Yersinia invasin, a bacterial beta1-integrin ligand, is a potent inducer of lymphocyte motility and migration to collagen type IV and fibronectin.

  • Arencibia I
  • Suárez N
  • Wolf-Watz H
  • et al.
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Abstract

The Yersinia pseudotuberculosis invasin protein was found to be a potent inducer of pseudopodia formation and chemotactic and haptotactic migration in human T lymphocytes. Checkerboard analysis confirmed that migration was directional. The Yersinia invasin triggered migration of otherwise poorly migratory normal T cells on fibronectin and in particular on collagen type IV, and augmented the migration of leukemic T cell lines on these components. Invasin-induced lymphocyte migration was inhibited by staurosporin that selectively prevented pseudopodia formation but, noteworthy, augmented adhesion. The motogenic and attractant properties of invasin (Inv) were mediated via beta1-integrins, as shown by lack of effect of Inv on the motility of a beta1-integrin-negative lymphoid cell line and inhibition of invasin-induced lymphocyte motility by anti-beta1 Abs. Inv was markedly more effective than the extracellular matrix components fibronectin, collagen type IV, and laminin, which also interact with lymphocyte beta1-integrins, with respect to induction of pseudopodia, chemotaxis, and haptotaxis. Thus, Yersinia invasin is a model ligand for induction of lymphocyte motility via beta1-integrins. The extraordinary capacity of Inv to trigger and guide T lymphocyte motility and potentiate lymphocyte migration to extracellular matrix components may be of pathogenetic significance for the movement of lymphocytes to extraintestinal sites secondary to Yersinia infection.

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Arencibia, I., Suárez, N. C., Wolf-Watz, H., & Sundqvist, K. G. (1997). Yersinia invasin, a bacterial beta1-integrin ligand, is a potent inducer of lymphocyte motility and migration to collagen type IV and fibronectin. The Journal of Immunology, 159(4), 1853–1859. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.159.4.1853

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