Claudia B Fieger

University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

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Publications (4)21.05 Total impact

  • Article: Endoglycan, a member of the CD34 family of sialomucins, is a ligand for the vascular selectins.
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    ABSTRACT: The interactions of the selectin family of adhesion molecules with their ligands are essential for the initial rolling stage of leukocyte trafficking. Under inflammatory conditions, the vascular selectins, E- and P-selectin, are expressed on activated vessels and interact with carbohydrate-based ligands on the leukocyte surface. While several ligands have been characterized on human T cells, monocytes and neutrophils, there is limited information concerning ligands on B cells. Endoglycan (EG) together with CD34 and podocalyxin comprise the CD34 family of sialomucins. We found that EG, previously implicated as an L-selectin ligand on endothelial cells, was present on human B cells, T cells and peripheral blood monocytes. Upon activation of B cells, EG increased with a concurrent decrease in PSGL-1. Expression of EG on T cells remained constant under the same conditions. We further found that native EG from several sources (a B cell line, a monocyte line and human tonsils) was reactive with HECA-452, a mAb that recognizes sialyl Lewis X and related structures. Moreover, immunopurified EG from these sources was able to bind to P-selectin and where tested E-selectin. This interaction was divalent cation-dependent and required sialylation of EG. Finally, an EG construct supported slow rolling of E- and P-selectin bearing cells in a sialic acid and fucose dependent manner, and the introduction of intact EG into a B cell line facilitated rolling interactions on a P-selectin substratum. These in vitro findings indicate that EG can function as a ligand for the vascular selectins.
    The Journal of Immunology 08/2008; 181(2):1480-90. · 5.79 Impact Factor
  • Article: Type 1 sphingosine 1-phosphate G protein-coupled receptor signaling of lymphocyte functions requires sulfation of its extracellular amino-terminal tyrosines.
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    ABSTRACT: The type 1 sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) G protein-coupled receptor (S1P1) transduces signals from S1P that mediate thymocyte emigration, T cell transmigration of lymph nodes, and T cell chemotaxis in tissues. Alterations in expression of functional S1P1 receptors by lymphocytes are the major mechanisms controlling their responses to S1P and were thought to be solely a consequence of the balance between surface down-regulation and insertion. However, results now show that lack of sulfation of tyrosines 19 and 22 of the extracellular N terminus of S1P1 diminishes high-affinity S1P binding and decreases S1P signaling of T cell migration and other functions. Non-sulfatable mutant (Y19,22F)S1P1 endows T cells with lower-affinity binding of [32P]S1P than wild-type S1P1 and transduces lesser effects of S1P on chemotaxis, chemokine-elicited chemotaxis, and T cell receptor-mediated proliferation and cytokine generation. Inhibition of S1P1 tyrosine sulfation or sulfatase removal of S1P1 sulfate in mouse CD4 T cells suppresses immune functional effects of S1P. Tyrosine sulfation of S1P1 may be a major controller of S1P effects on T cell traffic.
    The FASEB Journal 12/2005; 19(13):1926-8. · 5.71 Impact Factor
  • Article: Low force decelerates L-selectin dissociation from P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 and endoglycan.
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    ABSTRACT: Selectin-ligand interactions mediate the tethering and rolling of circulating leukocytes on vascular surfaces during inflammation and immune surveillance. To support rolling, these interactions are thought to have rapid off-rates that increase slowly as wall shear stress increases. However, the increase of off-rate with force, an intuitive characteristic named slip bonds, is at odds with a shear threshold requirement for selectin-mediated cell rolling. As shear drops below the threshold, fewer cells roll and those that do roll less stably and with higher velocity. We recently demonstrated a low force regime where the off-rate of P-selectin interacting with P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1) decreased with increasing force. This counter-intuitive characteristic, named catch bonds, might partially explain the shear threshold phenomenon. Because L-selectin-mediated cell rolling exhibits a much more pronounced shear threshold, we used atomic force microscopy and flow chamber experiments to determine off-rates of L-selectin interacting with their physiological ligands and with an antibody. Catch bonds were observed at low forces for L-selectin-PSGL-1 interactions coinciding with the shear threshold range, whereas slip bonds were observed at higher forces. These catch-slip transitional bonds were also observed for L-selectin interacting with endoglycan, a newly identified PSGL-1-like ligand. By contrast, only slip bonds were observed for L-selectin-antibody interactions. These findings suggest that catch bonds contribute to the shear threshold for rolling and are a common characteristic of selectin-ligand interactions.
    Journal of Biological Chemistry 02/2004; 279(3):2291-8. · 4.77 Impact Factor
  • Article: Endoglycan, a member of the CD34 family, functions as an L-selectin ligand through modification with tyrosine sulfation and sialyl Lewis x.
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    ABSTRACT: During lymphocyte homing to secondary lymphoid organs and instances of inflammatory trafficking, the rolling of leukocytes on vascular endothelium is mediated by transient interactions between L-selectin on leukocytes and several carbohydrate-modified ligands on the endothelium. Most L-selectin ligands such as CD34 and podocalyxin present sulfated carbohydrate structures (6-sulfated sialyl Lewis x or 6-sulfo-sLex) as a recognition determinant within their heavily glycosylated mucin domains. We recently identified endoglycan as a new member of the CD34 family. We report here that endoglycan, like the two other members of this family (CD34 and podocalyxin) can function as a L-selectin ligand. However, endoglycan employs a different binding mechanism, interacting with L-selectin through sulfation on two tyrosine residues and O-linked sLex structures that are presented within its highly acidic amino-terminal region. Our analysis establishes striking parallels with PSGL-1, a leukocyte ligand that interacts with all three selectins, mediating leukocyte-endothelial, leukocyte-leukocyte, and platelet-leukocyte interactions. Since the distribution of endoglycan includes hematopoietic precursors and leukocyte subpopulations, in addition to endothelial cells, our findings suggest several potential settings for endoglycan-mediated adhesion events.
    Journal of Biological Chemistry 08/2003; 278(30):27390-8. · 4.77 Impact Factor