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Microvascular endothelial cells express a phosphatidylserine receptor: a functionally active receptor for phosphatidylserine-positive erythrocytes

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 111, Issue 2, Pages 905-914

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2007-07-099465

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Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL73944, U54 HL070585, U54 HL70585, R01 HL073944] Funding Source: Medline

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Phosphatidylserine (PS)-positive erythrocytes adhere to endothelium and subendothelial matrix components. While thrombospondin mediates these interactions, it is unknown whether PS-associated erythrocyte-endothelial adhesion occurs in the absence of plasma ligands. Using ionophore-treated PS-expressing control HbAA erythrocytes, we demonstrate that PS-positive erythrocytes adhered to human lung microendothelial cells in the absence of plasma ligands, that this adhesion was enhanced following endothelial activation with IL-1 alpha, TNF-alpha, LPS, hypoxia, and heme, and that this adhesive interaction was selective to erythrocyte PS. We next explored whether microendothelial cells express an adhesion receptor that recognizes cell surf ace-expressed PS (PSR) similar to that expressed on activated macrophages. We demonstrate constitutive expression of both PSR mRNA and protein that were up-regulated in a time-dependent manner following endothelial activation. While minimal PSR expression was noted on unstimulated cells, endothelial activation up-regulated PSR surface expression. In antibody-blocking studies, using PS-positive erythrocytes generated either artificially via ionophore treatment of control erythrocytes or from patients with sickle cell disease, we demonstrate that PSR was functional, supporting PS-mediated erythrocyte adhesion to activated endothelium. Our results demonstrate the existence of a novel functional adhesion receptor for PS on the microendothelium that is up-regulated by such pathologically relevant agonists as hypoxia, cytokines, and heme.

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