophils, demonstrating their importance in leukocyte migration.
An inflammatory response requires leukocytes to migrate from the circulation across the vascular lining into the tissue to clear the invading pathogen. Whereas a lot of attention is focused on how leukocytes make their way through the endothelial monolayer, it is less clear how leukocytes migrate underneath the endothelium before they enter the tissue. Upon finalization of the diapedesis step, leukocytes reside in the subendothelial space and encounter endothelial focal adhesions. Using TIRF microscopy, we show that neutrophils navigate around these focal adhesions. Neutrophils recognize focal adhesions as physical obstacles and deform to get around them. Increasing the number of focal adhesions by silencing the small GTPase RhoJ slows down basolateral crawling of neutrophils. However, apical crawling and diapedesis itself are not affected by RhoJ depletion. Increasing the number of focal adhesions drastically by expressing the Rac1 GEF Tiam1 make neutrophils to avoid migrating underneath these Tiam1-expressing endothelial cells. Together, our results show that focal adhesions mark the basolateral migration path of neutrophils.

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