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Dive into the research topics where Donald C. Anderson is active.

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Featured researches published by Donald C. Anderson.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1989

Cooperative interactions of LFA-1 and Mac-1 with intercellular adhesion molecule-1 in facilitating adherence and transendothelial migration of human neutrophils in vitro.

C W Smith; Steven D. Marlin; R. Rothlein; C Toman; Donald C. Anderson

The adherence of human neutrophils to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) is partially dependent on the CD11/CD18 family of glycoproteins on the neutrophil and ICAM-1 on the HUVEC. The CD18 heterodimer involved in this adherence was evaluated in vitro using subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). The adherence of unstimulated neutrophils to IL-1-stimulated HUVEC was significantly inhibited by anti-CD11a but not CD11b MAbs, while the adherence of fMLP-stimulated neutrophils was significantly inhibited by both anti-CD11a and -CD11b. Anti-CD11a, but not anti-CD11b MAbs, reduced the adherence of unstimulated neutrophils on purified ICAM-1 to the same low level untreated neutrophils exhibited on a control protein, glycophorin. Stimulation with fMLP significantly increased neutrophil attachment to purified ICAM-1, but not to the control protein. Anti-CD11b MAbs reduced this chemotactically augmented adherence to that of unstimulated neutrophils, and in combination with anti-CD11a MAbs reduced adherence to that on the control protein. The results in this report indicate that unstimulated neutrophils exhibit LFA-1-dependent attachment to ICAM-1, and chemotactic stimulation enhances the attachment of human neutrophils to ICAM-1 by a Mac-1-dependent process.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1988

Recognition of an Endothelial Determinant for CD18-dependent Human Neutrophil Adherence and Transendothelial Migration

C W Smith; R. Rothlein; Bonnie J. Hughes; M. M. Mariscalco; H.E. Rudloff; F.C. Schmalstieg; Donald C. Anderson

Human neutrophil (PMN) attachment to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) was evaluated in vitro using two MAbs, R6-5-D6 and RR1/1, that recognize intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), and one MAb, TS1/18, that recognizes CD18. Pretreatment of the HUVEC with anti-ICAM-1 MAbs produced greater than 50% inhibition of attachment to HUVEC, and IL-1 (0.5 U/ml)- or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) (10 ng/ml)-stimulated HUVEC, and greater than 99% inhibition of f-Met-Leu-Phe (0.5 nM) enhanced adherence. Anti-ICAM-1 MAbs also inhibited by greater than 85% the transendothelial migration induced by 4-h IL-1 (0.5 U/ml) and LPS (10 ng/ml) activation of the HUVEC. That these effects involved a CD18-dependent mechanism is supported by the following results: pretreatment of PMN with TS1/18 produced the same degree of inhibition of attachment and migration as seen with R6-5-D6. In addition, the use of both MAbs together did not further increase the inhibition of cell attachment to stimulated HUVEC. The attachment of PMN from patients with CD18 deficiency to stimulated HUVEC was not reduced by R6-5-D6, and both R6-5-D6 and TS1/18 revealed the same time course for appearance and disappearance of an adherence component on stimulated HUVEC not blocked by either MAb. These results demonstrate that attachment and transendothelial migration of PMN in vitro depend substantially on both CD18 on the PMN and ICAM-1 on the endothelial cell.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1991

Chemotactic factors regulate lectin adhesion molecule 1 (LECAM-1)-dependent neutrophil adhesion to cytokine-stimulated endothelial cells in vitro.

C W Smith; T K Kishimoto; O Abbassi; B Hughes; R Rothlein; Larry V. McIntire; E Butcher; Donald C. Anderson; O Abbass

Monoclonal antibodies recognizing CD18, CD11a, CD11b, and neutrophil lectin adhesion molecule 1 (LECAM-1), i.e., the human homologue of the murine MEL-14 antigen, were used to assess the relative contribution of these glycoproteins to neutrophil-endothelial adhesion. Under static conditions, the adhesion of neutrophils to IL-1-stimulated human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) monolayers was inhibited by antibodies to CD18, CD11a, and the neutrophil LECAM-1, and the effect of combining anti-LECAM-1 and anti-CD11a was almost additive. Under flow at a wall shear stress 1.85 dyn/cm2, a condition where CD18-dependent adhesion is minimal, anti-LECAM-1 inhibited adhesion by greater than 50%. Chemotactic stimulation of neutrophils induced a rapid loss of LECAM-1 from the neutrophil surface, and the level of neutrophil surface LECAM-1 was closely correlated with adhesion under flow. Neutrophils contacting the activated endothelial cells for 30 min lost much of their surface LECAM-1, a phenomenon induced by a soluble factor or factors released into the medium by the stimulated monolayers, and a high percentage migrated through the HUVEC monolayer. This migration was almost completely inhibited by anti-CD18, but was unaffected by antibodies to neutrophil LECAM-1. These results support the concept that LECAM-1 is a neutrophil adhesion molecule that participates in the adherence of unstimulated neutrophils to cytokine-stimulated endothelial cells under conditions of flow, and is then lost from the neutrophil surface coincident with the engagement of CD18-dependent mechanisms leading to transendothelial migration.


Cell | 1987

Heterogeneous mutations in the β subunit common to the LFA-1, Mac-1, and p150,95 glycoproteins cause leukocyte adhesion deficiency

Takashi K. Kishimoto; Nurit Hollander; Thomas M. Roberts; Donald C. Anderson; Timothy A. Springer

Leukocyte adhesion deficiency (LAD) is a heritable disease involving deficient expression of three related leukocyte adhesion glycoproteins: LFA-1, Mac-1, and p150,95. These proteins are alpha beta heterodimers containing identical 95,000 dalton beta subunits. Here we demonstrate that the primary defect in LAD is in the beta subunit gene. We identified five distinct beta subunit phenotypes in LAD patients: undetectable beta subunit mRNA and protein precursor; low levels of beta subunit mRNA and precursor; an aberrantly large beta subunit precursor, probably due to an extra glycosylation site; an aberrantly small precursor; and a grossly normal precursor. Mutant beta subunit precursors from LAD patients failed to associate with the LFA-1 alpha subunit. In family studies, inheritance of the aberrant precursors correlates with the known inheritance of the LAD defect.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1984

Abnormalities of polymorphonuclear leukocyte function associated with a heritable deficiency of high molecular weight surface glycoproteins (GP138): common relationship to diminished cell adherence.

Donald C. Anderson; Frank C. Schmalstieg; M A Arnaout; S Kohl; Michael F. Tosi; N Dana; G J Buffone; Bonnie J. Hughes; B R Brinkley; W D Dickey

Investigations of polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) function were performed in a 5-yr-old white female with delayed umbilical cord separation, impaired pus formation, and a severe defect of PMN chemotaxis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated an almost total deficiency of a high molecular weight glycoprotein(s) (GP138) in the granule and membrane fractions of the patients cells, and NaB3H4-galactose oxidase labeling demonstrated the absence of a major glycoprotein complex on the surface of her PMNs. Monoclonal antibodies (MAb) were employed in flow cytometry experiments to demonstrate that two previously characterized glycoproteins (Mo1 and LFA1) were undetectable on the surface of the patients PMNs and monocytes. Immunoprecipitation of 125I-labeled patient cells with subunit specific MAbs confirmed that the alpha-subunits of Mo1 (155 kD) and LFA1 (177 kD) and their common beta-subunit (94 kD) were totally deficient. Functional analyses of patient PMNs demonstrated severe impairment of adherence- and adhesion-dependent cell functions including spreading, aggregation, orientation in chemotactic gradients, antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity, and phagocytosis of particles (Oil-Red-0-paraffin, zymosan) selectively opsonized with C3-derived ligands. Patient PMNs demonstrated a normal capacity to rosette with IgG or C3b-coated sheep erythrocytes, but rosette formation with C3bi-coated erythrocytes was profoundly diminished. Adhesion-independent functions including shape change, N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-3H-phenylalanine binding, and O-2 generation or secretion elicited by soluble stimuli were normal. Membrane fluidity, surface charge, and microtubule assembly were also normal. These findings provide new evidence that critical PMN surface glycoproteins are required to facilitate multiple adhesion-dependent cellular functions of the inflammatory response.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1993

E-selectin supports neutrophil rolling in vitro under conditions of flow.

Omid Abbassi; T. K. Kishimoto; Larry V. McIntire; Donald C. Anderson; C.W. Smith

E-selectin was evaluated for its ability to support neutrophil adhesion under conditions of flow. At a wall shear stress of 1.85 dyn/cm2, neutrophils were found to attach to E-selectin expressed on the apical surface of L cell monolayers. The initial intercellular contact was most often evidenced by neutrophils rolling on the monolayer at a mean rate of congruent to 10 microns/s. Anti-E-selectin monoclonal antibody, CL2/6, inhibited this interaction by > 90%. Rolling neutrophils often transiently stopped, but in contrast to the behavior on stimulated endothelial cells, they remained spherical in shape and did not migrate on or beneath the monolayer. A possible contribution of neutrophil L-selectin to this interaction was indicated by the findings that anti-L-selectin monoclonal antibody, DREG-56, inhibited E-selectin-dependent adhesion under flow by > 65%, and there was a highly significant correlation between surface levels of L-selectin and E-selectin-dependent adhesion under flow. E-selectin also appeared to support neutrophil adhesion to IL-1 beta-stimulated endothelial cells under conditions of flow, but it accounted for only congruent to 30% of the level of adherence, in contrast to L-selectin which accounted for > 65%. Thus, both L-selectin and E-selectin can support neutrophil adhesion at wall shear stresses that preclude intercellular adhesion molecule-1-dependent adhesion, and they participate in neutrophil adherence to stimulated endothelial cells under conditions of flow.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1993

Regulation of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) in ischemic and reperfused canine myocardium.

G L Kukielka; Hal K. Hawkins; Lloyd H. Michael; A M Manning; Keith A. Youker; C Lane; Mark L. Entman; C W Smith; Donald C. Anderson

Previous studies in vitro have shown an important role for intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) in adherence interactions of canine neutrophils with canine jugular vein endothelial cells and in cytotoxicity of canine neutrophils for adult cardiac myocytes. To evaluate the regulation of ICAM-1 in myocardial inflammation and its role in the pathogenesis of myocardial ischemia and reperfusion, a series of in vivo and ex vivo studies were performed in canine animals. Systemic administration of LPS elicited ICAM-1 mRNA in several tissues, including myocardium, which demonstrated increasing ICAM-1 staining on intercalated discs of cardiac myocytes. In ischemia and reperfusion protocols: (a) ICAM-1 mRNA was found in ischemic segments within 1 h of reperfusion and in both ischemic and normally perfused segments by 24 h of reperfusion; (b) expression of ICAM-1 was detected in cardiac myocytes in the ischemic region by 6 h of reperfusion; increased expression was seen thereafter as a function of time; (c) post-ischemic (but not preischemic) cardiac lymph collected at intervals from 1 to 24 h after reperfusion elicited ICAM-1 mRNA, ICAM-1 expression, and ICAM-1-dependent neutrophil adhesion in canine jugular vein endothelial cells and in cardiac myocytes with peak cytokine activity seen by 1 h; (d) extravascular localization of neutrophils was detected in ischemic areas only, and was associated with endothelium bearing high levels of ICAM-1 within 1 h of reperfusion; infiltration increased thereafter in association with increasing levels of ICAM-1 mRNA in myocardial segments and increasing levels of ICAM-1 expression on cardiac myocytes. These findings provide the first direct evidence for inflammatory regulation of ICAM-1 in ischemic and reperfused canine myocardium. They support the hypothesis that ICAM-1 participates in neutrophil-mediated myocardial damage.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1989

Adherence of neutrophils to cultured human microvascular endothelial cells. Stimulation by chemotactic peptides and lipid mediators and dependence upon the Mac-1, LFA-1, p150,95 glycoprotein family.

M G Tonnesen; Donald C. Anderson; Timothy A. Springer; A Knedler; Natalie J. Avdi; Peter M. Henson

The process of neutrophil adhesion to and migration through the microvascular endothelium, an early event in the induction of the acute inflammatory response, has been attributed to the generation of extravascular chemoattractants. Although both chemotactic peptides and lipid mediators enhance neutrophil adherence in vitro and in vivo, the mechanism(s) involved in the interaction between circulating neutrophils and microvascular endothelial cells is still not completely understood. In a microtiter well adherence assay, the chemotactic peptides, FMLP and C5a, and the lipid mediators, leukotriene B4 (LTB4) and platelet activating factor (PAF), enhanced human neutrophil adherence to cultured human microvascular endothelial cells as well as to human umbilical vein endothelial cells in a dose-dependent manner with a rapid time course. This stimulated adhesive interaction between neutrophils and cultured human endothelial cells was dependent on the expression of the Mac-1, LFA-1, p150,95 glycoprotein family on the neutrophil surface since neutrophils from patients with leukocyte adhesion deficiency, lacking surface expression of the adhesive glycoproteins, exhibited markedly diminished adherence to human endothelial cells in response to stimulation with chemotactic factors compared to normal control neutrophils. All four mediators enhanced expression of the glycoprotein family on the surface of normal neutrophils as determined by flow cytofluorimetry using a monoclonal antibody (TS1/18) to the glycoprotein common beta subunit. In addition, TS1/18 inhibited up to 100% the adherence of normal neutrophils to endothelial cells stimulated by maximal concentrations of FMLP, C5a, LTB4, or PAF. Moreover, HL-60 cells, human promyelocytic leukemia cells, neither increased glycoprotein surface expression nor adherence in response to stimulation. Thus, peptide and lipid mediators of the acute inflammatory response appear to enhance adherence of circulating neutrophils to the microvascular endothelium by a mechanism dependent on expression of the Mac-1, LFA-1, p150,95 glycoprotein family on the neutrophil surface.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1993

Requirements for leukocyte adhesion molecules in nephrotoxic nephritis.

Michael S. Mulligan; K J Johnson; R. F. Todd; Thomas B. Issekutz; Masayuki Miyasaka; Takuya Tamatani; C W Smith; Donald C. Anderson; Peter A. Ward

Requirements for leukocyte adhesion molecules as well as cytokines have been determined in the rat model of acute nephrotoxic nephritis. Proteinuria (at 24 h) and neutrophil accumulation in renal glomeruli (at 6 h) have been used as the endpoints. For full accumulation in glomeruli of neutrophils as well as full development of proteinuria, requirements have been demonstrated for TNF alpha, (but not IL-1), CD11b (but not CD11a), very late arising-4 (CD49d/CD29), and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 but not endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 (E-selectin). By immunohistochemical approaches, infusion of antibody to glomerular basement membrane induced glomerular upregulation of intercellular adhesion molecule-1, endothelial leukocyte adhesion molecule-1, and vascular adhesion molecule-1. Treatment of rats with anti-TNF alpha or soluble recombinant human TNF receptor-1 blocked this expression. Renal arterial infusion of TNF alpha induced glomerular expression of all three endothelial adhesion molecules, but infusion of IL-1 beta did not. These data suggest that, in neutrophil and complement-dependent anti-glomerular basement membrane-induced acute nephritis in rats, there are selective requirements for cytokines, beta 1 and beta 2 integrins, and endothelial adhesion molecules. These requirements contrast with those found in other vascular beds in which complement and neutrophil-induced vascular injury has been induced by deposition of immune complexes.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1991

Adherence of neutrophils to canine cardiac myocytes in vitro is dependent on intercellular adhesion molecule-1.

C W Smith; Mark L. Entman; C Lane; Arthur L. Beaudet; T I Ty; Keith A. Youker; Hal K. Hawkins; Donald C. Anderson

The adhesiveness of isolated canine cardiac myocytes for neutrophils is greatly increased by stimulation with cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha). Since this adhesion is significantly inhibited by an anti-CD18 MAb, experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that the newly expressed adhesion molecule on the cardiac myocytes was intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1). A newly developed MAb, CL18/6, was found to exhibit the functional and binding characteristics with canine neutrophils and canine jugular vein endothelial cells expected of an antibody recognizing ICAM-1. MAb CL18/6 also bound to isolated cardiac myocytes after stimulation of the myocytes with cytokines, and it blocked by greater than 90% the adhesion of neutrophils to stimulated myocytes. A partial cDNA clone for canine ICAM-1 was isolated, and ICAM-1 mRNA was found to be increased in both endothelial cells and cardiac myocytes after cytokine stimulation. Cytokines that both increased the CL18/6-inhibitable adhesion of neutrophils to myocytes and induced expression of ICAM-1 were IL-1 beta, TNF alpha, and LPS. These results are consistent with the conclusion that canine endothelial cells and cardiac myocytes express ICAM-1 in response to cytokine stimulation, and that ICAM-1 functions as an adhesive molecule for neutrophils on both cell types.

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C W Smith

Baylor College of Medicine

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C. Wayne Smith

Baylor College of Medicine

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Bonnie J. Hughes

Baylor College of Medicine

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Frank C. Schmalstieg

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Ralph D. Feigin

Baylor College of Medicine

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Roger D. Rossen

Baylor College of Medicine

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