Abstract

This study investigated whether the high expression of adhesion molecules on enriched preparations of circulating dendritic cells (DCs) was an intrinsic property of the cells or whether it was a consequence of the procedure used to isolate them from blood. Expression of the beta 1, beta 2 integrins (CD11/CD18 family) and other adhesion molecules on DCs in whole blood was compared with that on isolated DCs. Dendritic cells were identified by flow cytometry as leucocytes that were positive for human leucocyte antigen (HLA)-DR, but negative for CD3, CD14, CD16, CD19 and CD56. In contrast to a minority of DCs in whole blood, the majority of isolated DCs expressed the beta 2 integrins and there were a greater number of cells bearing CD44, CD54 and some of the beta 1 integrins (notably CD49b, CD49d, CD49e and CD29). An increase in the proportion of DCs bearing adhesion molecules was generally apparent at the isolation stage when mononuclear cells, which had been incubated overnight, were centrifuged on a metrizamide gradient to enrich for cells of low density. Inclusion of an inhibitor of protein glycosylation and exocytosis (brefeldin A) at all stages of separation partially prevented an increase in the percentage of DCs bearing CD18, C29 and C54 whereas the inclusion of cycloheximide (an inhibitor of polypeptide synthesis) interfered with increases in the percentage of cells bearing CD29 and CD54. Neither of these antagonists had an effect on the intensity of adhesion molecule expression. We suggest that some of the adhesion-dependent functions of isolated DCs are caused, in part, by an upregulation of surface adhesion molecules induced by the enrichment procedure.

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