Abstract

The functional opsonic and monocyte adherence domains within the 180,000 m.w. opsonic fibronectin fragment (180K-opFnf) that selectively augments human monocyte phagocytosis of particulate activators of the alternative complement pathway were analyzed with Fab fragments of monoclonal anti-fibronectin antibodies BC7, CE9, BD4, AB3, and CPG1, and with fragments of intact human plasma fibronectin derived by cathepsin cleavage and isolated by affinity chromatography. Monoclonals AB3 and CPG1, which recognize epitopes within 40,000 daltons of the carboxy terminus of intact fibronectin, and the cathepsin D-derived, disulfide-linked fragments that contain these epitopes each inhibited the opsonic function of 180K-opFnf. Monoclonals AB3 and CPG1 inhibited monocyte ingestion of rabbit erythrocytes (Er) by 60 and 50%, respectively, when 180K-opFnf was pretreated with 20 micrograms of these monoclonals, but neither monoclonal affected the enhanced monocyte ingestion of Er pretreated with the fibronectin fragment. The pretreatment of Er with 5 micrograms and 40 micrograms of the disulfide-linked, cathepsin D derivatives isolated from high and low affinity heparin fractions, respectively, inhibited the proportion of ingesting monocytes by 60%, but these types of fragments had little effect when concurrently incubated with the opsonic fragment and Er. Monoclonals CE9 and BD4, which recognize epitopes located adjacent to or within the cell-adhesive domain of intact fibronectin, respectively, inhibited the monocyte adherence function of 180K-opFnf, as evidence by their comparable inhibitory effects when present before or after Er were opsonized with 180K-opFnf. When 20 micrograms of monoclonals CE9 and BD4 were each introduced before and after Er were opsonized with 180K-opFnf, monocyte ingestion was inhibited by 60 and 65% and by 51 and 60%, respectively. At 42 micrograms, cathepsin D-derived, non-gelatin-binding, low affinity heparin fragments that contained both BD4 and CE9 determinants or only the BD4 determinant inhibited monocyte ingestion by 53 and 74%, respectively, when concurrently incubated with 180K-opFnf and target Er, but were without effect when used to pretreat Er before the addition of 180K-opFnf. Thus, the inhibitory effects produced by monoclonals AB3 and CPG1 and by cathepsin D-derived, disulfide-linked fragments containing their corresponding epitopes demonstrated that the opsonic domain within 180K-opFnf is immunologically similar to regions within the carboxy terminus of intact plasma fibronectin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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