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1.
The effect of heparin on the rate of binding of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) to high affinity (receptor) and low affinity (heparan sulfate) binding sites on endothelial cells and CHO cells transfected with FGF receptor-1 or FGF receptor-2 was investigated. Radiolabeled bFGF bound rapidly to both high and low affinity sites on all three types of cells. Addition of 10 micrograms/ml heparin eliminated binding to low affinity sites and decreased the rate of binding to high affinity sites to about 30% of the rate observed in the absence of heparin. However, the same amount of 125I-bFGF bound to high affinity sites at equilibrium in the presence and absence of heparin. The effect of heparin on the initial rate of binding to high affinity sites was related to the log of the heparin concentration. Depletion of the cells of heparan sulfates by treatment with heparinase also decreased the initial rate of binding to high affinity receptors. These results suggest that cell-surface heparan sulfates facilitate the interaction of bFGF with its receptor by concentrating bFGF at the cell surface. Dissociation rates for receptor-bound and heparan sulfate-bound bFGF were also measured. Dissociation from low affinity sites was rapid, with a half-time of 6 min for endothelial cell heparan sulfates and 0.5 min for Chinese hamster ovary heparan sulfates. In contrast, dissociation from receptors was slow, with a half-time of 46 min for endothelial cell receptors, 2.5 h for FGF receptor-1, and 1.4 h for FGF receptor-2. These results suggest that degradative enzymes may not be needed to release bFGF from the heparan sulfates in instances where receptors and heparan sulfate-bound bFGF are in close proximity because dissociation from heparan sulfates occurs rapidly enough to allow bFGF to bind to unoccupied receptors by laws of mass action.  相似文献   

2.
In the presence of FGF-2, cells in suspension expressing FGF receptor-1 will attach to monolayers of cells expressing heparan sulfates. This attachment provides physical evidence for the formation of a trimolecular complex between FGF-2, heparan sulfate, and FGF receptors. We have used this system to determine if receptor isoforms containing or lacking the first of three immunoglobulin-like domains are equally able to form complexes with FGF-2 and heparan sulfates. In the presence of FGF-2, cells expressing either isoform of the receptor were able to attach to monolayers of CHO cells expressing heparan sulfates. No attachment was observed in the absence of FGF-2 or if heparin was included in the incubation medium. Attachment of cells expressing the two receptor isoforms occurred at similar concentrations of FGF-2, and similar concentrations of heparin were required to disrupt the interactions. Thus, there appeared to be little difference between these receptor isoforms in their ability to form trimolecular complexes with FGF-2 and cell-associated heparan sulfates. We also found that, in the presence of FGF-2, cells expressing FGF receptor-1 are able to form complexes with both extracellular matrix and cell-surface heparan sulfates.  相似文献   

3.
A Yayon  M Klagsbrun  J D Esko  P Leder  D M Ornitz 《Cell》1991,64(4):841-848
The role of low affinity, heparin-like binding sites for basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) was investigated in CHO cells mutant in their metabolism of glycosaminoglycans. Heparan sulfate-deficient mutants transfected to express a cloned mouse FGF receptor cDNA are not able to bind bFGF. It is demonstrated that free heparin and heparan sulfate can reconstitute a low affinity receptor that is, in turn, required for the high affinity binding of bFGF. These studies suggest that the low affinity receptor is an accessory molecule required for binding of bFGF to the high affinity site. Such an obligatory interaction of low and high affinity FGF receptors suggests a physiological role for heparin-like, low affinity receptors and constitutes a novel mechanism for the regulation of growth factor-receptor interactions.  相似文献   

4.
A divalent cation-dependent association between heparin or heparan sulfate and the ectodomain of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor kinase (FGFR) restricts FGF-independent trans-phosphorylation between self-associated FGFR and determines specificity for and mediates binding of activating FGF. Here we show that only the fraction of commercial heparin or rat liver heparan sulfate which binds to immobilized antithrombin formed an FGF-binding binary complex with the ectodomain of the FGFR kinase. Conversely, only the fraction of heparin that binds to immobilized FGFR inhibited Factor Xa in the presence of antithrombin. Only the antithrombin-bound fraction of heparin competed with (3)H-heparin bound to FGFR in absence of FGF, whereas both antithrombin-bound and unretained fractions competed with radiolabeled heparin bound independently to FGF-1 and FGF-2. The antithrombin-bound fraction of heparin was required to support the heparin-dependent stimulation of DNA synthesis of endothelial cells by FGF-1. The requirement for divalent cations and the antithrombin-binding motif distinguish the role of heparan sulfate as an integral subunit of the FGFR complex from the wider range of effects of heparan sulfates and homologues on FGF signaling through FGFR-independent interactions with FGF.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, the internalization mechanism of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) at the blood-brain barrier (BBB) was investigated using a conditionally immortalized mouse brain capillary endothelial cell line (TM-BBB4 cells) as an in vitro model of the BBB and the corresponding receptor was identified using immunohistochemical analysis. The heparin-resistant binding of [125I]bFGF to TM-BBB4 cells was found to be time-, temperature-, osmolarity- and concentration-dependent. Kinetic analysis of the cell-surface binding of [125I]bFGF to TM-BBB4 cells revealed saturable binding with a half-saturation constant of 76 +/- 24 nm and a maximal binding capacity of 183 +/- 17 pmol/mg protein. The heparin-resistant binding of [125I]bFGF to TM-BBB4 was significantly inhibited by a cationic polypeptide poly-L-lysine (300 micro m), and compounds which contain a sulfate moiety, e.g. heparin and chondroitin sulfate-B (each 10 micro g/mL). Moreover, the heparin-resistant binding of [125I]bFGF in TM-BBB4 cells was significantly reduced by 50% following treatment with sodium chlorate, suggesting the loss of perlecan (a core protein of heparan sulfate proteoglycan, HSPG) from the extracellular matrix of the cells. This type of binding is consistent with the involvement HSPG-mediated endocytosis. RT-PCR analysis revealed that HSPG mRNA and FGFR1 and FGFR2 (tyrosine-kinase receptors for bFGF) mRNA are expressed in TM-BBB4 cells. Moreover, immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that perlecan is expressed on the abluminal membrane of the mouse brain capillary. These results suggest that bFGF is internalized via HSPG, which is expressed on the abluminal membrane of the BBB. HSPG at the BBB may play a role in maintaining the BBB function due to acceptance of the bFGF secreted from astrocytes.  相似文献   

6.
The radius of diffusion of basic FGF (bFGF) in the presence and in the absence of the glycosaminoglycans heparin and heparan sulfate was measured. Iodinated 125I-bFGF diffuses further in agarose, fibrin, and on a monolayer of bovine aortic endothelial (BAE) cells in the presence of heparin than in its absence. Heparan sulfates affected the diffusion of 125I-bFGF in a manner similar to, though less pronounced than, heparin. When applied at the center of a monolayer of BAE cells, bFGF plus heparin stimulated morphological changes at a 10-fold greater radius than bFGF alone. These results suggest that bFGF-heparin and/or heparan sulfate complexes may be more effective than bFGF alone in stimulating cells located away from the bFGF source because the bFGF-glycosaminoglycan complex partitions into the soluble phase rather than binding to insoluble glycosaminoglycans in the extracellular matrix. Thus, the complex of bFGF and glycosaminoglycan may represent one of the active forms of bFGF in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Fibroblast growth factor-7 (FGF-7) and a specific splice variant of the FGF tyrosine kinase receptor family (FGFR2IIIb) constitute a paracrine signaling system from stroma to epithelium. Different effects of the manipulation of cellular heparan sulfates and heparin on activities of FGF-7 relative to FGF-1 in epithelial cells suggest that pericellular heparan sulfates may regulate the activity of FGF-7 by a different mechanism than other FGFs. In this report, we employ the heparan sulfate-binding protein, protamine sulfate, to reversibly block cellular heparan sulfates. Protamine sulfate, which does not bind significantly to FGF-7 or FGFR2IIIb, inhibited FGF-7 activities, but not those of epidermal growth factor. The inhibition was overcome by increasing the concentrations of FGF-7 or heparin. Heparin was essential for binding of FGF-7 to recombinant FGFR2IIIb expressed in insect cells or FGFR2IIIb purified away from cell products. These results suggest that, similar to other FGF polypeptides, heparan sulfate within the pericellular matrix is required for activity of FGF-7. Differences in response to heparin and alterations in the BULK heparan sulfate content of cells likely reflect FGF-specific differences in the cellular repertoire of multivalent heparan sulfate chains required for assembly and activation of the FGF signal transduction complex.  相似文献   

8.
The formation of distinctive basic FGF-heparan sulfate complexes is essential for the binding of bFGF to its cognate receptor. In previous experiments, cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans extracted from human lung fibroblasts could not be shown to promote high affinity binding of bFGF when added to heparan sulfate-deficient cells that express FGF receptor-1 (FGFR1) (Aviezer, D., D. Hecht, M. Safran, M. Eisinger, G. David, and A. Yayon. 1994. Cell 79:1005-1013). In alternative tests to establish whether cell-surface proteoglycans can support the formation of the required complexes, K562 cells were first transfected with the IIIc splice variant of FGFR1 and then transfected with constructs coding for either syndecan-1, syndecan-2, syndecan-4 or glypican, or with an antisense syndecan-4 construct. Cells cotransfected with receptor and proteoglycan showed a two- to three- fold increase in neutral salt-resistant specific 125I-bFGF binding in comparison to cells transfected with only receptor or cells cotransfected with receptor and anti-syndecan-4. Exogenous heparin enhanced the specific binding and affinity cross-linking of 125I-bFGF to FGFR1 in receptor transfectants that were not cotransfected with proteoglycan, but had no effect on this binding and decreased the yield of bFGFR cross-links in cells that were cotransfected with proteoglycan. Receptor-transfectant cells showed a decrease in glycophorin A expression when exposed to bFGF. This suppression was dose-dependent and obtained at significantly lower concentrations of bFGF in proteoglycan-cotransfected cells. Finally, complementary cell- free binding assays indicated that the affinity of 125I-bFGF for an immobilized FGFR1 ectodomain was increased threefold when the syndecan- 4 ectodomain was coimmobilized with receptor. Equimolar amounts of soluble syndecan-4 ectodomain, in contrast, had no effect on this binding. We conclude that, at least in K562 cells, syndecans and glypican can support bFGF-FGFR1 interactions and signaling, and that cell-surface association may augment their effectiveness.  相似文献   

9.
Heparan sulfate of the cell surface of cultured Chinese hamster cells (line CHO) was promptly released when the cells were incubated with balanced salt solutions containing heparin. The released heparan sulfate included multichain proteoglycan of high molecular weight. The data suggest that the cell-surface localization of heparan sulfate is dependent, at least in part, upon cell-surface receptors with binding sites for the sugar chain moieties of sulfated glycosaminoglycans.  相似文献   

10.
The fate of exogenous glycosaminoglycans in cultures of strongly (RMS 0) and weakly (RMS 8) metastatic rat rhabdomyosarcoma cells was studied. The time course and concentration dependence of binding and internalization of the radiolabeled sulfated glycosaminoglycans were determined. Weakly metastatic cells took up heparin, heparan and dermatan sulfates into their pericellular compartment at a higher rate than the strongly metastatic RMS 0 cells. The RMS 8 cells exhibited about two times more binding sites for these iduronic acid containing glycosaminoglycans, and internalized higher amounts of them than the RMS 0 cells. The uptake of the chondroitin sulfate into the peri- and intracellular compartments of both cell types was about 5-15% of that of the other glycosaminoglycans studied. The specificity of displacement of the pericellular heparin and dermatan sulfate by the unlabeled glycosaminoglycans indicates the involvement of specific structural features of the polysaccharide chains in the interactions of glycosaminoglycans with the surface of rhabdomyosarcoma cells, beside ionic forces due to the polyanionic character of the glycosaminoglycans. Heparin and heparan sulfate degradation products, mainly large oligosaccharides, were recovered from the surface of RMS 0 cells but were absent on the surface of the RMS 8 cells. About 30% of the internalized heparin and heparan sulfate was present in the partially degraded form in both cell types. Oligosaccharides derived from glycosaminoglycans were not released into the medium. The decrease in the amount of iduronic acid containing glycosaminoglycans internalized by the highly invasive cells seems to be correlated with an increased cell-associated degradation and with an apparent loss of glycosaminoglycan binding sites on the cell surface.  相似文献   

11.
Human papillomavirus infection requires cell surface heparan sulfate   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Using pseudoinfection of cell lines, we demonstrate that cell surface heparan sulfate is required for infection by human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV-16) and HPV-33 pseudovirions. Pseudoinfection was inhibited by heparin but not dermatan or chondroitin sulfate, reduced by reducing the level of surface sulfation, and abolished by heparinase treatment. Carboxy-terminally deleted HPV-33 virus-like particles still bound efficiently to heparin. The kinetics of postattachment neutralization by antiserum or heparin indicated that pseudovirions were shifted on the cell surface from a heparin-sensitive into a heparin-resistant mode of binding, possibly involving a secondary receptor. Alpha-6 integrin is not a receptor for HPV-33 pseudoinfection.  相似文献   

12.
Bovine capillary endothelial (BCE) cells were incubated at 4 degrees C with 5 ng/ml 125I-basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) to equilibrate 125I-bFGF with high affinity cell surface receptors and low affinity matrix binding sites. 67% of the added 125I-bFGF bound to the matrix and 7% bound to receptors. The fate of bound bFGF was followed after cells were incubated in bFGF-free medium and were shifted to 37 degrees C to restore cell metabolism. 125I-bFGF bound to receptors decreased rapidly while the amount of 125I-bFGF bound to matrix was reduced more slowly. The rapid decrease in receptor-bound 125I-bFGF appeared to be due to a down-regulation of bFGF receptors; cells that had been treated for 5 h with bFGF had 60% fewer high affinity receptors than untreated cells. Despite the initial high level of 125I-bFGF binding to matrix, most of this 125I-bFGF was mobilized and metabolized by the cells. 125I-bFGF was internalized by the cells at 37 degrees C, leading to a constant accumulation of 125I-bFGF within the cell. Internalized bFGF was rapidly cleaved from an 18-kD form to a 16-kD form. The 16-kD form was more slowly degraded with a half-life of approximately 8 h. Degradation of internalized 125I-bFGF was inhibited by chloroquine, suggesting that the digestion occurred in a lysosomal compartment. The role of matrix binding sites in the internalization process was investigated. Binding to matrix sites seemed not to be directly involved in the internalization process, since addition of heparin at a concentration that blocked 95% of the binding to matrix had no effect on the initial rate of internalization of bFGF. BCE cells also released a substance that competed for the binding of bFGF to matrix but not to receptors. This substance bound to DEAE-cellulose and was sensitive to heparinase treatment, suggesting that it was a heparinlike molecule. Thus, heparinlike molecules produced by BCE cells can modulate the cellular interaction with bFGF. Matrix-associated heparinlike molecules bind bFGF which can later be metabolized by the cell, and secreted heparinlike molecules release bFGF from matrices.  相似文献   

13.
Fannon M  Forsten KE  Nugent MA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(6):1434-1445
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) binds to cell surface tyrosine kinase receptor proteins and to heparan sulfate proteoglycans. The interaction of bFGF with heparan sulfate on the cell surface has been demonstrated to impact receptor binding and biological activity. bFGF receptor binding affinity is reduced on cells that do not express heparan sulfate. The addition of soluble heparin or heparan sulfate has been demonstrated to rescue the bFGF receptor binding affinity on heparan sulfate deficient cells yet has also been shown to inhibit binding under some conditions. While the chemical requirements of the heparin-bFGF-receptor interactions have been studied in detail, the possibility that heparin enhances bFGF binding in part by physically associating with the cell surface has not been fully evaluated. In the study presented here, we have investigated the possibility that heparin binding to the cell surface might play a role in modulating bFGF receptor binding and activity. Balb/c3T3 cells were treated with various concentrations of sodium chlorate, so as to express a range of endogenous heparan sulfate sites, and [(125)I]bFGF binding was assessed in the presence of a range of heparin concentrations. Low concentrations of heparin (0.1-30 nM) enhanced bFGF receptor binding to an extent that was inversely proportional to the amount of endogenous heparan sulfate sites present. At high concentrations (10 microM), heparin inhibited bFGF receptor binding in cells under all conditions. The ability of heparin to stimulate and inhibit bFGF-receptor binding correlated with altered bFGF-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity and cell proliferation. Under control and chlorate-treated conditions, [(125) I]heparin was observed to bind with a high affinity to a large number of binding sites on the cells (K(d) = 57 and 50 nM with 3.5 x 10(6) and 3.6 x 10(6) sites/cell for control and chlorate-treated cells, respectively). A mathematical model of this process revealed that the dual functions of heparin in bFGF binding were accurately represented by heparin cell binding-mediated stimulation and soluble heparin-mediated inhibition of bFGF receptor binding.  相似文献   

14.
We have proposed a model in which fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signalling requires the interaction of FGF with at least two FGF receptors, a heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) and a tyrosine kinase. Since FGF may be a key mediator of skeletal muscle differentiation, we examined the synthesis of glycosaminoglycans in MM14 skeletal muscle myoblasts and their participation in FGF signalling. Proliferating and differentiated MM14 cells exhibit similar levels of HSPG, while differentiated cells exhibit reduced levels of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans and heparan sulfate chains. HSPGs, including syndecan, present in proliferating cells bind bFGF, while the majority of chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate chains do not. Treatment of skeletal muscle cells with chlorate, a reversible inhibitor of glycosaminoglycan sulfation, was used to examine the requirement of sulfated proteoglycans for FGF signalling. Chlorate treatment reduced glycosaminoglycan sulfation by 90% and binding of FGF to high affinity sites by 80%. Chlorate treatment of MM14 myoblasts abrogated the biological activity of acidic, basic, and Kaposi's sarcoma FGFs resulting in terminal differentiation. Chlorate inhibition of FGF signalling was reversed by the simultaneous addition of sodium sulfate or heparin. Further support for a direct role of heparan sulfate proteoglycans in fibroblast growth factor signal transduction was demonstrated by the ability of heparitinase to inhibit basic FGF binding and biological activity. These results suggest that activation of FGF receptors by acidic, basic or Kaposi's sarcoma FGF requires simultaneous binding to a HSPG and the tyrosine kinase receptor. Skeletal muscle differentiation in vivo may be dependent on FGFs, FGF tyrosine kinase receptors, and HSPGs. The regulation of these molecules may then be expected to have important implications for skeletal muscle development and regeneration.  相似文献   

15.
Heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) are obligatory for receptor binding and mitogenic activity of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). Mutant Chinese hamster ovary cells (pgsA-745) deficient in xylosyltransferase are unable to initiate glycosaminoglycan synthesis and hence can not bind bFGF to low- and high-affinity cell surface receptors. Exposure of pgsA-745 cells to β-D-xylopyranosides containing hydrophobic aglycones resulted in restoration of bFGF binding in a manner similar to that induced by soluble heparin or by heparan sulfate (HS) normally associated with cell sulfate. Restoration of bFGF binding correlated with the ability of the β-D-xylosides to prime the synthesis of heparan sulfate. Thus, both heparan sulfate synthesis and bFGF receptor binding were induced by low concentrations (10–30 μM) of estradiol-β-D-xyloside and naphthyl-β-D-xyloside, but not by cis/trans-decahydro-2-naphthyl-β-D-xyloside, which at low concentration primes mainly chondroitin sulfate. The obligatory involvement of xyloside-primed heparan sulfate in restoration of bFGF-receptor binding was also demonstrated by its sensitivity to heparinase treatment and by the lack of restoration activity in CHO cell mutants that lack enzymatic activities required to form the repeating disaccharide unit characteristic of heparan sulfate. Xyloside-primed heparan sulfate binds to the cell surface. Restoration of bFGF receptor binding was induced by both soluble and cell bound xyloside-primed heparan sulfate and was abolished in cells that were exposed to 0.5–1.0 M NaCl prior to the bFGF binding reaction. These results indicate that heparan sulfate chains produced on xyloside primers behave like heparan sulfate chains attached to cellular core proteins in terms of affinity for bFGF and ability to function as low-affinity sites in a dual receptor mechanism characteristic of bFGF and other heparin-binding growth promoting factors.  相似文献   

16.
The fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor of human umbilical vein-derived endothelial (HUE) cells has been identified by affinity labeling. It has an apparent molecular weight of 130,000. It binds both basic and acidic FGF, but not with epidermal growth factor, insulin, or transferrin. The lectin concanavalin-A does not inhibit the binding of 125l-bFGF to HUE cell-surface receptors, whereas it inhibits bFGF binding to BHK-21 cell-surface FGF receptor. This suggests that both types of receptors may differ in their degree of glycosylation. In contrast to other cell types, heparin only slightly inhibits the binding of basic FGF to its receptor. Protamine sulfate, which is anti-angiogenic in vivo, and suramin, a drug used in the therapy of trypanosomiasis and onchocerciasis, also inhibit the binding of basic FGF to the receptor.  相似文献   

17.
Fibroblast growth factors (FGF) activate their receptors through the formation of trimolecular complexes, composed of a ligand, a receptor, and a heparan sulfate oligosaccharide, all of which are members of particularly large families capable of multiple interactions in a combinatorial fashion. Understanding this large network of interactions not only presents a great challenge, but is practically beyond the capacity of most classical techniques routinely used to study ligand receptor interactions. We have used the yeast two hybrid system to study protein-protein interaction in the FGF family. Both ligand and receptor ectodomains are properly folded and functional in the yeast. Basic FGF (bFGF) expressed in the yeast dimerizes spontaneously. This self-assembly occurs at low affinity, which can be greatly enhanced by the introduction of heparin, supporting a defined role for heparin in bFGF dimerization. Screening a rat embryo cDNA library with bFGF in the yeast two hybrid system identified a short variant of FGF receptor 1, found most frequently in embryonal and tumor cells and which possesses affinity toward bFGF that is significantly greater than that of the more abundant, full-length receptor. We find the yeast two hybrid system, a most suitable alternative method for the analysis of growth factor-receptor interactions as well as for screening for novel interacting proteins and modulators of FGF and its receptors.  相似文献   

18.
Glycosaminoglycans complex with constituents of normal human serum, a finding that was exploited to develop a competitive binding assay for these substances. Heparan sulfate was isolated from renal cortex and radiolabeled with tritiated borohydride. The elution pattern of the radiolabeled material on Sephadex G-25, Bio-Gel P-30, and AG- 1X8 resin was identical to that of unlabeled heparan sulfate. The tritiated heparan sulfate formed radiolabeled precipitates when incubated with serum and zinc acetate. Binding was dose dependent and saturable. Heparin, heparan sulfate, and the chondroitin sulfates, but not hyaluronate or keratan sulfate, competed with the radiolabeled heparan sulfate for binding in a dose-dependent manner. The assay is specific for heparin polysaccharides in chondroitinase ABC-treated samples and is sensitive to microgram quantities.  相似文献   

19.
We have developed a quantitative method to evaluate the interaction between cell surface receptors and the endocytic apparatus. This method exploits occupancy-dependent changes in internalization rates that occur in cells expressing high numbers of receptors. We found that constitutive internalization of the transferrin receptor behaves as a simple, first order process that is unaltered by ligand. Internalization of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor, however, behaves as a saturable, second order process that is induced by receptor occupancy. Internalization of EGF receptors occurs through at least two distinct pathways: a low capacity pathway that has a relatively high affinity for occupied receptors, and a low affinity pathway that has a much higher capacity. The high affinity pathway was observed in all cells having receptors with intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity. Mutant EGF receptors lacking kinase activity could not utilize the high affinity pathway and were internalized only through the low affinity one. Mutated receptors with decreased affinity for kinase substrates were also internalized at decreased rates through the high affinity, inducible pathway. In the case of vitellogenin receptors in Xenopus oocytes, occupied receptors competed more efficiently for internalization than empty ones. Insulin increased the endocytic capacity of oocytes for vitellogenin receptors. Similarly, serum increased the capacity of the inducible pathway for EGF receptors in mammalian cells. These data are consistent with a model of internalization in which occupied receptors bind to specific cellular components that mediate rapid internalization. Ligand-induced internalization results from an increase in the affinity of occupied receptors for the endocytic apparatus. Hormones can also indirectly regulate endocytosis by increasing the number of coated pits or their rate of internalization. The ability to dissect receptor-specific effects from cell-specific ones should be very useful in investigating the molecular mechanisms of receptor mediated endocytosis.  相似文献   

20.
Keratinocyte growth factor (KGF) is an unusual fibroblast growth factor (FGF) family member in that its activity is largely restricted to epithelial cells, and added heparin/heparan sulfate inhibits its activity in most cell types. The effects of heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) on binding and signaling by acidic FGF (aFGF) and KGF via the KGFR were studied using surface-bound and soluble receptor isoforms expressed in wild type and mutant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells lacking HSPG. Low concentrations of added heparin (1 microgram/mL) enhanced the affinity of ligand binding to surface-bound KGFR in CHO mutants, as well as ligand-stimulated MAP kinase activation and c-fos induction, but had little effect on binding or signaling in wild type CHO cells. Higher heparin concentrations inhibited KGF, but not aFGF, binding and signaling. In addition to the known interaction between HSPG and KGF, we found that the KGFR also bound heparin. The biphasic effect of heparin on KGF, but not aFGF, binding and signaling suggests that occupancy of the HSPG binding site on the KGFR may specifically inhibit KGF signaling. In contrast to events on the cell surface, added heparin was not required for high-affinity soluble KGF-KGFR interaction. These results suggest that high-affinity ligand binding is an intrinsic property of the receptor, and that the difference between the HSPG-dependent ligand binding to receptor on cell surfaces and the HSPG-independent binding to soluble receptor may be due to other molecule(s) present on cell surfaces.  相似文献   

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