Int J Sports Med 1994; 15: S148-S153
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1021130
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Recruitment and Recirculation of Leukocytes after an Ultramarathon Run: Preferential Homing of Cells Expressing High Levels of the Adhesion Molecule LFA-1

H. Gabriel, L. Brechtel, A. Urhausen, W. Kindermann
  • Institute of Sports and Performance Medicine (Head: Prof. Dr. W. Kindermann) University of Saarland, Saarbrücken
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Publication History

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

The αLβ2 (CD11a/CD18) integrin LFA-1 (lymphocyte function-associated antigen-1) mainly contributes to the firm arrest of leucocytes on the endothelium. Its cell surface density is thought to be important for the exercise-induced homing of leucocytes. 9 athletes (7 males, 2 females, age 36-68 years, body mass 64±10 kg, height: 175±10 cm) absolved a competitive 100 km run in 8:07 hours (range: 7:29-9:50 hours). Immunophenotyping of circulating leucocytes and data aquisition by three colour flow cytometry before and up to 3 hours after the race showed that post exercise lymphocyte subpopulations with a higher expression of CD11a like CD3+CD8+CD45RO+ T-cells, natural killer cells (CD3-CD16/CD56+) and cytotoxic, not MHC-restricted T-cells (CD3+CD16/CD56+) decreased significantly more than CD45RO+ and CD45RO- helper-T-cells (CD3+CD4+), CD3+CD8+CD45RO- T-cells and B-cells (CD19+), which have lower levels for CD11a. Cell concentrations of regular monocytes (Fcγ receptor 3 negative, LFA-1 low positive) increased, whereas mature monocytes (Fcγ receptor 3 low or high positive respectively, LFA-1 high positive) decreased. In conclusion the surface density of the adhesion molecule LFA-1 on leucocytes is likely to contribute significantly to the extent of leucocyte's homing after long endurance exercise.