AI Article Synopsis

  • Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) were initially seen as a defense mechanism but have now been linked to aiding cancer cell spread and blood clotting.
  • The study investigated how integrins α5β1 and ανβ3 on cancer cells help them adhere to NETs, demonstrating that blocking these integrins or treating cells with DNAse 1 significantly reduced this adhesion.
  • Additionally, the research found that fibronectin plays a key role in this adhesion process by forming interactions with histones within NETs, suggesting that NETs facilitate specific binding locations for various cells, including cancer cells.

Article Abstract

Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), originally recognized as a host defense mechanism, were reported to promote thrombosis and metastatic dissemination of cancer cells. Here we tested the role of integrins α5β1 and ανβ3 in the adhesion of cancer cells to NETs. Neutrophil-like cells stimulated with calcium ionophore (A23187) were used as a stable source of cell-free NETs-enriched suspensions. Using NETs as an adhesion substrate, two human K562 cell lines, differentially expressing α5β1 and ανβ3 integrins, were subjected to adhesion assays in the presence or absence of DNAse 1, blocking antibodies against α5β1 or ανβ3, alone or in combination with DNAse 1, and Proteinase K. As expected DNAse 1 treatment strongly inhibited adhesion of both cell lines to NETs. An equivalent significant reduction of cell adhesion to NETs was obtained after treatment of cells with blocking antibodies against α5β1 or ανβ3 indicating that both integrins were able to mediate cell adhesion to NETs. Furthermore, the combination of DNAse 1 and anti-integrin antibody treatment almost completely blocked cell adhesion. Western blot analysis and immunoprecipitation experiments showed a dose-dependent increase of fibronectin levels in samples from stimulated neutrophil-like cells and a direct or indirect interaction of fibronectin with histone H3. Finally, co-immunolocalization studies with confocal microscopy showed that fibronectin and citrullinated histone H3 co-localize inside the web-structure of NETs. In conclusion, our study showed that α5β1 and ανβ3 integrins mediate cell adhesion to NETs by binding to their common substrate fibronectin. Therefore, in addition to mechanical trapping and aspecific adsorption of different cell types driven by DNA/histone complexes, NETs may provide specific binding sites for integrin-mediated cell adhesion of neutrophils, platelets, endothelial and cancer cells thus promoting intimate interactions among these cells.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5293257PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0171362PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cell adhesion
24
α5β1 ανβ3
20
neutrophil-like cells
12
cancer cells
12
adhesion nets
12
adhesion
10
nets
9
neutrophil extracellular
8
extracellular traps
8
cells
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!