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1.
Thrombospondin is a large multifunctional glycoprotein synthesized, secreted and incorporated into the extracellular matrix by several cell types in culture. It is also present in the blood platelet and is secreted following platelet activation. We have previously shown that thrombospondin co-distributes with fibronectin in the extracellular matrix and that it can bind directly to purified fibronectin. In order to elucidate the chemical aspects of thrombospondin incorporation into the extracellular matrix, we studied the interaction of endothelial cell thrombospondin and fibronectin. We find that endothelial cell thrombospondin has two distinct binding domains for fibronectin. One domain is on the 70-kDa core fragment, probably similar to that of platelet thrombospondin. The other domain is on the 27-kDa N-terminal fragment and is unique to endothelial cell thrombospondin. The dissociation constant of the intact endothelial-cell-derived molecule is 0.7 +/- 0.2 x 10(-7) M. Following fragmentation, the separate domains bind with somewhat lower affinity: the core domain binds with a Kd of 3.4 +/- 1.5 x 10(-7) M and the N-terminal domain binds with a Kd of 8.8 +/- 1.8 x 10(-7) M. Binding of the intact molecule is Ca2+-independent. By contrast, following tryptic fragmentation, binding of the 70-kDa fragment is practically lost. It can be restored, however, by removal of Ca2+, indicating that the binding site on this domain is either sequestered or becomes so following fragmentation. Heparin, which also binds to both fragments, competed with fibronectin binding to the 27-kDa fragment but not to the 70-kDa domain. The fact that heparin also competitively inhibits fibronectin binding of the intact molecule further supports sequestration of the fibronectin-binding domain on the 70-kDa core fragment. Our data suggest that endothelial-cell thrombospondin possesses two distinct binding sites for fibronectin, a low-affinity constitutively available one and a high-affinity one, possibly sequestered on the intact unbound molecule.  相似文献   

2.
Thrombospondin synthesized and secreted by human endothelial cells in culture binds specifically to fibronectin immobilized on Sepharose beads. It can also bind to immobilized platelet-derived thrombospondin but not to immobilized gelatin or albumin. These interactions are not dependent on the presence of divalent cations or of other secreted materials. Purified platelet thrombospondin binds to fibronectin and fibrinogen immobilized on plastic surfaces with dissociation constants of 1.12 +/- 0.37 X 10(-7) M and 1.27 +/- 0.41 X 10(-7) M respectively, and to thrombospondin immobilized on plastic with dissociation constant of 4.82 +/- 1.01 X 10(-7) M. The affinities of interaction are not significantly affected by removal of divalent cations. Soluble fibrinogen inhibits binding of thrombospondin to fibronectin regardless of which of the latter two is surface-bound. Thrombospondin-fibronectin interaction is also inhibited by soluble thrombospondin. The binding of soluble thrombospondin to surface-bound fibrinogen is inhibited both by soluble fibronectin and soluble fibrinogen. These results suggest that thrombospondin plays a role both in platelet-platelet aggregation and in platelet-substratum adhesion, and that it may also take part in the construction of the extracellular matrix.  相似文献   

3.
Recently we have shown that heparin and related sulfated polyanions are low-affinity ligands of the kringle domain in the amino-terminal region (ATF) of human urokinase (u-PA), and proposed that this may facilitate loading of u-PA onto its receptor at the focal contacts between adherent cells and their matrix. We have now tested other components of the cell matrix (fibronectin, vitronectin, thrombospondin and laminin-nidogen) for u-PA binding, and found that laminin-nidogen is also a ligand of the u-PA ATF. Direct binding assays and competition binding assays with defined fragments of laminin-nidogen showed that there are u-PA binding sites in fragment E4 of laminin as well as in nidogen. The long-arm terminal domain of laminin (fragment E3), which contains a heparin-binding site, competed for binding of u-PA to immobilised heparin. However nidogen, which does not bind to heparin, also inhibited binding of u-PA to heparin, and this effect was also observed with recombinant nidogen and with a fragment of nidogen lacking the carboxy-terminal domain. Direct binding assays confirmed that u-PA binds to nidogen through a site in the u-PA ATF. We conclude that u-PA binds to laminin-nidogen by interactions involving the ATF region of u-PA, the E4 domain of laminin and the rod or amino-terminal regions of nidogen. Since nidogen is suggested to be an important bridging molecule in the maintenance of the supramolecular organization in basement membranes, the presence of a binding site for u-PA in nidogen indicates a role for plasminogen activation in basement membrane remodelling.  相似文献   

4.
Thrombospondin (TSP) is a trimeric glycoprotein of Mr 420,000. It was originally described as a major component of human platelet alpha granules and is essential for the secondary phase of platelet aggregation. TSP is also synthesized and secreted by a variety of nucleated cells where it functions in processes involving growth and adhesion of cells to the extracellular matrix. Many of these processes are heparin-inhibitable and are mediated by a proteolytic fragment of TSP called the heparin binding domain (HBD). In order to facilitate the analysis of the structure and function(s) of this domain, we have expressed this molecule in Escherichia coli. A fragment of a TSP cDNA that encodes the heparin binding domain was inserted into the prokaryotic expression vector pJBL6. In bacterial cells grown at 42 degrees C, this vector directs the synthesis of a 24,000-Da polypeptide. Milligram quantities of this protein were purified to homogeneity from E. coli lysates. The structure of the recombinant HBD was confirmed by protein sequencing. The protein was further characterized by analysis of its conformation and function. The recombinant HBD binds [3H]heparin with a Kd of 71 nM, almost identical to that of TSP-derived HBD (80 nM). Additionally, the recombinant HBD is able to compete for TSP binding to 11B carcinoma cells. These studies indicate that the recombinant HBD is synthesized and purified in a native configuration and is functionally equivalent to thrombospondin-derived HBD. They further indicate that glycosylation of the thrombospondin HBD is not necessary for its interaction with heparin and that sequences essential to this interaction reside within the first 229 amino acids of secreted thrombospondin.  相似文献   

5.
Villin is an F-actin binding protein located in the microfilament bundle of intestinal epithelial cell microvilli. Extensive in vitro proteolysis with Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease results in the production of a stable domain (apparent Mr 44000) which can be isolated due to its Ca2+-dependent interaction with G-actin bound to immobilized DNase-I, the standard procedure for the purification of villin. This 44-kDa fragment retains a single Ca2+ binding site with an apparent Kd = 2 X 10(-6) M, binds to G-actin, and inhibits the rate of actin polymerization. However, the 44-kDa domain does not shown any Ca2+-activated severing activity nor does it compete with villin for F-actin binding. These results suggest that villin contains three domains: headpiece containing an F-actin binding site, 44-kDa fragment containing a G-actin binding site, and an amino-terminal fragment responsible for the Ca2+-dependent severing activity.  相似文献   

6.
Several cell-mediated activities for the amino terminus of fibronectin have been documented. In the present study we describe a macrophage surface protein with binding activity directed to the amino terminus of the fibronectin molecule. The binding of a 29-kDa amino-terminal fibronectin fragment to macrophages reached steady state by 30 min and was half-maximal at approximately 2 x 10(-8) M. This binding was specifically inhibited by excess unlabeled 29-kDa fragment or intact fibronectin but not by a 180-kDa fibronectin fragment which lacks the amino terminus. Competitive binding studies of the 70-kDa amino-terminal fibronectin fragment to macrophages revealed a single binding site with KD = 7.14 x 10(-8) M and approximately 8 x 10(4) binding sites/cell. Radiolabeled surface proteins extracted from rat peritoneal macrophages and from the human U937 cell line were applied to an affinity column comprised of the 70-kDa amino-terminal fragment of fibronectin coupled to a solid support. A single trypsin-sensitive radiolabeled protein of 67 kDa, from either cell type, was eluted from this column with urea. This protein showed no immunologic identity with fibronectin, fibrin(ogen), or albumin. The 67-kDa protein exhibited identical apparent molecular weight under reducing and nonreducing conditions, as assessed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis. We have localized the fibronectin binding activity of this protein to within the 29-kDa amino-terminal domain of fibronectin. The 67-kDa protein eluted from the 70-kDa column failed to bind to a column comprised of the 45-kDa gelatin-binding fragment of fibronectin. Additionally, the 67-kDa protein was specifically eluted from the 70-kDa column by the 29-kDa amino-terminal fragment but not by the 45-kDa gelatin-binding fragment. These data suggest that this 67-kDa protein is a macrophage cell surface binding protein for the amino terminus of fibronectin.  相似文献   

7.
Fibroblasts organize the modular cell-adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin into a highly structured pericellular matrix by poorly understood mechanisms. Previous studies implicated an amino-terminal domain in matrix assembly and suggested that fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and the corresponding fibroblast receptor were not involved in this process. To further elucidate the fibronectin region(s) involved in matrix assembly, we mapped a library of proteolytic fragments and antibodies to various fibronectin domains. The fragments and antibodies were used to probe the role of fibronectin's amino-terminal and cell-adhesive domains in a fibroblast matrix assembly assay. We found that fibronectin fragments including the first 25-kDa sequence of fibronectin and antibodies to amino-terminal domains inhibited pericellular matrix assembly. Polyclonal antibodies to the 40-kDa collagen binding domain following the 25-kDa amino-terminal domain also inhibited matrix assembly. However, collagen binding is not required for matrix assembly as neither monoclonals blocking collagen binding nor purified collagen binding domains themselves inhibited matrix assembly. Therefore, the amino-terminal region of fibronectin contains a site important in matrix assembly, and most activity is present in the first 25-kDa of fibronectin. Fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and the fibroblast receptor binding to this domain also play an important role in fibronectin matrix assembly. Apart from a monoclonal antibody to the amino-terminal domain, only monoclonal antibodies binding to fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and inhibiting cell adhesion also inhibited matrix assembly. In addition a 105-kDa fragment containing the cell-adhesive domain inhibited matrix assembly. We conclude that at least two discrete and widely separated sites in fibronectin with different binding properties--the carboxyl-terminal fibroblast cell-adhesive domain and an amino-terminal matrix assembly domain localized primarily within the first 25 kDa--are required for fibronectin pericellular matrix assembly by fibroblasts. Fibronectin's cell-adhesive domain and its cell surface-receptor complex appear to be involved in the matrix assembly process prior to a step involving the amino-terminal domain. We believe that this step is likely to be the initiation of cell-associated fibronectin fibril formation by the fibronectin-adhesive-receptor complex.  相似文献   

8.
Thrombospondin is a multifunctional adhesive glycoprotein which binds to the surface of resting and activated platelets. Thrombospondin also binds to a variety of proteins, including fibrinogen. The interactions between platelet-bound thrombospondin and fibrinogen are thought to facilitate irreversible platelet aggregation. Both the A alpha- and B beta-chains of fibrinogen specifically bind to thrombospondin. Cyanogen bromide cleavage products of the fibrinogen A alpha- and B beta-chains, and synthetic peptides corresponding to specific regions of these cleavage products were utilized to identify the regions of the fibrinogen A alpha- and B beta-chains which bind to thrombospondin. Cyanogen bromide fragments of the A alpha- and B beta-fibrinogen chains, resolved by gel filtration and reversed-phase chromatography, were examined for thrombospondin binding activity. Thrombospondin specifically bound to the A alpha-chain fragment encompassing residues 92-147 and the B beta-chain fragment encompassing residues 243-305. Analyses of the binding characteristics of two series of overlapping synthetic peptides revealed that peptides corresponding to residues 113-126 of the A alpha-chain and residues 243-252 of the B beta-chain retained thrombospondin binding activity. Separate bovine serum albumin conjugates of the active A alpha-chain and B beta-chain peptides inhibited platelet aggregation. These studies reveal that fibrinogen possesses at least two unique sequences which are recognized by thrombospondin and that such interaction may affect platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

9.
R Dardik  J Lahav 《Biochemistry》1991,30(38):9378-9386
Endothelial and other cell types synthesize thrombospondin (TSP), secrete it into their culture medium, and incorporate it into their extracellular matrix. TSP is a large multifunctional protein capable of specific interactions with other matrix components, as well as with cell surfaces, and can modulate cell adhesion to the extracellular matrix. With the aim of understanding the mechanism by which TSP exerts its effect on cell adhesion, we studied the interaction of endothelial cell TSP (EC-TSP) with three different cell types: endothelial cells, granulosa cells, and myoblasts. We find that endothelial cells specifically bind radiolabeled EC-TSP with a Kd of 25 nM, and the number of binding sites is 2.6 X 10(6)/cell. Binding is not inhibitable by the cell-adhesion peptide GRGDS, indicating that the cell-binding site of EC-TSP is not in the RGD-containing domain. Localization of the cell-binding site was achieved by testing two chymotryptic fragments representing different regions of the TSP molecule, the 70-kDa core fragment and the 27-kDa N-terminal fragment, for their ability to bind to the cells. Cell-binding capacity was demonstrated by the 70-kDa fragment but not by the 27-kDa fragment. Binding of both intact [125I]EC-TSP and of the 125I-labeled 70-kDa fragment was inhibited by unlabeled TSP, heparin, fibronectin (FN), monoclonal anti-TSP antibody directed against the 70-kDa fragment (B7-3), and by full serum, but not by heparin-absorbed serum or the cell-adhesion peptide GRGDS. The 70-kDa fragment binds to endothelial cells with a Kd of 47 nM, and the number of binding sites is 5.0 x 10(6)/cell.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Thrombospondin is an inhibitor of angiogenesis that modulates endothelial cell adhesion, proliferation, and motility. Synthetic peptides from the second type I repeat of human thrombospondin containing the consensus sequence -Trp-Ser-Pro-Trp- and a recombinant heparin binding fragment from the amino-terminus of thrombospondin mimic several of the activities of the intact protein. The peptides and heparin-binding domain promote endothelial cell adhesion, inhibit endothelial cell chemotaxis to basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), and inhibit mitogenesis and proliferation of aortic and corneal endothelial cells. The peptides also inhibit heparin-dependent binding of bFGF to corneal endothelial cells. The antiproliferative activities of the peptides correlate with their ability to bind to heparin and to inhibit bFGF binding to heparin. Peptides containing amino acid substitutions that eliminate heparin-binding do not alter chemotaxis or proliferation of endothelial cells. Inhibition of proliferation by the peptide is time-dependet and reversible. Thus, the antiproliferative activities of the thrombospondin peptides and recombinant heparin-binding domain result at least in part from competition with heparin-dependent growth factors for binding to endothelial cell proteoglycans. These results suggest that both the Trp-Ser-Xaa-Trp sequences in the type I repeats and the amino-terminal domain play roles in the antiproliferative activity of thrombospondin.  相似文献   

11.
The molecular basis for binding of alpha-macroglobulin-proteinase complexes to the human two-chain 500/85-kDa (alpha/beta) alpha 2-macroglobulin (alpha 2M) receptor (alpha 2MR)/low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein was analyzed. Ligand blotting experiments showed that a 40-kDa protein, present in the affinity-purified alpha 2MR preparation, is bound to the alpha 2MR alpha-chain and released by heparin. Removal of the 40-kDa protein resulted in a 3-5-fold increase in binding of alpha 2M-trypsin. Nitrocellulose-immobilized pure two-chain alpha 2MR was incubated with human alpha 2M-trypsin, containing four identical subunits, and two monovalent ligands: rat alpha 1-inhibitor-3-chymotrypsin and the 18-kDa receptor binding fragment of the alpha 2M subunit. Binding of alpha 2M-trypsin to the alpha-chain of immobilized alpha 2MR was composed of a high (Kd = 40 pM at 4 degrees C) and a low (Kd = 2 nM) affinity component. alpha 1-Inhibitor-3-chymotrypsin bound to the same sites but with one component (Kd = 0.4 nM). Competition-inhibition experiments and dissociation experiments, using ligands with different valences, as well as experiments with alpha 2MR immobilized at different densities, led to the following model. The low (Kd = 2 nM) affinity of alpha 2M-proteinase is prevalent when only one of the four domains binds to alpha 2MR, i.e. when the receptor density is low or when neighboring receptors are occupied. The high (Kd = 40 pM) affinity is achieved by binding of at least two domains to adjacent receptors.  相似文献   

12.
Interaction of thrombospondin with resting and stimulated human platelets   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The interaction of isolated and radioiodinated thrombospondin with washed human platelets has been characterized. The ligand bound to nonstimulated and thrombin-stimulated platelets in a time-dependent manner, and apparent steady state was reached within 25 min. Binding was not due to iodination of the ligand and was inhibited by nonlabeled thrombospondin but not by unrelated proteins, and bound ligand was identical with thrombospondin in terms of subunit structure. Nonlinear curve-fitting analyses of binding to resting platelets suggested the presence of a single class of sites which bound 3,100 +/- 1,000 molecules/platelet with an apparent Kd of 50 +/- 20 nM. This interaction was not attributable to contaminating cells or inadvertant platelet activation. Binding to thrombin-stimulated platelets had a lower apparent affinity (Kd = 250 +/- 100 nM) and higher apparent capacity (35,600 +/- 9,600 molecules/platelet). Thrombin-enhanced binding was dependent upon agonist dose and platelet stimulation. Fibrinogen, a monoclonal antibody to GPIIb-IIIa, temperature, and divalent ions had differential effects upon thrombospondin binding to resting and stimulated platelets, suggesting the presence of two distinct mechanisms of thrombospondin binding to platelets. While thrombospondin binding to thrombin-stimulated platelets occurs with characteristics similar to those observed for fibrinogen, fibronectin, and von Willebrand Factor, its high affinity interaction with resting platelets is unique to this adhesive glycoprotein.  相似文献   

13.
The extracellular matrix of cultured human lung fibroblasts contains one major heparan sulfate proteoglycan. This proteoglycan contains a 400-kDa core protein and is structurally and immunochemically identical or closely related to the heparan sulfate proteoglycans that occur in basement membranes. Because heparitinase does not release the core protein from the matrix of cultured cells, we investigated the binding interactions of this heparan sulfate proteoglycan with other components of the fibroblast extracellular matrix. Both the intact proteoglycan and the heparitinase-resistant core protein were found to bind to fibronectin. The binding of 125I-labeled core protein to immobilized fibronectin was inhibited by soluble fibronectin and by soluble cold core protein but not by albumin or gelatin. A Scatchard plot indicates a Kd of about 2 x 10(-9) M. Binding of the core protein was also inhibited by high concentrations of heparin, heparan sulfate, or chrondroitin sulfate and was sensitive to high salt concentrations. Thermolysin fragmentation of the 125I-labeled proteoglycan yielded glycosamino-glycan-free core protein fragments of approximately 110 and 62 kDa which bound to both fibronectin and heparin columns. The core protein-binding capacity of fibronectin was very sensitive to proteolysis. Analysis of thermolytic and alpha-chymotryptic fragments of fibronectin showed binding of the intact proteoglycan and of its isolated core protein to a protease-sensitive fragment of 56 kDa which carried the gelatin-binding domain of fibronectin and to a protease-sensitive heparin-binding fragment of 140 kDa. Based on the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence analyses of the 56- and 140-kDa fragments, the core protein-binding domain in fibronectin was tentatively mapped in the area of overlap of the two fragments, carboxyl-terminally from the gelatin-binding domain, possibly in the second type III repeat of fibronectin. These data document a specific and high affinity interaction between fibronectin and the core protein of the matrix heparan sulfate proteoglycan which may anchor the proteoglycan in the matrix.  相似文献   

14.
Thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) is an extracellular matrix glycoprotein that may play important roles in the morphogenesis and repair of skeletal muscle. To begin to explore the role of thrombospondin-1 in this tissue, we have examined the interactions of three rodent skeletal muscle cell lines, C2C12, G8, and H9c2, with platelet TSP-1. The cells secrete thrombospondin and incorporate it into the cell layer in a distribution distinct from that of fibronectin. Myoblasts attach and spread on fibronectin- or thrombospondin-coated substrates with similar time and concentration dependencies. Whereas cells adherent on fibronectin organize actin stress fibers, cells adherent on TSP-1 display prominent membrane ruffles and lamellae that contain radial actin microspikes. Attachment to thrombospondin-1 or the 140-kDa tryptic fragment is mediated by interactions with the type 1 repeats and the carboxy-terminal globular domain. Attachment is not inhibited by heparin, GRGDSP peptide, or VTCG peptide but is inhibited by chondroitin sulphate A. Integrins of the beta 1 or alpha V subgroups do not appear to be involved in myoblast attachment to TSP-1; instead, this process depends in part on cell surface chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans. Whereas the central 70-kDa chymotryptic fragment of TSP-1 does not support myoblast attachment, the carboxy-terminal domain of TSP-1 expressed as a fusion protein in the bacterial expression vector, pGEX, supported myoblast attachment to 30% the level of intact TSP-1. Thrombospondin-4 (TSP-4) is also present in skeletal muscle and a fusion protein containing the carboxy-terminal domain of TSP-4 also supported myoblast adhesion, although this protein was less active on a molar basis than the TSP-1 fusion protein. Thus, the carboxyterminal domain of TSP-1 appears to contain a primary attachment site for myoblasts, and this activity is present in a second member of the thrombospondin family.  相似文献   

15.
J Lawler  P Ferro  M Duquette 《Biochemistry》1992,31(4):1173-1180
Thrombospondin is a 420,000-dalton adhesive glycoprotein that is composed of three subunits of equivalent molecular weight. When the cDNA for the complete coding region of the human endothelial cell thrombospondin subunit is expressed in mouse NIH 3T3 cells, a 420,000-dalton protein is synthesized and secreted. The expressed protein comigrates with human platelet thrombospondin both in the presence and in the absence of a reducing agent. The expressed protein binds to a monoclonal anti-thrombospondin antibody, heparin, and calcium. In addition to the 420,000-dalton protein, the transfected cell lines also express a variable amount of a 140,000-dalton polypeptide. When the culture supernatants that are produced by cells that are expressing thrombospondin are applied to heparin-Sepharose, the 420,000-dalton and the 140,000-dalton proteins are bound to the column and are eluted with buffer containing 0.55 and 0.3 M NaCl, respectively. The 140,000-dalton protein only binds to heparin-Sepharose in the presence of calcium. Deletion of the region of homology with procollagen results in defective assembly of the trimer. Deletion of the type 1 or type 2 repeats results in decreased stability of the subunit with the predominant polypeptides that are expressed having molecular weights of 127,000 and 130,000, respectively. These polypeptides retain low-affinity heparin-binding activity. High-affinity heparin binding is markedly diminished by mutations in either of two sequence motifs that include clusters of lysines and arginines.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Thrombospondin induces the migration of human melanoma and carcinoma cells. Using a modified Boyden chamber assay, tumor cells migrated to a gradient of soluble thrombospondin (chemotaxis). Checkerboard analysis indicated that directional migration was induced 27-fold greater than stimulation of random motility. Tumor cells also migrated in a dose-dependent manner to a gradient of substratum-bound thrombospondin (haptotaxis). A series of human melanoma and carcinoma cells were compared for their relative motility stimulation by thrombospondin haptotaxis vs. chemotaxis. Some cell lines exhibited a stronger haptotactic response compared to their chemotactic response while other lines exhibited little or no migration response to thrombospondin. Human A2058 melanoma cells which exhibit a strong haptotactic and chemotactic response to thrombospondin were used to study the structural domains of thrombospondin required for the response. Monoclonal antibody C6.7, which binds to the COOH-terminal region of thrombospondin, inhibited haptotaxis in a dose-dependent optimal manner. C6.7 had no significant effect on thrombospondin chemotaxis. In contrast, monoclonal antibody A2.5, heparin, and fucoidan, which bind to the NH2-terminal heparin-binding domain of thrombospondin, inhibited thrombospondin chemotaxis but not haptotaxis. Monoclonal antibody A6.1 directed against the internal core region of thrombospondin had no significant effect on haptotaxis or chemotaxis. Synthetic peptides GRGDS (50 micrograms/ml), but not GRGES, blocked tumor cell haptotaxis on fibronectin, but had minimal effect on thrombospondin or laminin haptotaxis. The 140-kD fragment of thrombospondin lacking the heparin-binding amino-terminal region retained the property to fully mediate haptotaxis but not chemotaxis. When the COOH region of the 140-kD fragment, containing the C6.7-binding site, was cleaved off, the resulting 120-kD fragment (which retains the RGDA sequence) failed to induce haptotaxis. Separate structural domains of thrombospondin are therefore required for tumor cell haptotaxis vs. chemotaxis. This may have implications during hematogenous cancer metastases formation.  相似文献   

17.
In the present report we describe the isolation of a functional domain of platelet membrane glycoprotein (GP) Ib which retains von Willebrand factor (vWF)-binding activity. Glycocalicin, a proteolytic fragment of the alpha-chain of GP Ib generated by an endogenous calcium-activated protease, was submitted to digestion with trypsin. The two resulting fragments, one of 45 kDa extending between residues His1 and Arg293 and representing the amino terminus of the alpha-chain, the other of 84 kDa corresponding to the previously described macroglycopeptide, were purified to homogeneity. Glycocalicin, as well as the 45- and 84-kDa fragments, inhibited the ristocetin-dependent binding of native vWF to platelet GP Ib. The concentration inhibiting 50% of binding (IC50) was between 1 and 5 microM with all these molecules. In contrast, the binding of asialo-vWF to platelet GP Ib, measured directly in the absence of ristocetin, was blocked by glycocalicin and the 45-kDa fragment with a similar IC50, but not by the 84-kDa fragment. Both glycocalicin and the 45-kDa fragment bound to purified surface-bound vWF in a ristocetin-dependent manner and with similar affinities. Monoclonal antibodies against vWF or GP Ib inhibited this interaction in a way consistent with their inhibition of vWF binding to platelet GP Ib. These studies demonstrate that the amino-terminal extracytoplasmic region of the alpha-chain, extending between residues 1 and 293, contains a functional domain that interacts with vWF in the absence of any other structure of the GP Ib complex or any other platelet membrane component. Whereas the ristocetin-dependent binding of vWF may involve also other domains in the macroglycopeptide region, the direct vWF-GP Ib interaction appears to be mediated only by a domain in the amino-terminal region of GP Ib alpha.  相似文献   

18.
The proteoglycan (PG) on the surface of NMuMG mouse mammary epithelial cells consists of at least two functional domains, a membrane- intercalated domain which anchors the PG to the plasma membrane, and a trypsin-releasable ectodomain which bears both heparan and chondroitin sulfate chains. The ectodomain binds cells to collagen types I, III, and V, but not IV, and has been proposed to be a matrix receptor. Because heparin binds to the adhesive glycoproteins fibronectin, an interstitial matrix component, and laminin, a basal lamina component, we asked whether the cell surface PG also binds these molecules. Cells harvested with either trypsin or EDTA bound to fibronectin; binding of trypsin-released cells was inhibited by the peptide GRGDS but not by heparin, whereas binding of EDTA-released cells was inhibited only by a combination of GRDS and heparin, suggesting two distinct cell binding mechanisms. In the presence of GRGDS, the EDTA-released cells bound to fibronectin via the cell surface PG. Binding via the cell surface PG was to the COOH-terminal heparin binding domain of fibronectin. In contrast with the binding to fibronectin, EDTA-released cells did not bind to laminin under identical assay conditions. Liposomes containing the isolated intact cell surface PG mimic the binding of whole cells. These results indicate that the mammary epithelial cells have at least two distinct cell surface receptors for fibronectin: a trypsin- resistant molecule that binds cells to the sequence RGD and a trypsin- labile, heparan sulfate-rich PG that binds cells to the COOH-terminal heparin binding domain. Because the cell surface PG binds cells to the interstitial collagens (types I, III, and V) and to fibronectin, but not to basal lamina collagen (type IV) or laminin, we conclude that the cell surface PG is a receptor on epithelial cells specific for interstitial matrix components.  相似文献   

19.
A cell-binding peptide (Mr = 85,000) which lacks the gelatin- and heparin-binding domains, was purified from trypsin-digested fibronectin. Preincubation of rat hepatocytes in suspension with the peptide, inhibited initial attachment of the cells to immobilized fibronectin while attachment to immobilized laminin and collagen was unaffected. 125I-labeled 85-kDa peptide bound to the cells in suspension at 4 degrees C in a time-dependent, saturable, and partially reversible reaction. Scatchard analysis of the binding data indicated a single class of receptors with a Kd of 1.7 X 10(-8) M. The number of binding-sites was approximately 2.8 X 10(5)/cell. Unlabeled 85-kDa peptide inhibited the binding of 125I-labeled 85-kDa peptide 30-fold more effectively than intact fibronectin. These results provide direct evidence for the presence of a domain in the fibronectin molecule which has or may acquire a high affinity for receptors involved in adhesion of hepatocytes to immobilized fibronectin.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the distribution of thrombospondin-specific binding sites and the uptake of thrombospondin-gold conjugates in cultured porcine endothelial cells by light and electron microscopy. Colloidal gold marker and silver enhancement techniques were applied for cytochemical detection of monomeric thrombospondin and fragments of thrombospondin. Thrombospondin binds to granular and fibrillar structures and to sites of cell-cell contact on the cell surface, as indicated by many proteoglycan-cuprolinic blue precipitates. Cell migration tracks on the culture dish bottom are most heavily stained. Labeling of intact thrombospondin and of proteolytic fragments of thrombospondin with colloidal gold followed by silver intensification enables one to detect its binding and uptake in endothelial cells. Binding to the cell surface and uptake of thrombospondin-gold particles was inhibited by heparin but not by hyaluronic acid or chondroitin sulfate. The heparin binding region at the N-terminal end of the thrombospondin molecule proved to be essential for cell surface binding. Gold-conjugated thrombospondin fragments devoid of the heparin binding region were not internalized. After 60 min incubation at 37 degrees C, thrombospondin-gold particles accumulated in the lysosomal compartment close to the nucleus. In the presence of monensin and ammonium chloride, vesicles in this area are swollen and the concentration of particulate marker is reduced. Binding and uptake of thrombospondin by vascular endothelial cells appears to require linkage of the heparin binding region of the thrombospondin molecule to coated pits and heparan sulfate-rich molecules as receptors. Colloidal gold conjugation of thrombospondin fragments proved to be useful for cytochemical characterization of molecular domains.  相似文献   

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