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Journal ArticleDOI

Human junction adhesion molecule regulates tight junction resealing in epithelia.

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TLDR
It is suggested that JAM plays an important role in the regulation of tight junction assembly in epithelia, and these JAM-mediated effects may occur by either direct, or indirect interactions with occludin.
Abstract
Epithelial cells form a highly selective barrier and line many organs. The epithelial barrier is maintained by closely apposed cell-cell contacts containing tight junctions, the regulation of which is incompletely understood. Here we report the cloning, tissue localization and evidence for a role in epithelial barrier regulation of an immunoglobulin superfamily member that likely represents the human homolog of murine junction adhesion molecule (JAM). Analysis of the primary structure of human JAM, cloned from T84 epithelial cells, predicts a transmembrane protein with an extracellular domain that contains two IgV loops. Monoclonal antibodies generated against the putative extracellular domain were reactive with a 35–39 kDa protein from both T84 epithelial cells and human neutrophils. By immunofluorescence, JAM mAbs labeled epithelial cells from intestine, lung, and kidney, prominently in the region of tight junctions (co-localization with occludin) and also along lateral cell membranes below the tight junctions. Flow cytometric studies confirmed predominant JAM expression in epithelial cells but also revealed expression on endothelial and hematopoietic cells of all lineages. Functional studies demonstrated that JAM specific mAbs markedly inhibited transepithelial resistance recovery of T84 monolayers after disruption of intercellular junctions (including tight junctions) by transient calcium depletion. Morphologic analysis revealed that, after disassembly of cell-cell junctions, anti-JAM inhibition of barrier function recovery correlated with a loss of both occludin and JAM, but not ZO-1, in reassembling tight junction structure. Reassembly of the major adherens junction component E-cadherin was not affected by JAM specific mAbs. Our findings suggest that JAM plays an important role in the regulation of tight junction assembly in epithelia. Furthermore, these JAM-mediated effects may occur by either direct, or indirect interactions with occludin.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Multifunctional strands in tight junctions.

TL;DR: New insights into the molecular architecture of tight junctions allow us to now discuss the structure and functions of this unique cell–cell adhesion apparatus in molecular terms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Signaling Mechanisms Regulating Endothelial Permeability

TL;DR: This review summarizes and analyzes the recent data from genetic, physiological, cellular, and morphological studies that have addressed the signaling mechanisms involved in the regulation of both the paracellular and transcellular transport pathways.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intestinal barrier function: molecular regulation and disease pathogenesis.

TL;DR: Clinical and experimental evidence demonstrating intestinal epithelial barrier dysfunction as a major factor contributing to the predisposition to inflammatory diseases, including food allergy, inflammatory bowel diseases, and celiac disease is summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Endothelial Cell-to-Cell Junctions: Molecular Organization and Role in Vascular Homeostasis

TL;DR: How the molecular architectures and interactions may represent a mechanistic basis for the function and regulation of junctions, focusing on junction assembly and permeability regulation, is emphasized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tight junction proteins.

TL;DR: Advances in the knowledge of the molecular structure of TJ support previous physiological models that exhibited TJ as dynamic structures that present distinct permeability and morphological characteristics in different tissues and in response to changing natural, pathological or experimental conditions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cell Adhesion: The Molecular Basis of Tissue Architecture and Morphogenesis

TL;DR: A coupling between physical adhesion and developmental signaling provides a mechanism to tightly integrate physical aspects of tissue morphogenesis with cell growth and differentiation, a coordination that is essential to achieve the intricate patterns of cells in tissues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occludin: a novel integral membrane protein localizing at tight junctions.

TL;DR: An integral membrane protein localizing at tight junctions is now identified, which is designated as "occludin," which was revealed by a hydrophilicity plot that was very similar to that of connexin, an integral membraneprotein in gap junctions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Immunoglobulin Superfamily—Domains for Cell Surface Recognition

TL;DR: The domain hypothesis was firmly established when the structures of V and C domains were determined to reveal a common fold forming a sandwich of two p-sheets that was stabilized by the conserved disulfide bond.
Journal ArticleDOI

Claudin-1 and -2: Novel Integral Membrane Proteins Localizing at Tight Junctions with No Sequence Similarity to Occludin

TL;DR: It is indicated that multiple integral membrane proteins with four putative transmembrane domains, occludin and claudins, constitute TJ strands.
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