10.1 Cell Adhesions Flashcards
What are cell-adhesion molecules or CAMs?
CAMs help cells adhere to other cells or matrix. They perform structural roles but also provide cells with information about their surroundings and neighbors. the attachment of cells to each other is a reflection of active decisions made by cels
How are adhesion molecules divided?
Into two groups: those that require extra cellular calcium (can be further divided into three groups) for their function and those that do not require calcium.
What are the three groups that calcium dependent adhesion molecules can be divided into?
1) Selectins (L, P, and E selectins)
2) Integrins
3) Cadherins
What do selectins bind to? Is their attachment strong or weak?
selectins are molecules that bind to carbohydrates found on other cells or in the extracellular matrix and they do so in a calcium dependent manner.
Their adhesions are the weakest type of attachment and they are used to form temporary and weak attachments.
Where are L selectins found?
found on white blood cells or Leucocytes
Where are E selectins found?
found on endothelial cells
Where are P selectins found?
on both white blood cells/leucocyts or endothelial cells.
The P stands for platelet.
What are lectins?
proteins that bind to sugars or carbohydrates
What is a C lectin
lectin proteins that have a trans membrane tail which anchors them to the actin cytoskeleton on the intracellular side of the cell membrane.
What do endothelial cells do when tissues initiates an inflammation response?
endothelial cells express E and P selectins during inflammation to recruit white blood cells with L-selectins.
In the inflammation response, what happens after epithelial cells begin to express P selectins on their surface?
Circulating white blood cells (L-selectins) will bind to the end of the endothelial cells (they bind b/c both cells express compatible glycosylated proteins on their surfaces.
What kind of bond (strong or weak) does selecting create between epithelial cells and white blood cells in inflammation response? What does this attachment type result in?
Selectins create a weak bond. The weak binding are not strong enough to anchor white blood cells against the blood flow but strong enough to attach the white blood cells to the vessel wall.
This results in a highly characteristic of rolling behavior of white blood cells in the area of an inflammation.
Why is the rolling behavior of white blood cells in an area of inflammation important?
this behavior is going to allow the white blood cells time to organize and activate other and stronger adhesion molecules.
once the stronger adhesion molecules are activated leukocytes exit the blood vessels and enter the surrounding tissue
What would happen if white blood cells did not exhibit rolling behavior in inflammation response? And if they had a strong attachment?
If white blood cells had a very strong adhesion molecule activated all the time they would just exit the blood stream randomly and wouldn’t exhibit this sort of homing behavior.
What happens if selectins are not present in cells?
resistance to infection decreases.
What happens if a tumor cell expresses selectins?
the cells enhances metastasis
What is the structure of integrins?
heterodimers made up of an alpha and beta subunit. They contain extracellular adhesion domains as well as a trans membrane helix and a intracellular tail that is used to anchor the integrin’s to the actin cytoskeleton.
Both subunits have calcium binding domains and the calcium is needed to allow the integrin’s subunits to have the right shape for attachments.