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Citations to this article

Functional activation of lymphocyte CD44 in peripheral blood is a marker of autoimmune disease activity.
P Estess, … , V Pascual, M H Siegelman
P Estess, … , V Pascual, M H Siegelman
Published September 15, 1998
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1998;102(6):1173-1182. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI4235.
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Research Article Article has an altmetric score of 3

Functional activation of lymphocyte CD44 in peripheral blood is a marker of autoimmune disease activity.

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Abstract

Interactions between complementary receptors on leukocytes and endothelial cells play a central role in regulating extravasation from the blood and thereby affect both normal and pathologic inflammatory responses. CD44 on lymphocytes that has been "activated" to bind its principal ligand hyaluronate (HA) on endothelium can mediate the primary adhesion (rolling) of lymphocytes to vascular endothelial cells under conditions of physiologic shear stress, and this interaction is used for activated T cell extravasation into an inflamed site in vivo in mice (DeGrendele, H.C., P. Estess, L.J. Picker, and M.H. Siegelman. 1996. J. Exp. Med. 183:1119-1130. DeGrendele, H.D., P. Estess, and M.H. Siegelman. 1997. Science. 278:672-675. DeGrendele, H.C., P. Estess, and M.H. Siegelman. 1997. J. Immunol. 159: 2549-2553). Here, we have investigated the role of lymphocyte-borne-activated CD44 in the human and show that CD44-dependent primary adhesion is induced in human peripheral blood T cells through T cell receptor triggering. In addition, lymphocytes capable of CD44/HA-dependent rolling interactions can be found resident within inflamed tonsils. In analysis of peripheral bloods of patients from a pediatric rheumatology clinic, examining systemic lupus erythematosus, and a group of chronic arthropathies, expression of CD44-dependent primary adhesion strongly correlates with concurrent symptomatic disease, with 85% of samples from clinically active patients showing elevated levels of rolling activity (compared with only 4% of inactive patients). These rolling interactions are predominantly mediated by T cells. The results suggest that circulating T lymphocytes bearing activated CD44 are elevated under conditions of chronic inflammation and that these may represent a pathogenically important subpopulation of activated circulating cells that may provide a reliable marker for autoimmune or chronic inflammatory disease activity.

Authors

P Estess, H C DeGrendele, V Pascual, M H Siegelman

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Total citations by year

Year: 2022 2021 2020 2019 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1993 Total
Citations: 2 2 2 4 1 2 1 4 2 5 1 1 6 5 5 5 4 6 9 8 1 76
Citation information
This citation data is accumulated from CrossRef, which receives citation information from participating publishers, including this journal. Not all publishers participate in CrossRef, so this information is not comprehensive. Additionally, data may not reflect the most current citations to this article, and the data may differ from citation information available from other sources (for example, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and Scopus).

Citations to this article in year 2012 (4)

Title and authors Publication Year
The Role of Hyaluronan and CD44 in the Pathogenesis of Lupus Nephritis
S Yung, TM Chan
Autoimmune Diseases 2012
CD44 expression in plexiform lesions of idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension : CD44 in pulmonary hypertension
K Ohta-Ogo, H Hao, H Ishibashi-Ueda, S Hirota, K Nakamura, T Ohe, H Ito
Pathology International 2012
Role of CD44 in tumour progression and strategies for targeting
LM Negi, S Talegaonkar, M Jaggi, FJ Ahmad, Z Iqbal, RK Khar
Journal of Drug Targeting 2012
The high and low molecular weight forms of hyaluronan have distinct effects on CD44 clustering
C Yang, M Cao, H Liu, Y He, J Xu, Y Du, Y Liu, W Wang, L Cui, J Hu, F Gao
The Journal of biological chemistry 2012

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