Effect of Ganglioside and Tetraspanins in Microdomains on Interaction of Integrins with Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor

The functional interaction (“cross-talk”) of integrins with growth factor receptors has become increasingly clear as a basic mechanism in cell biology, defining cell growth, adhesion, and motility. However, no studies have addressed the microdomains in which such interaction takes place nor the effe...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2005-04, Vol.280 (16), p.16227-16234
Hauptverfasser: Toledo, Marcos S., Suzuki, Erika, Handa, Kazuko, Hakomori, Senitiroh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The functional interaction (“cross-talk”) of integrins with growth factor receptors has become increasingly clear as a basic mechanism in cell biology, defining cell growth, adhesion, and motility. However, no studies have addressed the microdomains in which such interaction takes place nor the effect of gangliosides and tetraspanins (TSPs) on such interaction. Growth of human embryonal WI38 fibroblasts is highly dependent on fibroblast growth factor (FGF) and its receptor (FGFR), stably associated with ganglioside GM3 and TSPs CD9 and CD81 in the ganglioside-enriched microdomain. Adhesion and motility of these cells are mediated by laminin-5 ((LN5) and fibronectin (FN) through α3β1 and α5β1 integrin receptors, respectively. When WI38 cells or its transformant VA13 cells were adhered to LN5 or FN, α3β1 or α5β1 were stimulated, giving rise to signaling to activate FGFR through tyrosine phosphorylation and inducing cell proliferation under serum-free conditions without FGF addition. Types and intensity of signaling during the time course differed significantly depending on the type of integrin stimulated (α3β1 versus α5β1), and on cell type (WI38 versus VA13). Such effect of cross-talk between integrins and FGFR was influenced strongly by the change of GM3 and TSPs. (i) GM3 depletion by P4 caused enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation of FGFR and Akt followed by MAPK activation, without significant change of ceramide level. GM3 depletion also caused enhanced co-immunoprecipitation of FGFR with α3/α5/β1 and of these integrins with CD9/CD81. (ii) LN5- or FN-dependent proliferation of both WI38 and VA13 was strongly enhanced by GM3 depletion and by CD9/CD81 knockdown by siRNA. Thus, integrin-FGFR cross-talk is strongly influenced by GM3 and/or TSPs within the ganglioside-enriched microdomain.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M413713200