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1.
We utilized recombinant fibronectin polypeptides with cell-binding domain and heparin-binding domains (referred to as C-274 and H-271, respectively) and their fusion polypeptide (CH-271) to examine the role of sulfated polysaccharide heparin and/or the functional domains of fibronectin in modulating tumor cell behavior. Both C-274 and CH-271 polypeptides with cell-binding domains promoted the adhesion and migration of B16-BL6 melanoma cells, whereas H-271 did not. Heparin bound to the immobilized polypeptides with heparin-binding domain (H-271, CH-271, and a mixture of C-274 and H-271 or fibronectin) but did not affect the tumor cell adhesion to the substrates. At the same time, heparin or two monoclonal antibodies against the heparin-binding domain were able to inhibit the haptotactic migration to CH-271 or fibronectin, though not to C-274 or a mixture of C-274 and H-271. This suggests that although heparin did not affect tumor cell adhesion to the cell-binding domain near the heparin-binding domain in CH-271 or fibronectin, it did lead to a modulation of cell motility. It seems likely that the regulatory mechanism may depend on interaction between heparin-like molecules on the cell surface and the heparin-binding domain in fibronectin, rather than on simple steric hindrance or on the masking of the cell-binding domain caused by the binding of heparin to heparin-binding domain.  相似文献   

2.
Two domains of fibronectin deliver two different but cooperative signals required for focal adhesion formation. The signal from the cell-binding domain is mediated by integrins, whereas the signal from the heparin-binding domain is recognized by heparan sulfate proteoglycans, of which syndecan-4 has been hypothesized to be involved in focal adhesion formation. We generated mice deficient in syndecan-4 to study its role directly. Even in fibroblasts from syndecan-4-deficient mice, focal adhesions were formed, and actin fibers terminated normally at focal adhesions when they were cultured on coverslips coated with fibronectin or with a mixture of its cell-binding and heparin-binding fragments. However, when the cells were cultured on the cell-binding fragment and the heparin-binding fragment was added to the medium, focal adhesion formation was impaired in the syndecan-4 null fibroblasts as compared with that in wild-type cells. Therefore, syndecan-4 is essential for promoting focal adhesion formation only when the signal of the heparin-binding domain of fibronectin is delivered as a soluble form, most probably from the apical surface. When the signal is delivered as a substratum-bound form, other molecule(s) also participate(s) in the signal reception.  相似文献   

3.
Previously, we have shown that some lymphoid cell lines adhere to fibronectin (FN)-coated substratum, whereas others do not. In this study, the adhesion of five adherent lymphoid cell lines to different FN domains was examined. These cell lines ranged in their adherence to substratum coated with FN, the cell-binding domain (CBD) fragment, or the heparin-binding domain (HBD) fragments. None of the cell lines adhered to substratum coated with the gelatin-binding domain fragment. Three of the lymphoid cell lines adhered preferentially to HBD over CBD, whereas two other lymphoid cell lines and BHK fibroblasts adhered preferentially to CBD. These results suggest that two distinct adhesive interactions occur between cells and FN and that the pattern of interaction varies among cell types. Using MOPC 315 (which adheres preferentially to HBD) as a cell model to study the cell-HBD interaction, the HBD-promoted adhesion was found to be independent of the RGD sequence and could be inhibited by anti-FN antibodies. Moreover, the MOPC 315-HBD interaction had the following characteristics: (1) adhesion was temperature dependent, (2) presence of divalent cations was necessary, (3) integrity of cellular microfilaments but not microtubules was required, (4) inhibition of protein synthesis abolished adhesion, (5) pretreatment of cells with trypsin inhibited adhesion, and (6) the adhesion was mediated by the carboxyl-terminal HBD.  相似文献   

4.
Fibronectin has been shown previously to promote complete cell adhesion in the absence of other serum components or de novo protein synthesis. Recently a sequence of four amino acids from the cell-binding domain of fibronectin has been termed the 'cell recognition site' of this multidomain molecule since it mediates cell attachment and inhibits cell adhesion to intact fibronectin. We show here, however, that substrata coated with an isolated cell-binding domain of fibronectin are not sufficient for complete cell adhesion; cells attach and spread but, unlike those adhering to intact fibronectin, they do not form stress fibres terminating in focal adhesions. An additional external stimulus is needed for this cytoskeletal reorganisation and may be provided by one of two heparin-binding fragments of fibronectin. The two 'signals' required for complete adhesion need not be provided simultaneously since focal adhesion formation can be promoted by stimulating cells pre-spread on a cell-binding fragment of fibronectin with a soluble heparin-binding fragment. This second stimulation may involve cell membrane heparan sulphate proteoglycans.  相似文献   

5.
Two distinct cell types from the amphibian gastrula were compared with regard to their interactions in vitro with fibronectin (FN). Xenopus embryonic endoderm cells attach to FN substrates in a way characteristic of most cell types studied so far; that is, adhesion increases abruptly at a certain threshold concentration of FN, and maximal binding of cells already occurs at low FN concentrations (10 micrograms/ml). In contrast, embryonic ectodermal cells bind maximally to FN substrates only at unusually high concentrations of FN (200 micrograms/ml). This peculiar mode of attachment to FN has been characterized more closely. It is shown that the adhesion of ectodermal cells is modified by their interaction with a heparin-binding domain of the FN molecule. Furthermore, ectodermal cell adhesion increases very slowly with increasing FN concentrations. Despite these characteristic differences, both ectodermal and endodermal cells attach to the normal RGD cell-binding site of FN, as can be shown by competitive inhibition of adhesion by a hexapeptide containing the RGD sequence of amino acids.  相似文献   

6.
Fibroblast adhesion to fibronectin (FN) induces formation of focal adhesions (FAs), structures that have significant effect on cell migration and signaling. FA formation requires actomyosin-based contractility that is regulated by Rho-dependent myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation. Previous studies indicated that the FN central cell-binding (and integrin-binding) domain (CBD) is insufficient for FA formation and that the major heparin-binding domain (HepII) facilitates FA formation in a Rho-dependent manner. We describe here conditions under which FN CBD alone is sufficient for FA formation in both human dermal fibroblasts and the FN-null murine fibroblasts. CBD-mediated FA formation is dependent on its surface adsorption and the adhesion activity of the cells. Attachment of FN-null fibroblasts to CBD elicits the same biphasic regulation of Rho activity as seen on intact FN, whereas adhesion to HepII alone does not activate Rho. Activation of Rho requires high levels of integrin occupancy. However, FN or CBD may induce FAs without increased activation of Rho (i.e. the basal level of GTP-Rho induces sufficient phospho-MLC for FA assembly under this condition). In contrast, adhesion to HepII alone does not sustain MLC phosphorylation. Pulse stimulation of cells on CBD or HepII with lysophosphatidic acid elevates Rho GTP loading to the same level, but the lysophosphatidic acid-stimulated MLC phosphorylation is significantly lower in cells on HepII than on CBD. Coating HepII with suboptimal concentrations of CBD induces FAs without increased activation of Rho. Therefore, FN CBD can support FA formation and generate contraction by activating Rho or by facilitating Rho downstream signaling.  相似文献   

7.
W.M. DUNNE AND E.M. BURD. 1993. The adhesion of five strains of slime-positive Staphylococcus epidermidis to plastic microwells was significantly diminished ( P < 0.005) in a concentration-dependent fashion when wells were previously coated with increasing concentrations (1.6–13.1 μg cm-2) of human fibronectin (FN). The adhesion of four of five strains was significantly reduced when wells were coated with 3.2 μg cm-2 of FN and at concentrations ≥6.5 μg cm-2 the adhesion of all slime-positive strains was significantly reduced. The coating of microwells with chymotryptic fragments of FN containing the heparin-binding, gelatin-binding, or cell-binding domains also reduced bacterial adhesion but none of the fragments exceeded the anti-adhesive activity of intact FN. A comparison of FN-coated or albumin-coated microwells showed that both proteins caused a significant reduction in the adhesion of test strains to plastic but that the anti-adhesive activity of FN was greater than albumin at all concentrations tested. The adhesion of the slime-negative phase variant of one of the test strains to plastic was neither enhanced nor reduced by FN coating indicating that the production of an exopolysaccharide by Staph. epidermidis influences interactions with protein-coated surfaces. These results support the contention that FN does not mediate the adhesion of all strains of Staph. epidermidis to plastic surfaces.  相似文献   

8.
Cells of the neural crest participate in a major class of cell migratory events during embryonic development. From indirect evidence, it has been suggested that fibronectin (FN) might be involved in these events. We have directly tested the role of FN in neural crest cell adhesion and migration using several in vitro model systems. Avian trunk neural crest cells adhered readily to purified plasma FN substrates and to extracellular matrices containing cellular FN. Their adhesion was inhibited by antibodies to a cell-binding fragment of FN. In contrast, these cells did not adhere to glass, type I collagen, or to bovine serum albumin in the absence of FN. Neural crest cell adhesion to laminin (LN) was significantly less than to FN; however, culturing of crest cells under conditions producing an epithelioid phenotype resulted in cells that could bind equally as well to LN as to FN. The migration of neural crest cells appeared to depend on both the substrate and the extent of cell interactions. Cells migrated substantially more rapidly on FN than on LN or type I collagen substrates; if provided a choice between stripes of FN and glass or LN, cells migrated preferentially on the FN. Migration was inhibited by antibodies against the cell-binding region of FN, and the inhibition could be reversed by a subsequent addition of exogenous FN. However, the migration on FN was random and displayed little persistence of direction unless cells were at high densities that permitted frequent contacts. The in vitro rate of migration of cells on FN-containing matrices was 50 microns/h, similar to their migration rates along the narrow regions of FN-containing extracellular matrix in migratory pathways in vivo. These results indicate that FN is important for neural crest cell adhesion and migration and that the high cell densities of neural crest cells in the transient, narrow migratory pathways found in the embryo are necessary for effective directional migration.  相似文献   

9.
The extracellular matrix molecule fibronectin (FN) is a glycoprotein whose major functional property is to support cell adhesion. FN contains at least two distinct cell-binding domains: the central cell-binding domain and the HepII/IIICS region. The HepII region comprises type III repeats 12-14 and contains proteoglycan-binding sites, while the alternatively spliced IIICS segment possesses the major alpha4beta1 integrin-binding sites. Both cell surface proteoglycans and integrins are important for mediating the adhesion of cells to this region of FN. By comparing heparin binding to different recombinant splice variants of the HepII/IIICS region, evidence was obtained for the existence of a novel heparin-binding site in the centre of the IIICS. Site-directed mutagenesis of basic amino acid sequences in this region reduced heparin binding to recombinant HepII/IIICS proteins and, in conjunction with mutations in the HepII region, caused a synergistic loss of activity. Using the H/120 variant of FN, which contains type III repeats 12-15 and the full-length IIICS region, and the H/95 variant of FN, which contains type III repeats 12-15 but lacks the high affinity integrin-binding LDV sequence, the relative roles played by cell-surface proteoglycans and integrins in mediating cell adhesion have been investigated. This was achieved by studying the effects of anti-integrin antibodies and exogenous heparin on A375 melanoma cell attachment to the wild-type and three different mutants of H/120 and H/95 in which the potential proteoglycan-binding sites were partially or completely removed. A375 cell adhesion to H/120 and its mutants was found to involve the co-operative action of both integrin and cell-surface proteoglycan binding, although integrin made a dominant contribution. Anti-integrin antibodies and exogenous heparin were capable of inhibiting melanoma cell adhesion to H/95 and in this case adhesion was due primarily to cell-surface proteoglycan and not integrin binding.  相似文献   

10.
FGFRL1 is a novel member of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor family. Utilizing the FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer) technique, we demonstrate that FGFRL1 forms constitutive homodimers at cell surfaces. The formation of homodimers was verified by co-precipitation of differentially tagged FGFRL1 polypeptides from solution. If overexpressed in cultivated cells, FGFRL1 was found to be enriched at cell-cell contact sites. The extracellular domain of recombinant FGFRL1 promoted cell adhesion, but not cell spreading, when coated on plastic surfaces. Adhesion was mediated by heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycans located at the cell surface. It could specifically be blocked by addition of soluble heparin but not by addition of other glycosaminoglycans. When the amino acid sequence of the putative heparin-binding site was modified by in vitro mutagenesis, the resulting protein exhibited decreased affinity for heparin and reduced activity in the cell-binding assay. Moreover, a synthetic peptide corresponding to the heparin-binding site was able to neutralize the effect of heparin. With its dimeric structure and its adhesion promoting properties, FGFRL1 resembles the nectins, a family of cell adhesion molecules found at cell-cell junctions.  相似文献   

11.
Mesangial cell apoptosis induced by a fibronectin fragment   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We previously showed that in passive Heymann nephritis (PHN) rats, a large quantity of fibronectin (FN) fragments containing the central cell-binding (CCB) domain and adjacent domains are generated in the kidney and excreted into urine (Nishizawa et al., Biol Pharm Bull 1998; 21: 429–433). To ascertain whether the FN fragments could affect the progression of PHN, we investigated the effect of a 150 K FN fragment containing the CCB and carboxyl-terminal heparin-binding (Hep 2) domains on cultured rat mesangial cells. When rat mesangial cells cultured on FN-coated plates were exposed to the 150 K FN fragment, some mesangial cells detached from the FN substrate and then underwent apoptosis as judged by nuclear and DNA fragmentations. The 150 K FN fragment competitively inhibited the mesangial cell adhesion to the FN substrate in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, gelatinzymography of the conditioned medium of mesangial cells showed that the 150 K FN fragment induced and/or poteintiated the extracellular matrix (ECM)-degrading proteinases including matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) of mesangial cells. These results indicate that the 150 K FN fragment may elicit mesangial cell apoptosis by disrupting the mesangial cell adhesion through two distinct ways: the inhibition of mesangial cell adhesion and the ECM-degradation by the 150 K FN fragment-induced MMPs. Thus, FN fragments containing the CCB and adjacent domains generated in the kidneys of PHN rats may be involved in the evolution of the renal injury.  相似文献   

12.
Cell surface integrins, especially those binding to fibronectin (FN), participate in processes of tumor cell invasion and metastasis. Changes in glycosylation of cell surface adhesion proteins are often associated with malignant transformation of cells. In this study we examined the influence of swainsonine (SW) on adhesion, wound healing and haptotactic migration on FN, comparing the responses of different human melanoma cell lines: primary WM35 and metastatic WM9, WM239 and A375. We also examined the role of alpha subunits in adhesion to FN. All of the antibodies inhibited adhesion to FN but with different efficiencies depending on the cell line. Adhesion was mediated mainly by integrin alpha(5)beta(1) (WM9, A375), alpha(3)beta(1) (WM35, A375, WM239). Scratch wound repair was significantly faster on FN-coated wells than on plastic for all cells except for WM9. A375 and WM9 had the greatest migration ability, both expressing the highest level of alpha(5)beta(1) integrin. It seems very likely that adhesion to FN can be accomplished by many different integrins, but for effective migration alpha(5)beta(1) integrin is responsible. Only A375 and WM239 cell lines reacted to SW treatment. In the presence of SW WM239 and A375 cells had 70% and 40% increased adhesion to FN, and their migration was decreased 40% and 50%, respectively. Interestingly, although most of the cell lines share a common profile of integrins, each line interacted with FN differently. They differed mainly in the repertoire of integrins used for adhesion, and in the manner in which glycosylation affected these processes. The influence of SW was observed in two metastatic cell lines indicating the contribution of glycosylation status to the progression of melanoma. The lack of reaction to SW in WM9 cells may suggest that there is a threshold in the expression level of the highly branched N-glycans that may influence the adhesion and migration properties of the cell.  相似文献   

13.
Mechanism of fibronectin (FN)-induced chemotaxis of fibroblastic cells has not been fully understood. The present study was performed to establish a molecular nature of the chemotactic region of rat plasma FN. The chemotactic dose-response pattern of intact FN for mouse embryo fibroblastic cells, NIH-L13 cells, which was represented as a "bell-shape" curve with a maximum activity at around 50 nM, changed to a "biphasic" mode through a proteolysis with thermolysin. Two distinct chemotactic components were isolated from the thermolytic fragments. One component, a fragment with a molecular mass of 110-150 kDa, was estimated to contain the central cell-binding domain and the carboxyl-terminal heparin-binding domain of the intact FN molecule. Cell migration stimulated by the 110-150-kDa fragment increased successively in a dose-dependent manner, and the capability to promote the migration was much higher than that of the intact FN (over 2-fold). The second chemotactic component, a fragment with a molecular mass of 21 kDa, was shown to reside in the carboxyl-terminal fibrin-binding domain. The 21-kDa fragment produced a bell-shape dose-response pattern, being consistent with the intact FN, whereas a maximum response occurred at a 100-fold lower concentration (0.5 nM) than that of the intact FN molecule. At higher concentrations, this fragment revealed an inhibitory activity for the cell migration in response to the 110-150-kDa fragment. No significant molecular interaction between these two active components was observed by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions, suggesting that the 21-kDa fragment may act directly on the cell to inhibit the cell migration. These results suggest that rat plasma FN contains at least two chemotactically active components that regulate cooperatively chemotactic migration of fibroblastic cells.  相似文献   

14.
Fibronectin (FN) is an adhesive extracellular matrix component that is essential for vertebrate development. It forms a fibrillar matrix at the cell surface which controls cell morphology, migration, proliferation, and other important cellular processes. To address specific functions of FN matrix structure during early vertebrate development, we introduced normal and mutant recombinant FNs (recFNs) into the blastocoel cavity of embryos of the amphibian Pleurodeles waltl. Here we show that a native recFN FN(A-B-) as well as recFNs with specific mutations in the cell-binding domain, FN(RGD-) and FN(syn-), or in a FN-binding region, FNDeltaIII(1), are assembled into fibrillar matrix. A recFN (FNDeltaIII(1-7)) that forms a structurally distinct matrix in cultured cells was assembled into aggregates at the cell periphery and was able to inhibit assembly of endogenous amphibian FN matrix in a dose-dependent manner. Cell adhesion, spreading, and migration were perturbed in vitro and in vivo on chimeric matrices containing FN(RGD-), FN(syn-), or FNDeltaIII(1-7) co-assembled with amphibian FN. Developmentally, this perturbation resulted in defects in mesoderm patterning and inhibition of gastrulation. These results indicate that FN matrix fibrillar structure and composition are important determinants of cell adhesion and migration during development.  相似文献   

15.
The migration of human keratinocytes over the wound bed plays an important role in the re-epithelialization of cutaneous wounds. Fibronectin, a large glycoprotein matrix component that is abundant within cutaneous wound beds, promotes keratinocyte migration. However, the mechanisms by which keratinocytes migrate over fibronectin are unknown. In this study, we sought to identify specific sites within the fibronectin molecule that induce keratinocyte locomotion and to characterize the cell surface receptors involved. The data show that the domain within the fibronectin molecule that induces human keratinocyte migration is the 120 kD cell-binding domain close to the carboxyl terminus. The 40 kD heparin-binding domain near the carboxyl terminus and the 45 kD gelatin-binding domain near the amino terminus did not promote keratinocyte migration. In addition, keratinocyte migration on both fibronectin and the 120 kD cell-binding domain was completely inhibited by the presence of GRGDSP peptide, suggesting that keratinocyte migration on fibronectin is mediated by recognizing the RGD sequence located within the cell-binding domain of fibronectin. Furthermore, keratinocytes were able to migrate directly on immobilized RGD substratum. Cell migration on fibronectin is mediated by the alpha 5 beta 1 integrin since antibodies blocking the alpha 5 and the beta 1 subunits completely inhibited keratinocyte migration on fibronectin. In addition, we demonstrate that human keratinocytes express alpha 5 beta 1 integrin in culture by flow cytometry.  相似文献   

16.
We have examined the molecular interactions of avian neural crest cells with fibronectin and laminin in vitro during their initial migration from the neural tube. A 105-kDa proteolytic fragment of fibronectin encompassing the defined cell-binding domain (65 kDa) promoted migration of neural crest cells to the same extent as the intact molecule. Neural crest cell migration on both intact fibronectin and the 105-kDa fragment was reversibly inhibited by RGD-containing peptides. The 11.5-kDa fragment containing the RGDS cell attachment site was also able to support migration, whereas a 50-kDa fragment corresponding to the adjacent N-terminal portion of the defined cell-binding domain was unfavorable for neural crest cell movement. In addition to the putative "cell-binding domain," neural crest cells were able to migrate on a 31-kDa fragment corresponding to the C-terminal heparin-binding (II) region of fibronectin, and were inhibited in their migration by exogenous heparin, but not by RGDS peptides. Heparin potentiated the inhibitory effect of RGDS peptides on intact fibronectin, but not on the 105-kDa fragment. On substrates of purified laminin, the extent of avian neural crest cell migration was maximal at relatively low substrate concentrations and was reduced at higher concentrations. The efficiency of laminin as a migratory substrate was enhanced when the glycoprotein occurred complexed with nidogen. Moreover, coupling of the laminin-nidogen complex to collagen type IV or the low density heparan sulfate proteoglycan further increased cell dispersion, whereas isolated nidogen or the proteoglycan alone were unable to stimulate migration and collagen type IV was a significantly less efficient migratory substrate than laminin-nidogen. Neural crest cell migration on laminin-nidogen was not affected by RGDS nor by YIGSR-containing peptides, but was reduced by 35% after addition of heparin. The predominant motility-promoting activity of laminin was localized to the E8 domain, possessing heparin-binding activity distinct from that of the N-terminal E3 domain. Migration on the E8 fragment was reduced by greater than 70% after addition of heparin. The E1' fragment supported a minimal degree of migration that was RGD-sensitive and heparin-insensitive, whereas the primary heparin-binding E3 fragment and the cell-adhesive P1 fragment were entirely nonpermissive for cell movement.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Influence of decorin on fibroblast adhesion to fibronectin.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Decorin is a ubiquitous small dermatan sulfate proteoglycan carrying a single glycosaminoglycan chain. It is known for its ability to bind, via its core protein, to interstitial collagens. Decorin was purified from the secretions of cultured human skin fibroblasts under non-denaturing conditions. The intact proteoglycan and its glycosaminoglycan-free core protein were tested for their interference with fibroblast adhesion to a fibronectin substrate. Concentrations of 40 nmoles or more of hexuronic acid/ml of decorin or equivalent amounts of core protein inhibited cell adhesion. Inhibition was caused by an interaction of core protein with fibronectin and not by masking of the fibronectin receptor. When cell-binding fragments of fibronectin were used as substrates, a similar inhibition of cell adhesion by decorin core protein was found, and in vitro assays demonstrated an interaction of core protein with the cell-binding domain of fibronectin. Decorin core protein also inhibited the low degree of cell adhesion to heparin-binding fragments on the N-terminus and near the C-terminus of the fibronectin molecules.  相似文献   

18.
An efficient expression system was constructed in Escherichia coli that produced a 33-kDa fragment, C-274, of human fibronectin with a strong cell-adhesive activity. The entire sequence of the heparin-binding domain with 271 amino acids, H-271, was also expressed. Deletion analysis of the type III repeats showed that the heparin-binding site was at type III-13. The cell-adhesive activity of a fusion protein, CH-271, containing the cell- and the heparin-binding domains was twice that of C-274 when BHK but not B16-F10 melanoma cells were tested; H-271 alone was inactive. Recombinant proteins containing the CS1 sequence of the IIICS region were more active than C-274 and CH-271 with B16-F10. However, H-296, which contained both H-271 and CS1, was almost inactive with BHK. CH-296, which contained CS1 at the C-terminus of CH-271, was more active with B16-F10 than H-296 and C-CS1, which was produced by the deletion of H-271 from CH-296. Thus, the cell-binding domain was active with both kinds of cells. The heparin-binding domain promoted the adhesion of both kinds of cells only when linked to the cell-binding domain or CS1. CS1 was specific for the adhesion of B16-F10 but was not essential.  相似文献   

19.
Fibronectin (FN) is a multidomain extracellular matrix protein that induces attachment and chemotactic migration of fibroblastic cells. In this study we analyzed the molecular determinants involved in the FN-induced chemotactic migration of normal and SV40-transformed 3T3 cells. Two different monoclonal antibodies to the cell-binding site of FN blocked chemotaxis to a 140-kD FN fragment (Ca 140) containing the cell-binding domain. A monoclonal antibody to a determinant distant from the cell-binding site did not affect chemotaxis. A synthetic tetrapeptide, RGDS, which represents the major cell-attachment sequence, was able to compete with FN and the Ca 140 fragment in chemotaxis assays, but this peptide itself had no significant chemotactic activity. A larger peptide encompassing this sequence, GRGDSP, was chemotactic, while the peptide GRGESP, where a glutamic acid residue was substituted for aspartic acid, was inactive. Chemotactic migration could be prevented in a dose-dependent manner by a rabbit polyclonal antiserum to a 140-kD cell surface FN receptor. This antibody was more effective on normal than on transformed 3T3 cells. Neither the anti-FN receptor antiserum nor a monoclonal antibody to the cell-binding site of FN blocked migration induced by another potent chemoattractant, platelet-derived growth factor. These data indicate that FN-induced chemotaxis of 3T3 and SV3T3 cells is mediated via the RGDS cell-attachment site of FN and the 140-kD cell surface FN receptor. The interaction is specific and can be altered by transformation.  相似文献   

20.
Two monoclonal anti-fibronectin antibodies that inhibit fibronectin-mediated cell adhesion have been established and characterized. One antibody, FN12-8, inhibited attachment of rat kidney fibroblasts on the fibronectin-coated substrate in a concentration-dependent manner, attaining a maximal inhibition of greater than 85% at 850 micrograms/ml. Another antibody, FN30-8, caused about 70% inhibition at a concentration as low as 0.85 microgram/ml, although further increase of the antibody concentration did not significantly augment the inhibitory effect. Immunoblot analysis with defined proteolytic fragments revealed that both antibodies are directed to the cell-binding domain of fibronectin. The epitopes for these antibodies were further narrowed down using recombinant cell-binding fragments expressed in Escherichia coli. FN12-8 recognized the 11.5-kDa cell-binding fragment previously characterized by Pierschbacher et al. (1981, Cell 26, 259-267), suggesting that FN12-8 blocks the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) cell adhesion signal. FN30-8 could not bind this fragment but did recognize a longer cell-binding fragment containing additional greater than 111 amino acid residues upstream of the 11.5-kDa fragment. Since the RGD-dependent cell adhesion seems to require another signal located at a region 50-160 residues upstream of the 11.5-kDa fragment for full activity, FN30-8 may exert its inhibitory effect by blocking the latter signal.  相似文献   

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