Abstract
Circulating monocytes adhere to platelets and matrix proteins at sites of vascular injury, where engagement of specific surface tethering molecules mediates outside-in signaling and synthesis of gene products by the leukocytes. Here we demonstrate that interaction of isolated human monocytes with collagen induces matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9; gelatinase B) synthesis by monocytes, a process that is greatly enhanced in the presence of platelets. MMP-9 is a potent matrix degrading enzyme implicated in atherosclerotic plaque rupture, aneurysm formation, and other vascular syndromes. Synthesis of MMP-9 by monocytes is tightly regulated and synergistically increased following adhesion to collagen and platelets. Adhesion to control matrix proteins alone did not result in MMP-9 protein production and, similarly, adhesion of monocytes to platelets activated with thrombin in suspension was not sufficient to induce MMP-9 synthesis in the absence of monocyte adhesion to collagen. Interruption of intercellular contact between platelets and monocytes dramatically inhibited MMP-9 synthesis. These observations demonstrate that discrete adhesion-dependent signaling pathways govern MMP-9 synthesis by monocytes. The synthesis of MMP-9 by monocytes may be critical in vascular syndromes and other pathological processes that are dependent on dysregulated cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions.
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Galt, S. W., Lindemann, S., Medd, D., Allen, L. L., Kraiss, L. W., Harris, E. S., … Zimmerman, G. A. (2001). Differential regulation of matrix metalloproteinase-9 by monocytes adherent to collagen and platelets. Circulation Research, 89(6), 509–516. https://doi.org/10.1161/hh1801.096339
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