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1.
It is well known that activated Factor XII (FXIIa) and kallikrein are rapidly inactivated in plasma as a result of reaction with endogenous inhibitors. The purpose of this may be to prevent uncontrolled deleterious spreading and activation of target zymogens. Both FXII and the complex plasma prekallikrein/high molecular mass kininogen become activated when they bind, in a Zn2+-dependent manner, to receptors on human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). The C1-esterase inhibitor (C1-INH) is by far the most efficient inhibitor of FXIIa. In the present study it has been investigated whether binding of FXIIa to HUVEC might offer protection against inactivation by C1-INH. It appeared that the relative amidolytic activity of purified FXIIa bound to the surface of HUVEC decreased according to the concentration of C1-INH in medium; however, the decrease was smaller than that measured for inactivation of FXIIa in solution. The secondary rate constant for the inactivation was 3-10-fold lower for cell-bound than for soluble FXIIa. The inactivation was found to be caused by C1-INH binding to cell-bound FXIIa. Accordingly, the amidolytic activity of saturated amounts of cell-bound FXIIa was reduced in the presence of C1-INH and was theoretically nonexistent at physiological C1-INH concentrations. Amidolytic activity was, however, present on HUVEC incubated with plasma indicating that the endogenous C1-INH did not completely abolish the activity of FXIIa generated during the incubation period. This supports the hypothesis that binding to endothelial cells protects the activated FXII against inactivation by its major endogenous inhibitor. Hence, the function of FXII may be localized at cellular surfaces.  相似文献   

2.
When activated, factor XII (FXII) has been shown to play a role in a series of proteolytic cascades including systems as the fibrinolytic, the coagulation, the kallikrein-kinin and the complement. How FXII is activated in vivo remains poorly understood as the concentration and density of surface bound negative charges known to trigger the activation in vitro is far from sufficient in vivo. Specific binding of FXII to cellular receptors in the blood stream may, however, solve this problem which may be a question of inter molecular vicinity enhanced by binding to any surface. Here we report that the Zn(2+)-dependent binding of FXII to endothelial cells is rapid, saturable, specific and cooperative. Each endothelial cell from the human umbilical veins was found to bind (417 +/- 202) x 10(3) molecules of FXII with a Kd of (65 +/- 23) nM and a Hill coefficient of 2.1. The binding was inhibited by alpha-FXIIa but not by beta-FXIIa. The Kd for binding alpha-FXIIa was (50 +/- 27) nM. The rate of association was found to be 1.9 x 10(5) M(-1). min(-1). A confirmed inhibition by HK increased the Kd without affecting the maximal number of binding sites and the Hill coefficient. The concentration of HK in serum did not prevent binding of FXII/FXIIa to cells incubated with serum supplemented with Zn2+. The optimal concentration of Zn(2+) was 15 microM for binding factor XII/FXIIa whether purified or in serum.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Latent transforming growth factor (TGF)-β binding proteins are extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins involved in the regulation of TGF-β sequestration and activation. In this study, we have identified binding domains in LTBP-4, which mediate matrix targeting and cell adhesion. LTBP-4 was found to possess heparin binding activity, especially in its N-terminal region. The C-terminal domain of LTBP-4 supported fibroblast adhesion, a property reduced by soluble heparin. In addition, we found that LTBP-4 binds directly to fibronectin (FN), which was indispensable for the matrix assembly of LTBP-4. The FN binding sites were also located in the N-terminal region. Interestingly, heparin was able to reduce the binding of LTBP-4 to FN. In fibroblast cultures, LTBP-4 colocalized first with FN and subsequently with fibrillin-1, pointing to a role for FN in the early assembly of LTBP-4. In FN −/− fibroblasts, LTBP-mediated ECM targeting was disturbed, resulting in increased TGF-β activity. These results revealed new molecular interactions which are evidently important for the ECM targeting, but which also are evidence of novel functions for LTBP-4 as an adhesion molecule.  相似文献   

5.
The region of fibronectin (FN) surrounding the two type II modules of FN binds type I collagen. However, little is known about interactions of this collagen binding domain with other collagen types or extracellular matrix molecules. Among several expressed recombinant (r) human FN fragments from the collagen binding region of FN, only rI6-I7, which included the two type II modules and both flanking type I modules, bound any of several tested collagens. The rI6-I7 interacted specifically with both native and denatured forms of types I and III collagen as well as denatured types II, IV, V and X collagen with apparent K(d) values of 0.2-3.7 x 10(-7) M. Reduction with DTT disrupted the binding to gelatin verifying the functional requirement for intact disulfide bonds. The FN fragments showed a weak, but not physiologically important, binding to heparin, and did not bind elastin or laminin. The broad, but selective range of ligand interactions by rI6-I7 mirrored our prior observations for the collagen binding domain (rCBD) from matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) [J. Biol. Chem. 270 (1995) 11555]. Subsequent experiments showed competition between rI6-I7 and rCBD for binding to gelatin indicating that their binding sites on this extracellular matrix molecule are identical or closely positioned. Two collagen binding domain fragments supported cell attachment by a beta1-integrin-dependent mechanism although neither protein contains an Arg-Gly-Asp recognition sequence. Furthermore, activation of MMP-2 and MMP-9 was greatly reduced for HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells cultured on either of the fibronectin fragments compared to full-length FN. These observations imply that the biological activities of FN in the extracellular matrix may involve interactions with a broad range of collagen types, and that exposure to pathologically-generated FN fragments may substantially alter cell behavior and regulation.  相似文献   

6.
It is now generally accepted that factor XII (FXII) binds to cellular surfaces in the vascular system. One of the suggested receptors of this binding is the glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored urokinase-like plasminogen activator (u-PAR) harbored in caveolae/lipid rafts. However, binding of FXII to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) has never been shown to be localized to these specialized membrane structures. Using microscopical techniques, we here report that FXII binds to specific patches of the HUVEC plasma membrane with a high density of caveolae. Further investigations of FXII binding to caveolae were performed by sucrose density-gradient centrifugations. This showed that the majority of FXII, chemically cross-linked to HUVEC, could be identified in the same fractions of the gradient as caveolin-1, a marker of caveolae, while the majority of u-PAR was identified in noncaveolae lipid rafts. Accordingly, cholesterol-depleted cells were found to bind significantly reduced amounts of FXII. These observations, combined with the presence of a minority of u-PAR in caveolae concomitant with FXII binding, indicate that FXII binding to u-PAR may be secondary and depends upon the structural elements within caveolae. Thus, FXII binding to HUVEC depends on intact caveolae on the cellular surface.  相似文献   

7.
The extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoprotein fibronectin (FN) requires the help of cells to assemble into a functional fibrillar matrix, which then orchestrates the assembly of other ECM proteins and promotes cell adhesion, migration and signalling. Fibrillogenesis is initiated and governed by cell surface integrins that bind to specific sites in the FN molecule. Recent studies identified novel integrin binding sites in FN that can also participate in FN fibril formation and in morphogenetic events during development.  相似文献   

8.
Activated factor XII (FXIIa), the initiator of the contact activation system, has been shown to activate plasminogen in a purified system. However, the quantitative role of FXIIa as a plasminogen activator in contact activation-dependent fibrinolysis in plasma is still unclear. In this study, the plasminogen activator (PA) activity of FXIIa was examined both in a purified system and in a dextran sulfate euglobulin fraction of plasma by measuring fibrinolysis in a fibrin microtiter plate assay. FXIIa was found to have low PA activity in a purified system. Dextran sulfate potentiated the PA activity of FXIIa about sixfold, but had no effect on the PA activity of smaller fragments of FXIIa, missing the binding domain for negatively charged surfaces. The addition of small amounts of factor XII (FXII) to FXII-deficient plasma induced a large increase in contact activation-dependent PA activity, as measured in a dextran sulfate euglobulin fraction, which may be ascribed to FXII-dependent activation of plasminogen activators like prekallikrein. When more FXII was added, PA activity continued to increase but to a lesser extent. In normal plasma, the addition of FXII also resulted in an increase of contact activation-dependent PA activity. These findings suggested a significant contribution of FXIIa as a direct plasminogen activator. Indeed, at least 20% of contact activation-dependent PA activity could be extracted from a dextran sulfate euglobulin fraction prepared from normal plasma by immunodepletion of FXIIa and therefore be ascribed to direct PA activity of FXIIa. PA activity of endogenous FXIIa immunoadsorped from plasma could only be detected in the presence of dextran sulfate. From these results it is concluded that FXIIa can contribute significantly to fibrinolysis as a plasminogen activator in the presence of a potentiating surface.  相似文献   

9.
Factor XII (FXII) is a protease that is mainly produced in the liver and circulates in plasma as a single chain zymogen. Following contact with negatively charged surfaces, FXII is converted into the two-chain active form, FXIIa. FXIIa initiates the intrinsic blood coagulation pathway via activation of factor XI. Furthermore, it converts plasma prekallikrein to kallikrein (PK), which reciprocally activates FXII and liberates bradykinin from high molecular weight kininogen. In addition, FXIIa initiates fibrinolysis via PK-mediated urokinase activation and activates the classical complement pathway. Even though the main function of FXII seems to relate to the activation of the intrinsic coagulation pathway and the kallikrein-kinin system, a growing body of evidence suggests that FXII may also directly regulate cellular responses. In this regard, it has been found that FXII/FXIIa induces the expression of inflammatory mediators, promotes cell proliferation, and enhances the migration of neutrophils and lung fibroblasts. In addition, it has been reported that genetic ablation of FXII protects against neuroinflammation, reduces the formation of atherosclerotic lesions in Apoe−/− mice, improves wound healing, and inhibits postnatal angiogenesis. Although the aforementioned effects can be partially explained by the downstream products of FXII activation, the ability of FXII/FXIIa to directly regulate cellular responses has recently emerged as an alternative hypothesis. These direct cellular reactions to FXII/FXIIa will be discussed in the review.  相似文献   

10.
The plasma protein factor XII (FXII) is the liver-derived zymogen of the serine protease FXIIa that initiates an array of proteolytic cascades. Zymogen activation, enzymatic FXIIa activity and functions are regulated by interactions with cell receptors, negatively charged surfaces, other serine proteases, and serpin inhibitors, which bind to distinct protein domains and regions in FXII(a). FXII exerts mitogenic activity, while FXIIa initiates the pro-inflammatory kallikrein-kinin pathway and the pro-thrombotic intrinsic coagulation pathway, respectively. Growing evidence indicates that FXIIa-mediated thrombo-inflammation plays a crucial role in various pathological states besides classical thrombosis, such as endothelial dysfunction. Consistently, increased FXIIa levels are associated with hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia. In contrast, FXII deficiency protects from thrombosis but is otherwise not associated with prolonged bleeding or other adverse clinical manifestations. Here, we review current concepts for FXII(a)-driven vascular inflammation focusing on endothelial hyperpermeability, receptor signaling, atherosclerosis and immune cell activation.  相似文献   

11.
SFS is a non-anchored protein of Streptococcus equi subspecies equi that causes upper respiratory infection in horses. SFS has been shown to bind to fibronectin (FN) and block interaction of FN with type I collagen. We have characterized interactions of a recombinant 60-mer polypeptide, R1R2, with FN. R1R2 contains two copies of collagen-like 19-residue repeats. Experiments utilizing various FN fragments and epitope-mapped anti-FN monoclonal antibodies located the binding site to 8-9FNI modules of the gelatin-binding domain. Fluorescence polarization and competitive enzyme-linked assays demonstrated that R1R2 binds preferentially to compact dimeric FN rather than monomeric constructs containing 8-9FNI or a large dimeric FN construct that is constitutively in an extended conformation. In contrast to bacterial peptides that bind 2–5FNI in addition to 8-9FNI, R1R2 did not cause conformational extension of FN as assessed by a conformationally sensitive antibody. Equilibrium and stopped-flow binding assays and size exclusion chromatography were compatible with a two-step binding reaction in which each of the repeats of R1R2 interacts with one of the subunits of dimeric FN, resulting in a stable complex with a slow koff. In addition to not binding to type I collagen, the R1R2·FN complex incorporated less efficiently into extracellular matrix than free FN. Thus, R1R2 binds to FN utilizing features of compact soluble FN and in doing so interferes with the organization of the extracellular matrix. A similar bivalent binding strategy may underlie the collagen-FN interaction.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism by which vascular smooth muscle (VSM) cells modulate their contractility in response to structural cues from extracellular matrix remains poorly understood. When pulmonary VSM cells were cultured on increasing densities of immobilized fibronectin (FN), cell spreading, myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation, cytoskeletal prestress (isometric tension in the cell before vasoagonist stimulation), and the active contractile response to the vasoconstrictor endothelin-1 all increased in parallel. In contrast, MLC phosphorylation did not increase when suspended cells were allowed to bind FN-coated microbeads (4.5-microm diameter) or cultured on micrometer-sized (30 x 30 microm) FN islands surrounded by nonadhesive regions that support integrin binding but prevent cell spreading. Cell spreading and MLC phosphorylation also both decreased in parallel when the mechanical compliance of flexible FN substrates was raised. MLC phosphorylation was inhibited independently of cell shape when cytoskeletal prestress was dissipated using a myosin ATPase inhibitor in fully spread cells, whereas it increased to maximal levels when microtubules were disrupted using nocodazole in cells adherent to FN but not in suspended cells. These data demonstrate that changes in cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions modulate smooth muscle cell contractility at the level of biochemical signal transduction and suggest that the mechanism underlying this regulation may involve physical interplay between ECM and the cytoskeleton, such that cell spreading and generation of cytoskeletal tension feed back to promote MLC phosphorylation and further increase tension generation.  相似文献   

13.
Streptococcus suis serotype 2 binding to extracellular matrix proteins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Streptococcus suis serotype 2 is a major swine and human pathogen that causes septicemia and meningitis. The ability of S. suis serotype 2 to bind to different extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins was evaluated by ELISA. All 23 strains tested bound to plasma and cellular fibronectin and collagen types I, III, and V, some to fibrin, vitronectin, and laminin, and none to the other ECM proteins tested. An unencapsulated isogenic mutant bound to ECM proteins better than its parental encapsulated strain, suggesting that the polysaccharide capsule interfered with binding. Cross-inhibition was observed between soluble plasma fibronectin and collagens in the ECM adherence assay, indicating that binding domains for both proteins exist on the same or nearby bacterial surface molecules. On the other hand, pre-incubation with plasma fibronectin increased binding to collagen IV, suggesting that S. suis might use fibronectin as a bridging molecule. The results of heat treatment and proteolytic digestion suggest that adhesins for these ECM proteins are proteinaceous in nature.  相似文献   

14.
Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) is a member of the CCN family of the cysteine-rich proteins and involved in wound healing and fibrosis. We have previously shown a biochemical interaction between the CTGF and fibronectin (FN) using the yeast two-hybrid system. In this study, we confirmed the interaction between the CTGF and FN using the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and solid-phase binding analysis. Our results show that the regions containing the FN type I repeat modules (the N-terminal fibrin, the gelatin-collagen and the C-terminal fibrin binding domains) of FN and the C-terminal domain of CTGF are required for the interaction. We also demonstrated that CTGF enhances the affinity of FN to fibrin. It appears that CTGF contributes to the extracellular matrix accumulation in wound healing and tissue fibrosis by enhancing the affinity of FN to fibrin. Because CTGF is up-regulated during the tissue repair and in coagulation cascade-associated fibrotic disorders, the new function of CTGF found in this study is consistent with its physiological role.  相似文献   

15.
Excessive proteolysis of fibronectin (FN) impairs tissue repair in chronic wounds. Since FN is essential in wound healing, our goal is to improve its proteolytic stability and at the same time preserve its biological activity. We have previously shown that reduced FN conjugated with polyethylene glycol (PEG) at cysteine residues is more proteolytically stable than native FN. Cysteine‐PEGylated FN supported cell adhesion and migration to the same extent as native FN. However, unlike native FN, cysteine‐PEGylated FN was not assembled into an extracellular matrix (ECM) when immobilized. Here, we present an alternative approach in which FN is preferentially PEGylated at lysine residues using different molecular weight PEGs. We show that lysine PEGylation does not perturb FN secondary structure. PEG molecular weight, from 2 to 10 kDa, positively correlates with FN–PEG proteolytic stability. Cell adhesion, cell spreading, and gelatin binding decrease with increasing molecular weight of PEG. The 2‐kDa FN–PEG conjugate shows comparable cell adhesion to native FN and binds gelatin. Moreover, immobilized FN–PEG is assembled into ECM fibrils. In summary, lysine PEGylation of FN can be used to stabilize FN against proteolytic degradation with minimal perturbation to FN structure and retained biological activity.  相似文献   

16.
Integrins bind to their ligand in the extracellular matrix (ECM), such as fibronectin (FN), through a specific interaction between the amino acid motifs in the ligand, and binding sites in the extracellular domains of the integrin molecule generated jointly by its alpha and beta subunits. It has been proposed that membrane cholesterol and glycosphingolipids (GSLs) can regulate integrin-ECM interactions and it has been demonstrated that increased membrane cholesterol leads to increased cell adhesion to FN. Here, we have shown that a specific glycosphingolipid GM3 binds directly to alpha5beta1 integrin and an increase in membrane cholesterol results in the redistribution of GM3-associated alpha5beta1 integrin molecules specifically on the surface that is in contact with the substratum. Our results suggest that GM3-associated alpha5beta1 integrins bind less avidly to FN than GM3-free integrins and that cholesterol and GM3 play an interdependent role in the distribution of alpha5beta1integrin molecules in the membrane and regulation of cell adhesion.  相似文献   

17.
Adhesion modulatory proteins are important effectors of cell–matrix interactions during tissue remodeling and regeneration. They comprise a diverse group of matricellular proteins that confer antiadhesive properties to the extracellular matrix (ECM). We compared the inhibitory effects of two adhesion modulatory proteins, fibulin-1 and tenascin-C, both of which bind to the C-terminal heparin-binding (HepII) domain of fibronectin (FN) but are structurally distinct. Here, we report that, like tenascin-C, fibulin-1 inhibits fibroblast spreading and cell-mediated contraction of a fibrin–FN matrix. These proteins act by modulation of focal adhesion kinase and extracellular signal-regulated kinase signaling. The inhibitory effects were bypassed by lysophosphatidic acid, an activator of RhoA GTPase. Fibroblast response to fibulin-1, similar to tenascin-C, was dependent on expression of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan syndecan-4, which also binds to the HepII domain. Therefore, blockade of HepII-mediated signaling by competitive binding of fibulin-1 or tenascin-C represents a shared mechanism of adhesion modulation among disparate modulatory proteins.  相似文献   

18.
How fibronectin (FN) converts from a compact plasma protein to a fibrillar component of extracellular matrix is not understood. "Functional upstream domain" (FUD), a polypeptide based on F1 adhesin of Streptococcus pyogenes, binds by anti-parallel β-strand addition to discontinuous sets of N-terminal FN type I modules, (2-5)FNI of the fibrin-binding domain and (8-9)FNI of the gelatin-binding domain. Such binding blocks assembly of FN. To learn whether ligation of (2-5)FNI, (8-9)FNI, or the two sets in combination is important for inhibition, we tested "high affinity downstream domain" (HADD), which binds by β-strand addition to the continuous set of FNI modules, (1-5)FNI, comprising the fibrin-binding domain. HADD and FUD were similarly active in blocking fibronectin assembly. Binding of HADD or FUD to soluble plasma FN exposed the epitope to monoclonal antibody mAbIII-10 in the tenth FN type III module ((10)FNIII) and caused expansion of FN as assessed by dynamic light scattering. Soluble N-terminal constructs truncated after (9)FNI or (3)FNIII competed better than soluble FN for binding of FUD or HADD to adsorbed FN, indicating that interactions involving type III modules more C-terminal than (3)FNIII limit β-strand addition to (1-5)FNI within intact soluble FN. Preincubation of FN with mAbIII-10 or heparin modestly increased binding to HADD or FUD. Thus, ligation of FNIII modules involved in binding of integrins and glycosaminoglycans, (10)FNIII and (12-14)FNIII, increases accessibility of (1-5)FNI. Allosteric loss of constraining interactions among (1-5)FNI, (10)FNIII, and (12-14)FNIII likely enables assembly of FN into extracellular fibrils.  相似文献   

19.
Interactions between fibronectin and tenascin-C within the extracellular matrix provide specific environmental cues that dictate tissue structure and cell function. The major binding site for fibronectin lies within the fibronectin type III-like repeats (TNfn) of tenascin-C. Here, we systematically screened TNfn domains for their ability to bind to both soluble and fibrillar fibronectin. All TNfn domains containing the TNfn3 module interact with soluble fibronectin. However, TNfn domains bind differentially to fibrillar fibronectin. This distinct binding pattern is dictated by the fibrillar conformation of FN. TNfn1-3, but not TNfn3-5, binds to immature fibronectin fibrils, and additional TNfn domains are required for binding to mature fibrils. Multiple binding sites for distinct regions of fibronectin exist within tenascin-C. TNfn domains comprise a binding site for the N-terminal 70-kDa domain of fibronectin that is freely available and a binding site for the central binding domain of fibronectin that is cryptic in full-length tenascin-C. The 70-kDa and central binding domain regions are key for fibronectin matrix assembly; accordingly, binding of several TNfn domains to these regions inhibits fibronectin fibrillogenesis. These data highlight the complexity of protein-protein binding, the importance of protein conformation on these interactions, and the implications for the physiological assembly of complex three-dimensional matrices.  相似文献   

20.
Campylobacter fetus is a recognized pathogen of cattle and sheep that can also infect humans. No adhesins specific for C. fetus have to date been identified; however, bacterial attachment is essential to establish an infecting population. Scanning electron microscopy revealed C. fetus attachment to the serosal surface of human colonic biopsy explants, a location consistent with the presence of the extracellular matrix (ECM). To determine whether the ECM mediated C. fetus adherence, 7 C. fetus strains were assessed in a solid-phase binding assay for their ability to bind to immobilized ECM components. Of the ECM components assayed, adherence to fibronectin was noted for all strains. Attachment to ECM components was neither correlated with S-layer expression nor with cell-surface hydrophobicity. Ligand immunoblots, however, identified the S-layer protein as a major site of fibronectin binding, and modified ECM binding assays revealed that soluble fibronectin significantly enhanced the attachment of S-layer-expressing C. fetus strains to other ECM components. Soluble fibronectin also increased C. fetus adherence to INT 407 cells. This adherence was inhibited when INT 407 cells were incubated with synthetic peptides containing an RGD sequence, indicating that integrin receptors were involved in fibronectin-mediated attachment. Together, this data suggests that C. fetus can bind to immobilized fibronectin and use soluble fibronectin to enhance attachment to other ECM components and intestinal epithelial cells. In vivo, fibronectin would promote bacterial adherence, thereby, contributing to the initial interaction of C. fetus with mucosal and submucosal surfaces.  相似文献   

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