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1.
Recent biochemical and sequence data suggest a possible relationship between Pgp-1 (identical to CD44/Hermes 1/p85) and a hyaluronic acid-binding function. Here, we have studied the hyaluronic acid-binding activity of a series of murine hematopoietic cell lines using several assays: cell aggregation by hyaluronic acid, binding of fluorescein-conjugated hyaluronic acid, and cell adhesion to hyaluronic acid-coated dishes. Certain Pgp-1-positive T and B cell lines show hyaluronic acid binding that is highly specific and is not competed for by other glycosaminoglycans. Monoclonal antibodies against Pgp-1, but not antibodies against other major cell surface glycoproteins, inhibited hyaluronic acid-induced cell aggregation and cell adhesion to hyaluronic acid-coated dishes. Additionally, some anti-Pgp-1 antibodies inhibited binding of fluorescein-hyaluronic acid to hyaluronic acid-binding lines. We found no Pgp-1-negative lines that bound, but many Pgp-1-positive cell lines did not bind hyaluronic acid. Two Pgp-1-positive thymomas that did not bind hyaluronic acid were induced by phorbol ester to bind hyaluronic acid with the same specificity as other hyaluronic acid-binding lines. Normal hematopoietic cells, including those which express high levels of Pgp-1, such as bone marrow myeloid cells and splenic lymphocytes, showed no detectable hyaluronic acid-binding activity. We discuss several models that might account for these observations: (1) the hyaluronic acid receptor is Pgp-1, but it normally exists in an inactive state; (2) hyaluronic acid receptors are a subset of a family of molecules recognized by anti-Pgp-1 antibodies; (3) the hyaluronic acid receptor is not Pgp-1, but is closely associated with Pgp-1 on the surface of cells which express hyaluronic acid-binding activity.  相似文献   

2.
CD44 is the primary leukocyte cell surface receptor for hyaluronic acid (HA), a component of the extracellular matrix. Enzymatic post translational cleavage of labile disulfide bonds is a mechanism by which proteins are structurally regulated by imparting an allosteric change and altering activity. We have identified one such disulfide bond in CD44 formed by Cys77 and Cys97 that stabilises the HA binding groove. This bond is labile on the surface of leukocytes treated with chemical and enzymatic reducing agents. Analysis of CD44 crystal structures reveal the disulfide bond to be solvent accessible and in the–LH hook configuration characteristic of labile disulfide bonds. Kinetic trapping and binding experiments on CD44-Fc chimeric proteins show the bond is preferentially reduced over the other disulfide bonds in CD44 and reduction inhibits the CD44-HA interaction. Furthermore cells transfected with CD44 no longer adhere to HA coated surfaces after pre-treatment with reducing agents. The implications of CD44 redox regulation are discussed in the context of immune function, disease and therapeutic strategies.  相似文献   

3.
CD44 is a polymorphic glycoprotein expressed on the surface of many tissues and cell lines which has been implicated in a number of cellular functions including lymphocyte homing to mucosal lymphoid tissue (Peyers patches), leukocyte activation, lymphopoiesis, and tumor metastasis. The predominant isoform found on human leukocytes, CD44H, is a receptor for hyaluronic acid. Because of the prominent role CD44 plays in diverse biological processes, we set out to identify the hyaluronic acid binding site(s) in the extracellular domain of CD44H. Using truncation and site-directed mutagenesis we identified two regions containing clusters of conserved basic residues which are important in hyaluronic acid binding. One of these regions is situated near the NH2 terminus and is homologous to other hyaluronic acid binding proteins including cartilage link protein. The other more membrane proximal region lies outside the link protein homologous domain. Mutagenesis of basic residues within these regions established their role as determinants in hyaluronic acid binding. Mutation of Arg 41, a position where a basic residue is conserved in all hyaluronic acid binding proteins, completely abolished binding suggesting that this residue plays a critical role in hyaluronic acid binding.  相似文献   

4.
Interaction of CD44, an adhesion molecule, with its ligand, hyaluronan (HA), in monocytic cells plays a critical role in cell migration, inflammation, and immune responses. Most cell types express CD44 but do not bind HA. The biological functions of CD44 have been attributed to the generation of the functionally active, HA-adhesive form of this molecule. Although lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and cytokines induce HA-adhesive CD44, the molecular mechanism underlying this process remains unknown. In this study, we show that LPS-induced CD44-mediated HA (CD44-HA) binding in monocytes is regulated by endogenously produced tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and IL-10. Furthermore, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) activation was required for LPS- and TNF-alpha-induced, but not IL-10-induced, CD44-HA-binding in normal monocytes. To dissect the signaling pathways regulating CD44-HA binding independently of cross-regulatory IL-10-mediated effects, IL-10-refractory promonocytic THP-1 cells were employed. LPS-induced CD44-HA binding in THP-1 cells was regulated by endogenously produced TNF-alpha. Our results also suggest that lysosomal sialidase activation may be required for the acquisition of the HA-binding form of CD44 in LPS- and TNF-alpha-stimulated monocytic cells. Studies conducted to understand the role of MAPKs in the induction of sialidase activity revealed that LPS-induced sialidase activity was dependent on p42/44 MAPK-mediated TNF-alpha production. Blocking TNF-alpha production by PD98059, a p42/44 inhibitor, significantly reduced the LPS-induced sialidase activity and CD44-HA binding. Subsequently, TNF-alpha-mediated p38 MAPK activation induced sialidase activity and CD44-HA binding. Taken together, our results suggest that TNF-alpha-induced p38 MAPK activation may regulate the induction of functionally active HA-binding form of CD44 by activating sialidase in LPS-stimulated human monocytic cells.  相似文献   

5.
Our previous studies have identified TNFalpha as a positive regulator and IL-4 as a negative regulator of human monocyte CD44-HA binding. In order to determine the mechanisms of IL-4- and TNFalpha-mediated regulation of monocyte HA binding, we measured HA binding and CD44 expression on peripheral blood monocytes following monocyte treatment with TNFalpha or IL-4, as well as following monocyte treatment with inhibitors of protein synthesis, N- and O-linked glycosylation, and chondroitin sulfation. IL-4 decreased CD44-HA binding on monocytes initially treated with TNFalpha. Similarly, pretreatment of monocytes with IL-4 prevented subsequent TNFalpha-mediated HA binding. Cycloheximide (protein synthesis inhibitor), tunicamycin (N-linked glycosylation inhibitor), and beta-d-xyloside (chondroitin sulfation inhibitor) all inhibited IL-4-mediated downregulation of TNFalpha-induced monocyte HA binding. Western blot analysis of CD44 from TNFalpha-treated monocytes revealed a 5-10 Mr decrease in the standard isoform of CD44. In contrast, IL-4 treatment of monocytes inhibited CD44-HA binding and reversed the 5- to 10-kDa decrease in monocyte CD44 Mr. Finally, studies with F10.44.2, a CD44 mab that enhances CD44-HA binding, indicated that IL-4 treatment of monocytes not only diminished constitutive HA binding, but also diminished CD44 mab-induced HA binding. Taken together, these data suggested that IL-4-mediated inhibition of TNFalpha-induced monocyte HA binding was dependent not only on protein synthesis, but also on N-linked glycosylation and chondroitin-sulfate modification of either CD44 or, alternatively, another monocyte protein(s) that may regulate the ability of CD44 to bind HA.  相似文献   

6.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(4):1099-1109
GP85 is one of the most common hemopoietic isoforms of the cell adhesion molecule, CD44. CD44(GP85) is known to contain at least one ankyrin-binding site within its 70 aa cytoplasmic domain and to bind hyaluronic acid (HA) with its extracellular domain. In this study we have mapped the ankyrin-binding domain of CD44(GP85) by deleting various portions of the cytoplasmic region followed by expression of these truncated cDNAs in COS cells. The results of these experiments indicate that the ankyrin-binding domain resides between amino acids 305 and 355. Biochemical analyses, using competition binding assays and a synthetic peptide (NGGNGT-VEDRKPSEL) containing 15 aa between aa 305 and aa 320, support the conclusion that this region is required for ankryin binding. Furthermore, we have constructed a fusion protein in which this 15 aa sequence of CD44(GP85) is transplanted onto another transmembrane protein which does not bind ankyrin. Our results show that this fusion protein acquires the ability to bind ankyrin confirming that the sequence (306NGGNGTVEDRKPSE320L) is a critical part of the ankryin-binding domain of CD44(GP85). In addition, we have demonstrated that deletion of this 15 aa ankyrin-binding sequence from CD44(GP85) results in a drastic reduction (> or = 90%) of HA-binding and HA-mediated cell adhesion. These findings strongly suggest that ankyrin binding to the cytoplasmic domain of CD44(GP85) plays a pivotal role in regulating hyaluronic acid-mediated cell-cell and cell- extracellular matrix interactions.  相似文献   

7.
Here we show that a large chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, versican, derived from a renal adenocarcinoma cell line ACHN, binds L-selectin, P-selectin, and CD44. The binding was mediated by the interaction of the chondroitin sulfate (CS) chain of versican with the carbohydrate-binding domain of L- and P-selectin and CD44. The binding of versican to L- and P-selectin was inhibited by CS B, CS E, and heparan sulfate (HS) but not by any other glycosaminoglycans tested. On the other hand, the binding to CD44 was inhibited by hyaluronic acid, chondroitin (CH), CS A, CS B, CS C, CS D, and CS E but not by HS or keratan sulfate. A cross-blocking study indicated that L- and P-selectin recognize close or overlapping sites on versican, whereas CD44 recognizes separate sites. We also show that soluble L- and P-selectin directly bind to immobilized CS B, CS E, and HS and that soluble CD44 directly binds to immobilized hyaluronic acid, CH, and all the CS chains examined. Consistent with these results, structural analysis showed that versican is modified with at least CS B and CS C. Thus, proteoglycans sufficiently modified with the appropriate glycosaminoglycans should be able to bind L-selectin, P-selectin, and/or CD44.  相似文献   

8.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,132(6):1199-1208
CD44-mediated cell adhesion to hyaluronate is controlled by mechanisms which are poorly understood. In the present work we examine the role of N-linked glycosylation and Ser-Gly motifs in regulating CD44- hyaluronate interaction. Our results show that treatment of a panel of human cell lines which constitutively express CD44 with the inhibitor of N-linked glycosylation tunicamycin results in the loss of attachment of these cells to hyaluronate-coated substrate. In contrast, treatment of the same cells with deoxymannojirimycin, which inhibits the conversion of high mannose oligosaccharides to complex N-linked carbohydrates, results in either no change or an increase in CD44- mediated adhesion to hyaluronate, suggesting that complex N-linked oligosaccharides may not be required for and may even inhibit CD44-HA interaction. Using human melanoma cells stably transfected with CD44 N- linked glycosylation site-specific mutants, we show that integrity of five potential N-linked glycosylation sites within the hyaluronate recognition domain of CD44 is critical for hyaluronate binding. Mutation of any one of these potential N-linked glycosylation sites abrogates CD44-mediated melanoma cell attachment to hyaluronate-coated surfaces, suggesting that all five sites are necessary to maintain the HA-recognition domain in the appropriate conformation. We also demonstrate that mutation of serine residues which constitute the four Ser-Gly motifs in the membrane proximal domain, and provide potential sites for glycosaminoglycan side chain attachment, impairs hyaluronate binding. Taken together, these observations indicate that changes in glycosylation of CD44 can have profound effects on its interaction with hyaluronic acid and suggest that glycosylation may provide an important regulatory mechanism of CD44 function.  相似文献   

9.
CD44 is a multifunctional glycoprotein that binds to hyaluronan and fibrin(ogen). Alternative splicing is responsible for the generation of numerous different isoforms, the smallest of which is CD44s. Insertion of variant exons into the extracellular membrane proximal region generates the variant isoforms (CD44v). Here, we used force spectroscopy to delineate the biophysical and molecular requirements of CD44-HA and CD44-fibrin(ogen) interactions at the single-molecule level. CD44v-HA and CD44s-HA single bonds exhibit similar kinetic and micromechanical properties because the HA-binding motif on CD44 is common to all of the isoforms. Although this is the primary binding site, O- and N-linked glycans and sulfation also contribute to the tensile strength of the CD44-HA bond. The CD44s-fibrin pair has a lower unstressed dissociation rate and a higher tensile strength than CD44s-fibrinogen but is weaker than the CD44-HA bond. In contrast to CD44-HA binding, the molecular interaction between CD44 and fibrin(ogen) is predominantly mediated by the chondroitin sulfate and dermatan sulfate on CD44. Blocking sulfation on CD44s modestly decreases the tensile strength of CD44s-fibrin(ogen) binding, which is in stark contrast to CD44v-fibrin interaction. Collectively, the results obtained by force spectroscopy in conjunction with biochemical interventions enable us to delineate the biophysical parameters and molecular constituents of CD44 binding to hyaluronan and fibrin(ogen).  相似文献   

10.
Migration of some tumor cells, and their lodgment in target organs, is dependent on the activation of cell surface CD44 receptor, usually detected by its ability to bind hyaluronic acid (HA) or other ligands. In an attempt to reveal the mechanism of tumor cell CD44 activation, we compared the physical and chemical properties of CD44 in nonactivated LB cell lymphoma with those in phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-activated LB cells and of an LB cell subline (designated HA9) expressing constitutively-active CD44. In contrast to nonactivated LB cells, PMA-activated LB cells and HA9 cells displayed a CD44-dependent ability to bind HA. The ability of activated cell CD44 to bind HA was not dependent on microfilament or microtubule integrity or on changes in CD44 mobility on the membrane plane, indicating that the CD44 activation status is not associated with cytoskeleton function. Aside from the increased expression of CD44 on the surface of PMA-activated LB cells and HA9 cells, qualitative differences between the CD44 of nonactivated and activated LB cells were also detected: the CD44 of the activated lymphoma was (i) larger in molecular size, (ii) displayed a broader CD44 isoform repertoire, including a CD44 variant that binds HA, and (iii) its glycoprotein contained less sialic acid. Indeed, after removal of sialic acid from their cell surface by neuraminidase, LB cells acquired the ability to bind HA. However, a reduced dose of neuraminidase did not confer HA binding on LB cells, unless they were also activated by a low concentration of PMA, which by itself was ineffective. Similarly, under suboptimal conditions, a synergistic effect was obtained with tunicamycin and PMA: each one alone was ineffective but in combination they induced the acquisition of HA binding by the lymphoma cells, while their CD44 expression was not enhanced. Unveiling of the activation mechanism of CD44, by exposing the cells to PMA stimulation or to deglycosylation, is not only academically important, but it also has practical implications, as activated CD44 may be involved in the support of tumor progression.  相似文献   

11.
Migration of some tumor cells, and their lodgment in target organs, is dependent on the activation of cell surface CD44 receptor, usually detected by its ability to bind hyaluronic acid (HA) or other ligands. In an attempt to reveal the mechanism of tumor cell CD44 activation, we compared the physical and chemical properties of CD44 in nonactivated LB cell lymphoma with those in phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA)-activated LB cells and of an LB cell subline (designated HA9) expressing constitutively-active CD44. In contrast to nonactivated LB cells, PMA-activated LB cells and HA9 cells displayed a CD44-dependent ability to bind HA. The ability of activated cell CD44 to bind HA was not dependent on microfilament or microtubule integrity or on changes in CD44 mobility on the membrane plane, indicating that the CD44 activation status is not associated with cytoskeleton function. Aside from the increased expression of CD44 on the surface of PMA-activated LB cells and HA9 cells, qualitative differences between the CD44 of nonactivated and activated LB cells were also detected: the CD44 of the activated lymphoma was (i) larger in molecular size, (ii) displayed a broader CD44 isoform repertoire, including a CD44 variant that binds HA, and (iii) its glycoprotein contained less sialic acid. Indeed, after removal of sialic acid from their cell surface by neuraminidase, LB cells acquired the ability to bind HA. However, a reduced dose of neuraminidase did not confer HA binding on LB cells, unless they were also activated by a low concentration of PMA, which by itself was ineffective. Similarly, under suboptimal conditions, a synergistic effect was obtained with tunicamycin and PMA: each one alone was ineffective but in combination they induced the acquisition of HA binding by the lymphoma cells, while their CD44 expression was not enhanced. Unveiling of the activation mechanism of CD44, by exposing the cells to PMA stimulation or to deglycosylation, is not only academically important, but it also has practical implications, as activated CD44 may be involved in the support of tumor progression.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies have shown that the antibody 7H9D6 identifies CD44, a glycoprotein receptor for hyaluronic acid. 7H9D6 recognizes an epitope of CD44 that is not always present on CD44 molecules. The 7H9D6 antibody bound to the hyaluronic acid binding domain of CD44 and inhibited cell adhesion to immobilized hyaluronic acid. However, the expression of the 7H9D6 epitope was not sufficient for hyaluronic acid binding. Immunofluorescent staining with 7H9D6 revealed a punctate surface staining pattern, suggesting that CD44 molecules recognized by 7H9D6 are located in clusters on the cell surface. In contrast, other CD44 antibodies produced a uniform staining pattern. Early bone marrow B cells were negative for 7H9D6 but reactive with other CD44 monoclonal antibodies. In contrast, leukaemic cells from 65% of patients (28 of 43) with B lineage acute lymphoblastic leukaemia bound 7H9D6. Patients expressing the 7H9D6 epitope on their leukaemic cells had an increased risk of death (HR 3.5 95% CI 1.1-10.9, P = 0.029) and of disease relapse (HR 3.2 95% CI 1.2-8.5, P = 0.017) when corrected for white cell count. This antibody may be useful for the detection of residual disease in B lineage acute lymphoblastic leukaemia and as a prognostic indicator and for the study of CD44 function.  相似文献   

13.
CD44 is a major cell surface receptor for the large polydisperse glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA). Binding of the long and flexible HA chains is thought to be stabilized by the multivalent nature of the sugar molecule. In addition, high and low molecular weight forms of HA provoke distinct proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory effects upon binding to CD44 and can deliver either proliferative or antiproliferative signals in appropriate cell types. Despite the importance of such interactions, however, neither the stoichiometry of multivalent HA binding at the cell surface nor the molecular basis for functional distinction between different HA size categories is understood. Here we report on the design of a supported lipid bilayer system that permits quantitative analysis of multivalent binding through presentation of CD44 in a stable, natively oriented manner and at controlled density. Using this system in combination with biophysical techniques, we show that the amount of HA binding to bilayers that are densely coated with CD44 increases as a function of HA size, with half-maximal saturation at ∼30 kDa. Moreover, reversible binding was confined to the smaller HA species (molecular weight of ≤10 kDa), whereas the interaction was essentially irreversible with larger polymers. The amount of bound HA decreased with decreasing receptor surface density, but the stability of binding was not affected. From a physico-chemical perspective, the binding properties of HA share many similarities with the typical behavior of a flexible polymer as it adsorbs onto a homogeneously attractive surface. These findings provide new insight into the multivalent nature of CD44-HA interactions and suggest a molecular basis for the distinct biological properties of different size fractions of hyaluronan.  相似文献   

14.
The hyaluronic acid receptor, CD44, exists as multiple splice variants that appear to have a role in migration of tumor cells. The role of this receptor and its variants in normal wound repair is poorly understood. A central feature of wound repair in the liver is activation and migration of perisinusoidal stellate cells. We have examined CD44 expression by stellate cells from normal or injured rat liver, finding that it increases with injury and involves a distinct set of CD44 splice variants. Among the latter, variants containing the v6 exon (CD44v6) are strikingly increased. Analysis of migration of primary cells on transwell filter inserts reveals that only cells isolated from injured liver are migratory. Also, they move more rapidly on hyaluronic acid than on collagen I or collagen IV. A polyclonal antibody to recombinant CD44v6 blocks migration by 50%, whereas antibody to CD44v4 has no effect. The inhibition is specific for cells migrating on hyaluronic acid and is reversed by synthetic peptide representing the N terminus of the v6 protein. In conclusion, activated stellate cells use CD44v6 and hyaluronic acid for migration. Given the evidence that migration is required for progression of injury with scar formation, blockers of CD44v6 expression or function are candidates for preventing the deleterious effects of chronic fibrosis.  相似文献   

15.
CD44 is a principal cell-surface receptor for hyaluronan (HA). Up-regulation of CD44 is often associated with morphogenesis and tumor invasion. On the contrary, reduction of cell-cell adhesion due to down-regulation of E-cadherin is associated with the invasive and metastatic phenotype of carcinomas. In our current study, we investigated the functional relationship between CD44 and E-cadherin. We established an inverse correlation between CD44 and E-cadherin indicating that the cells expressing higher levels of E-cadherin display weaker binding affinity between CD44 and HA. By using TA3 murine mammary carcinoma (TA3) cells, which display CD44-dependent HA binding, branching morphogenesis, and invasion, we demonstrated an inverse functional relationship between CD44 and E-cadherin by transfecting exogenous E-cadherin into the cells. Our results showed that increased expression of E-cadherin in TA3 cells, but not ICAM-1, weakens the binding between CD44 and HA and blocks spreading of the cells on HA substratum and CD44-mediated branching morphogenesis and tumor cell invasion. The results reported here demonstrated for the first time that E-cadherin negatively regulated CD44-HA interaction and CD44 function and suggested that balanced function of CD44 and E-cadherin may be essential for normal epithelial cell functions, and imbalanced up-regulation of CD44 function and/or down-regulation of E-cadherin function likely contributes to tumor progression.  相似文献   

16.
Osteopontin is a secreted glycoprotein with adhesive and migratory functions. Cellular interactions with osteopontin are mediated through integrin receptors which recognize the RGD domain. Recently, CD44, a non-integrin, multifunctional adhesion molecule was identified as an osteopontin receptor. CD44 is a ubiquitous surface molecule that exists as a number of different isoforms, generated by alternative splicing. To analyze which forms of CD44 mediate binding to osteopontin, we used the standard form of CD44 as CD44-human immunoglobulin fusion proteins and several splice variants in enzyme-linked immunosorbant assays. Multiple preparations of osteopontin were used including native osteopontin derived from smooth muscle cells, human urinary osteopontin, full-length recombinant osteopontin, and two recombinant osteopontin fragments expected to be formed following thrombin cleavage. Our data show that although the CD44-hlg fusion proteins could interact with hyaluronic acid as expected, there was no interaction between CD44H, CD44E, CD44v3,v8-v10, or CD44v3 with osteopontin. These studies suggest that CD44-osteopontin interactions may not be common in vivo and may be limited to a specific CD44 isoform(s), and/or a particular modified form of osteopontin.  相似文献   

17.
CD44 is the main cell surface receptor for hyaluronic acid (HA) and contains a functional HA-binding domain (HABD) composed of a Link module with N- and C-terminal extensions. The contact residues of human CD44 HABD for HA have been determined by cross-saturation experiments and mapped on the topology of CD44 HABD, which we elucidated by NMR. The contact residues are distributed in both the consensus fold for the Link module superfamily and the additional structural elements consisting of the flanking regions. Interestingly, the contact residues exhibit small changes in chemical shift upon HA binding. In contrast, the residues with large chemical shift changes are localized in the C-terminal extension and the first alpha-helix and are generally inconsistent with the contact residues. These results suggest that, upon ligand binding, the C-terminal extension and the first alpha-helix undergo significant conformational changes, which may account for the broad ligand specificity of CD44 HABD.  相似文献   

18.
CD44 is a cell-surface glycoprotein and receptor for hyaluronan, one of the major components of the tumor extracellular matrix. There is evidence that the interaction between CD44 and hyaluronan promotes breast cancer metastasis. Recently, the molecule F-19848A was shown to inhibit hyaluronan binding to receptor CD44 in a cell-based assay. In this study, we investigated the mechanism and energetics of F-19848A binding to CD44 using molecular simulation. Using the molecular mechanics/Poisson Boltzmann surface area (MM-PBSA) method, we obtained the binding free energy and inhibition constant of the complex. The van der Waals (vdW) interaction and the extended portion of F-19848A play key roles in the binding affinity. We screened natural products from a traditional Chinese medicine database to search for CD44 inhibitors. From combining pharmaceutical requirements with docking and molecular dynamics simulations, we found ten compounds that are potentially better or equal to the F-19848A ligand at binding to CD44 receptor. Therefore, we have identified new candidates of CD44 inhibitors, based on molecular simulation, which may be effective small molecules for the therapy of breast cancer.  相似文献   

19.
In this study we have explored the interaction between CD44 (the hyaluronic acid (HA)-binding receptor) and Tiam1 (a guanine nucleotide exchange factor) in metastatic breast tumor cells (SP1 cell line). Immunoprecipitation and immunoblot analyses indicate that both the CD44v3 isoform and the Tiam1 protein are expressed in SP1 cells and that these two proteins are physically associated as a complex in vivo. Using an Escherichia coli-derived calmodulin-binding peptide-tagged Tiam1 fragment (i.e. the NH(2)-terminal pleckstrin homology (PHn) domain and an adjacent protein interaction domain designated as PHn-CC-Ex, amino acids 393-738 of Tiam1) and an in vitro binding assay, we have detected a specific binding interaction between the Tiam1 PHn-CC-Ex domain and CD44. Scatchard plot analysis indicates that there is a single high affinity CD44 binding site in the PHn-CC-Ex domain of Tiam1 with an apparent dissociation constant (K(d)) of 0.2 nM, which is comparable with CD44 binding (K(d) = approximately 0.13 nM) to intact Tiam1. These findings suggest that the PHn-CC-Ex domain is the primary Tiam1-binding region for CD44. Most importantly, the binding of HA to CD44v3 of SP1 cells stimulates Tiam1-catalyzed Rac1 signaling and cytoskeleton-mediated tumor cell migration. Transfection of SP1 cells with Tiam1cDNA promotes Tiam1 association with CD44v3 and up-regulates Rac1 signaling as well as HA/CD44v3-mediated breast tumor cell migration. Co-transfection of SP1 cells with PHn-CC-Ex cDNA and Tiam1 cDNA effectively inhibits Tiam1 association with CD44 and efficiently blocks tumor behaviors. Taken together, we believe that the linkage between CD44v3 isoform and the PHn-CC-EX domain of Tiam1 is required for HA stimulated Rac1 signaling and cytoskeleton-mediated tumor cell migration during breast cancer progression.  相似文献   

20.
We used complementary biochemical and immunological techniques to establish that an endothelial cell transmembrane glycoprotein, GP116, is a CD44-like molecule and binds directly both to extracellular matrix components (e.g., hyaluronic acid) and to ankyrin. The specific characteristics of GP116 are as follows: (i) GP116 can be surface labeled with Na 125I and contains a wheat germ agglutinin-binding site(s), indicating that it has an extracellular domain; (ii) GP116 displays immunological cross-reactivity with a panel of CD44 antibodies, shares some peptide similarity with CD44, and has a similar 52-kDa precursor molecule, indicating that it is a CD44-like molecule; (iii) GP116 displays specific hyaluronic acid-binding properties, indicating that it is a hyaluronic acid receptor; (iv) GP116 can be phosphorylated by endogenous protein kinase C activated by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate and by exogenously added protein kinase C; and (v) GP116 and a 20-kDa tryptic polypeptide fragment of GP116 from the intracellular domain are capable of binding the membrane-cytoskeleton linker molecule, ankyrin. Furthermore, phosphorylation of GP116 by protein kinase C significantly enhances GP116 binding to ankyrin. Together, these findings strongly suggest that phosphorylation of the transmembrane glycoprotein GP116 (a CD44-like molecule) by protein kinase C is required for effective GP116-ankyrin interaction during endothelial cell adhesion events.  相似文献   

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