Current View on the Molecular Mechanisms Underlying Fibrin(ogen)-Dependent Inflammation, 2022, Yakovlev et al

Discussion in 'Other health news and research' started by Andy, Jul 28, 2022.

  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

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    Numerous studies have revealed the involvement of fibrinogen in the inflammatory response. To explain the molecular mechanisms underlying fibrinogen-dependent inflammation, two bridging mechanisms have been proposed in which fibrin(ogen) bridges leukocytes to endothelial cells. The first mechanism suggests that bridging occurs via the interaction of fibrinogen with the leukocyte receptor Mac-1 and the endothelial receptor ICAM-1, which promotes leukocyte transmigration and enhances inflammation. The second mechanism includes bridging of leukocytes to the endothelium by fibrin degradation product E1 fragment through its interaction with leukocyte receptor CD11c and endothelial VE-cadherin to promote leukocyte transmigration. The role of E1 in promoting inflammation is inhibited by the fibrin-derived β15-42 fragment, and this has been suggested to result from its ability to compete for the E1-VE-cadherin interaction and to trigger signaling pathways through the Src kinase Fyn.

    Our recent study revealed that the β15-42 fragment is ineffective in inhibiting the E1- or fibrin-VE-cadherin interaction, leaving the proposed signaling mechanism as the only viable explanation for the inhibitory function of β15-42. We have discovered that fibrin interacts with the VLDL receptor, and this interaction triggers a signaling pathway that promotes leukocyte transmigration through inhibition of src kinase Fyn. This pathway is inhibited by another pathway induced by the interaction of β15-42 with a putative endothelial receptor.

    In this review, we briefly describe the previously proposed molecular mechanisms underlying fibrin-dependent inflammation and their advantages/disadvantages and summarize our recent studies of the novel VLDL receptor-dependent pathway of leukocyte transmigration which plays an important role in fibrin-dependent inflammation.

    Paywall, https://www.thieme-connect.de/products/ejournals/abstract/10.1055/a-1910-4538
     

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