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Macrophage recognition and ingestion of 'self' cells undergoing apoptosis in vivo protects tissues from the toxic contents of dying cells and modulates macrophage regulation of inflammatory and immune responses. However, the complex molecular mechanisms mediating macrophage discrimination between viable and apoptotic cells are poorly understood. In particular, little is known of why viable nucleated cells are not engulfed by macrophages. To reveal active repulsion of viable cells and to seek specific capture or 'tethering' of apoptotic cells, we studied macrophage binding of viable and apoptotic leukocytes under conditions of flow. We found that homophilic ligation of CD31 (ref. 4) on viable leukocytes promoted their active, temperature-dependent detachment under low shear, whereas such CD31-mediated detachment was disabled in apoptotic leukocytes, promoting tight binding and macrophage ingestion of dying cells. Here we propose that CD31 (also known as platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1, PECAM-1) is an example of a cell-surface molecule that prevents phagocyte ingestion of closely apposed viable cells by transmitting 'detachment' signals, and which changes function on apoptosis, promoting tethering of dying cells to phagocytes.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/nature00811

Type

Journal article

Journal

Nature

Publication Date

07/2002

Volume

418

Pages

200 - 203

Addresses

Inflammation Repair Group, MRC Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9AG, UK. simon.brown@ed.ac.uk

Keywords

Leukocytes, Cells, Cultured, Macrophages, Humans, Proteolipids, Antigens, CD31, Cell Adhesion, Signal Transduction, Apoptosis, Cell Survival, Endocytosis