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1.
We have reviewed the evidence supporting the notion that the fibrillar extracellular matrix on the basal surface of the blastocoel roof in amphibian embryos directs and guides mesodermal cell migration during gastrulation. Based on extensive experimental evidence in several different systems, we conclude the following: (i) the fibrillar extracellular matrix contains fibronectin (FN) and laminin. (ii) The fibrils are oriented in such a way as to promote directional migration of mesodermal cells during migration. (iii) We have used several different probes to disrupt the interaction between migrating mesodermal cells and the fibrillar extracellular matrix. These probes include: (a) nucleocytoplasmic and interspecific hybridization. Such embryos have defects in FN synthesis and gastrulation. (b) Fab' fragments of anti-FN and anti-integrin VLA-5 IgGs prohibit mesodermal cell adhesion both in vitro and in vivo and gastrulation is arrested. (c) Peptides containing the RGDS sequence specifically inhibit interactions between migrating mesodermal cells and the FN-fibrillar matrix. (d) Tenascin blocks cell adhesion to FN in vitro and gastrulation in vivo. (e) Antibodies against the cytoplasmic domain of beta 1 integrin, when injected into blastomeres, prevent FN-fibrillogenesis in progeny of injected blastomeres and delay mesodermal cell migration selectively in the progeny of injected blastomeres but not in the uninjected blastomere progeny.  相似文献   

2.
During early development of the urodele Ambystoma maculatum, the appearance and distribution of fibronectin-containing fibrillar extracellular materials were studied by immunocytochemistry. Fibronectin (FN) first appears in the early blastula (stage 7) as thin punctate fibrils on the cell surface concentrated in the marginal zone. In late blastula (stage 9), thin fibrils are found throughout the blastocoel roof. Early gastrulae (stage 10) have numerous fibrils and multifibrillar strands concentrated in the dorsal lip region and oriented preferentially along a line parallel to the dorsal lip-animal pole axis. There is a striking increase in the amount of FN fibrils during the rest of gastrulation. This FN-containing network can be transferred to plastic substrata with preservation of the preferential orientation observed in vivo. Dorsal marginal zone explants placed on such conditioned substrata show polarized outgrowth toward the animal pole region of conditioned areas when placed on the dorsal lip side or the ventral marginal zone side of conditioned substrata. This outgrowth occurs symmetrically on bovine plasma FN-coated substrata, is prevented by Fab' fragments of antibodies to FN but fails to occur on laminin coated substrata. When migrating mesodermal cells from early gastrulae are cultured on substrata conditioned by deposition of the fibrillar matrix, these cells exhibit striking contact inhibition of locomotion, a phenomenon that may explain dispersal of migrating mesodermal cells across the blastocoel roof. When leading edges of mesodermal cells collide, cells abruptly change direction. When leading edges collide with trailing edges, the trailing edges detach from the substratum and cells move apart in the direction of the leading edge.  相似文献   

3.
Mesodermal cell migration during Xenopus gastrulation   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin (FN), which is a component of the network of extracellular matrix fibrils on the inner surface of the blastocoel roof (BCR), has been proposed to play a major role in directing mesodermal cell migration during amphibian gastrulation. In the first part of this paper, the adhesion of Xenopus mesodermal cells to FN in vitro is examined. Cells from several mesoderm regions, which differ in developmental fate and morphogenetic activity, are able to bind specifically to the RGD cell-binding site of FN. Dorsal mesodermal cell adhesion to FN varies along the anterior-posterior (a-p) axis: adhesion is strongest in the anterior head mesoderm, and gradually decreases posteriorly. This a-p gradient of mesodermal adhesiveness to FN does not change during mesodermal involution, and is reflected in the morphology of mesodermal explants on FN. An a-p strip of mesoderm develops a spreading, leading anterior margin and a compact, retracting posterior end, thus moving slowly and directionally over the FN substrate at about 0.8 micron/min. Although dissociated cells from all levels of the dorsal mesodermal axis adhere to FN, only the anterior, leading prospective head mesoderm cells migrate as single cells on a FN substrate in vitro. Locomotion by means of lamelliform protrusions occurs at an average rate of about 1.5 micron/min. Cells of the more posterior axial mesoderm merely shift position at random without substantial net translocation, and preinvolution mesoderm cells are completely stationary. On the BCR, the in vivo substrate for mesodermal cell migration, dissociated prospective head mesoderm cells spread and migrate as on FN in vitro, at 2.2 microns/min. In the presence of an RGD peptide which inhibits cell-FN interaction, cells remain globular and do not spread. They are still motile, but change direction frequently, which leads to less efficient net translocation. Apparently, interaction with the RGD cell-binding site of FN and concomitant spreading of head mesoderm cells is required for the stabilization of cell locomotion. In contrast to the directional migration of the mesoderm cell population toward the animal pole in the embryo, the pathways of dissociated cells on the BCR are randomly oriented. Coherent explants of migratory mesoderm do not move at all on the BCR, although they translocate on FN in vitro.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Cells interact with extracellular fibronectin (FN) via adhesive fibronectin receptors (FNRs) that are members of the very late antigens (VLAs) subgroup of the integrin family. In stationary fibroblasts, the FNR is highly organized and distributed identically to extracellular FN fibrils. However, in highly migratory neural crest cells and embryonic somatic fibroblasts, this organization is lost and the FNR appears diffuse. Similarly, oncogenic transformation typically leads to disorganization of the FN receptor and loss of matrix FN. Two models can account for these observations. First, the FN matrix may organize the FN receptor at extracellular matrix contacts on the cell surface. Motile cells not depositing FN matrices thus lack organized receptors. Alternatively, as the FNR is required for optimal FN matrix assembly, (McDonald, J. A., B. J. Quade, T. J. Broekelmann, R. LaChance, K. Forseman, K. Hasegawa, and S. Akiyama. 1987. J. Biol. Chem. 272:2957-2967; Roman, J. R. M. LaChance, T. J. Broekelmann, C. J. R. Kennedy, E. A. Wayner, W. G. Carter, J. A. McDonald. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 108:2529-2543) and has putative cytoskeletal links, it could be organized from within the cell helping to position newly forming FN fibrils. To study this question, we developed peptide antibodies specifically recognizing the alpha 5 subunit of the FNR. Using these antibodies, we examined the organization of FN and of the FNR in normal, matrix assembly inhibited, and SV40-transformed human fibroblasts. On FN-coated substrates, the FNR is found in focal contacts rather than diffusely on the basal cell surface, suggesting FNR interaction with intracellular components. However, when FN fibrils are deposited, the FNR is co-distributed with these fibrils. Preventing FN matrix assembly prevents organization of the FNR. Moreover, when fibroblasts with well established FN matrices and co-distributed FNR are incubated briefly with monoclonal antibodies that block FNR binding to FN, the FNR is no longer co-distributed with the FN matrix. Thus, the FN receptor is organized in fibrils on the cell surface in response to extracellular FN. Because exogenous FN restores a FN matrix and receptor organization to SV40-transformed cells, the diffuse FN receptor phenotype appears to be related to loss of the FN matrix rather than to impaired FNR function. These results explain diffusely distributed FNRs in migratory neural crest and embryonic fibroblasts lacking well organized FN matrices and emphasize the existence of separate but related systems controlling FN deposition and recognition by receptor-armed cells.  相似文献   

6.
Early development of the urodele amphibian Pleurodeles waltl is accompanied by a process of progressive fibronectin (FN) fibrillogenesis. FN begins to assemble into fibrils on the inner surface of the blastocoele roof at the early blastula stage and progressively forms a complex extracellular matrix. We have analyzed the mechanisms of FN-fibril formation under normal and experimental conditions in vivo with the following probes: iodinated FN, fluorescein-labeled FN, synthetic peptides containing the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) cell surface recognition sequence of FN, and polyclonal antibodies against both beta 1 subunit of the amphibian FN receptor and the cytoplasmic domain of beta 1 subunit. We report that in living embryos, exogenous labeled mammalian FN injected into the amphibian blastocoele undergoes FN-fibril formation in spatiotemporal patterns similar to those of endogenous FN. This indicates regulation of fibrillogenesis by the cell surface rather than by changes in the type of FN. Fibrillogenesis is inhibited in a dose-dependent manner both by the GRGDS peptide and monospecific antibodies to amphibian integrin beta 1 subunit. Furthermore, when injected intracellularly into uncleaved embryos or into selected blastomeres, antibodies to the cytoplasmic domain of integrin beta 1 subunit produce a reversible inhibition of FN-fibril formation that follows early cell lineages and cause delays in development. Together, these data indicate that in vivo, the integrin beta 1 subunit and the RGD recognition signal are essential for the proper assembly of FN fibrils in early amphibian development.  相似文献   

7.
Cell Locomotion and Contact Guidance in Amphibian Gastrulation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Presumptive mesodermal cells in amphibian gastrulae migratefrom the blastopore toward the animal pole by using the innersurface of the ectodermal layer as their substratum. Duringmigration, the mesodermal cells form lamellipodia and filopodiapredominantly in a direction toward the animal pole. There isa network of the extracellular fibrils on the inner surfaceof the ectodermal layer. The fibrils seem to serve as an adequatesubstratum for attachment of the filopodia and locomotion ofthe mesodermal cells. A significant alignment of the fibrilnetwork along the blastopore—animal pole axis suggestsa hypothesis that it directs morphogenetic cell movements bycontact guidance in combination with contact inhibition of movement.New culture conditions allow the gastrula mesodermal cells tomove actively in vitro with a similar cell shape and at a similarrate as in vivo. Such culture conditions enabled an in vitroexperiment to test the hypothesis of contact guidance. Explantedectodermal layers deposit the fibril network on the surfaceof a cover slip. Dissociated gastrula mesodermal cells seededon such a conditioned surface attach to the surface and moveabout actively. A computer analysis of the time—lapsefilms shows that the cell trails are significantly aligned alongthe blastopore—animal pole axis of the ectodermal layerthat conditioned the surface. The deposited fibril network showsthe alignment along the same axis. There is also a tendencyof the mesodermal cells to move in a polarized fashion preferentiallytoward the animal pole. These results support the hypothesisof contact guidance of mesodermal cell migration in vivo byoriented extracellular fibrils  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Fibronectin (FN) is an extracellular matrix protein that is assembled into fibrils by cells during tissue morphogenesis and wound healing. FN matrix fibrils are highly elastic, but the mechanism of elasticity has been debated: it may be achieved by mechanical unfolding of FN-III domains or by a conformational change of the molecule without domain unfolding. Here, we investigate the folded state of FN-III domains in FN fibrils by measuring the accessibility of buried cysteines. Four of the 15 FN-III domains (III-2, -3, -9, and -11) appear to unfold in both stretched fibrils and in solution, suggesting that these domains spontaneously open and close even in the absence of tension. Two FN-III domains (III-6 and -12) appear to unfold only in fibrils and not in solution. These results suggest that domain unfolding can at best contribute partially to the 4-fold extensibility of fibronectin fibrils.  相似文献   

10.
The physical structure of the extracellular matrix (ECM) is tissue-specific and fundamental to normal tissue function. Proper alignment of ECM fibers is essential for the functioning of a variety of tissues. While matrix assembly in general has been intensively investigated, little is known about the mechanisms required for formation of aligned ECM fibrils. We investigated the initiation of fibronectin (FN) matrix assembly using fibroblasts that assemble parallel ECM fibrils and found that matrix assembly sites, where FN fibrillogenesis is initiated, were oriented in parallel at the cell poles. We show that these polarized matrix assembly sites progress into fibrillar adhesions and ultimately into aligned FN fibrils. Cells that assemble an unaligned meshwork matrix form matrix assembly sites around the cell periphery, but the distribution of matrix assembly sites in these cells could be modulated through micropatterning or mechanical stretch. While an elongated cell shape corresponds with a polarized matrix assembly site distribution, these two features are not absolutely linked, since we discovered that transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β1) enhances matrix assembly site polarity and assembly of aligned fibrils independent of cell elongation. We conclude that the ultimate orientation of FN fibrils is determined by the alignment and distribution of matrix assembly sites that form during the initial stages of cell–FN interactions.  相似文献   

11.
Zebrafish gastrulation entails morphogenetic cell movements that shape the body plan and give rise to an embryo with defined anterior–posterior and dorsal–ventral axes. Regulating these cell movements are diverse signaling pathways and proteins including Wnts, Src-family tyrosine kinases, cadherins, and matrix metalloproteinases. While our knowledge of how these proteins impact cell polarity and migration has advanced considerably in the last decade, almost no data exist regarding the organization of extracellular matrix (ECM) during zebrafish gastrulation. Here, we describe for the first time the assembly of a fibronectin (FN) and laminin containing ECM in the early zebrafish embryo. This matrix was first detected at early gastrulation (65% epiboly) in the form of punctae that localize to tissue boundaries separating germ layers from each other and the underlying yolk cell. Fibrillogenesis increased after mid-gastrulation (80% epiboly) coinciding with the period of planar cell polarity pathway-dependent convergence and extension cell movements. We demonstrate that FN fibrils present beneath deep mesodermal cells are aligned in the direction of membrane protrusion formation. Utilizing antisense morpholino oligonucleotides, we further show that knockdown of FN expression causes a convergence and extension defect. Taken together, our data show that similar to amphibian embryos, the formation of ECM in the zebrafish gastrula is a dynamic process that occurs in parallel to at least a portion of the polarized cell behaviors shaping the embryonic body plan. These results provide a framework for uncovering the interrelationship between ECM structure and cellular processes regulating convergence and extension such as directed migration and mediolateral/radial intercalation.  相似文献   

12.
Summary In the early development of the urodele amphibian Pleurodeles waltl, a fibronectin-containing extracellular matrix underlies the inner face of the blastocoel roof. When gastrulation occurs, the fibronectin fibrils provide a suitable substrate for mesodermal-cell migration. Delay in morphogenetic movements of gastrulation has been described in embryos from mutant females (ac/ac) of Pleurodeles waltl. Studies of abnormal mutant gastrulae with fluorescent lectins and immunostaining for fibronectin reveal that they lack a normal matrix. The fibronectin-containing extracellular material always gives rise to a granular pattern without fibronectin-fibril formation. Fibronectin and 51 syntheses occur normally in maternal-effect embryos. In vitro, mesodermal cells from early mutant gastrulae adhere and migrate on fibronectin-conditioned substrata.  相似文献   

13.
We have used amphibian gastrulation as a model system to study the action of the extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoprotein tenascin on mesodermal cell migration. Tenascin function was assayed in vitro during spreading of isolated cells from the dorsal marginal zone (DMZ) and during cell migration from DMZ explants. Plastic coated with bovine fibronectin or gastrula ECM was used as a substratum. In both cases, tenascin added to the medium inhibited spreading and migration of mesodermal cells. In addition, a substratum coated with a mixture of fibronectin and tenascin was found to prevent mesodermal cell migration. Tenascin was also microinjected into the blastocoel cavity of living embryos at the late blastula stage. This led to a complete arrest of gastrulation in more than 80% of the cases. Scanning electron microscopy of fractures from arrested gastrulae showed that mesodermal cell migration was blocked. Similar injection experiments carried out at the middle gastrula stage demonstrated that tenascin is able to inhibit cell migration after cells have already contacted the ECM. Mesodermal cell migration in the presence of tenascin could be restored in vitro and in vivo by the monoclonal antibody mAb Tn68 which is known to mask a cell binding site of the molecule. Finally, tenascin microinjected into the blastocoel of blastula or gastrula stage embryos bound within 15 min to the ECM fibrils at all the stages studied. Our results show that exogenous tenascin can be incorporated into embryonic ECM and interferes in vivo with the interactions of cells with a fibronectin-rich matrix.  相似文献   

14.
In order to investigate the mechanism of the formation of the mesodermal layer during chick gastrulation, we observed the behavior of fragments of mesodermal cells explanted and cultured on substrata coated with parallel lines of fibronectin (FN). We also examined the distribution of F-actin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin in explanted fragments by immunocytochemical methods noting particularly their distribution with respect to FN lines. Explants of mesodermal cells flattened on FN-coated substrata and then became elliptical with the major axis of the ellipse oriented along the FN lines and migrated along them. The peripheral cells of explants extended filopodia and lamellipodia which attached preferentially to FN lines and then contracted, pulling other mesodermal cells in explants along passively. Vinculin and alpha-actinin in peripheral anchoring filopodia and lamellipodia co-localized with the terminations of F-actin bundles and with FN lines, suggesting that the peripheral cells were the moving force for explant translocation. We propose based on these results that in vivo, peripheral cells of invaginated cell mass are guided by the known FN-rich fibrous extracellular matrix on the basal surface of epiblast to move outwards; the rest linked to the peripheral cells are pulled away from the primitive streak to spread in tandem to form the mesodermal layer.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Chick mesodermal cells, having become invaginated and beginning to locomote prior to the formation of the mesodermal cell layer at an early primitive streak stage, extend many filopodia and flatten themselves against the basal surface of the epiblast. Morphometry on scanning electron micrographs of chick mesodermal cells revealed two statistically significant tendencies. Each cell took an extended form and protruded filopodia, preferably along its major axis, suggesting that the force extending the cell body was generated by both ends rich in filopodia. The cells also tended to protrude filopodia most frequently in a direction away from Hensen's node. The orientation of the fibrous extracellular matrix (fECM), running on the basal surface of the epiblast, was assessed quantitatively, and it was proved statistically that the orientation of the fECM was radial around the primitive streak: With an immunogold staining technique, fECM, to which the filopodia of the mesodermal cells attached frequently and closely, was confirmed to be rich in fibronectin (FN). These results lead us to conclude that the mesodermal cells in chick gastrula were guided to locomote towards the periphery of the area pellucida by FN-rich fECM laid on the basal surface of the epiblast, and that this movement was due to an in vivo locomotive mechanism using filopodia. Offprint requests to: R. Toyoizumi  相似文献   

16.
During wound healing and inflammation, fibroblasts express elevated alkaline phosphatase (ALP), but are not in contact with collagen fibrils in the fibronectin (FN)-rich granulation tissue. We hypothesized that the extracellular matrix (ECM) environment might influence the induction of ALP in fibroblasts. Here we tested this hypothesis by studying the ALP-inductive response of normal human gingival fibroblasts to ascorbic acid (AsA). AsA induced ALP activity and protein in cells in conventional monolayer culture. This induction was inhibited by blocking-antibodies to the FN receptor alpha 5 beta 1 integrin and by the proline analog 3,4-dehydroproline (DHP). DHP prevented cells from arranging FN fibrils into a pericellular network and reduced the activity of cell spreading on FN. Plating of cells on FN facilitated the up-regulation by AsA of ALP expression, but did not substitute for AsA. In contrast, AsA did not cause ALP induction in cells cultured on and in polymerized type I collagen gels. Collagen fibrils inhibited the up-regulation by AsA of ALP expression in cells plated on FN. These results indicate that the ECM regulates the induction of ALP expression by AsA in fibroblasts: FN enables them to express ALP in response to AsA through interaction with integrin alpha 5 beta 1, whereas type I collagen fibrils cause the suppression of ALP expression and overcome FN.  相似文献   

17.
Rana pipiens eggs fertilized by Rana esculenta sperm (ESC) hybrid embryos develop until gastrulation in control Rana pipiens embryos (PIP) and then show morphogenetic arrest. After arrest, ESC do not gastrulate but live for 5 days as blastula-like embryos. We studied the distribution of fibronectin (FN)-containing fibrils and integrin (INT) in PIP and ESC. There are many FN-fibrils in PIP organized in anastomosing networks radiating away from the center of individual cells and across intercellular boundaries. ESC have fewer fibrils compared to PIP. These fibrils are first located between cells in disorganized arrays. After arrest in ESC, when PIP are Stage 14 neurulae, many more FN-fibrils appear. INT-staining occurs in both embryos in similar patterns. In xenoplastic transplantations, we found that the extracellular matrix on the inner surface of the ESC blastocoel roof serves as a substratum for PIP cell migration. In an in vitro assay, we found more cell adhesion to FN-substrata in PIP than in ESC. Cell locomotion rates on FN-substrata were 1.70 +/- 0.85 microns/min for PIP but only 0.46 +/- 0.56 microns/min for ESC. We also found that the inner surface of the blastocoel roof from ESC can not promote cell adhesion and locomotion when Stage 11 fragments are used for conditioning but that Stage 14 fragments can deposit a FN-fibril-rich extracellular matrix which supports PIP mesodermal cell migration at a rate of 1.26 +/- 0.38 microns/min.  相似文献   

18.
An anastomosing network of extracellular fibrils on the inner surface of the ectoderm layer of amphibian gastrulae has been shown to provide an adequate substratum for attachment and migration by the mesodermal cells. These fibrils contain fibronectin as shown by immunostaining at the light and electron microscope levels. Now we report the presence of laminin, another cell adhesion glycoprotein, as a fibrillar network on the inner surface of the ectoderm layer in gastrulae of the Japanese newt ( Cynops pyrrhogaster ), but its absence on the blastula ectoderm layer, by the immunofluorescent staining using an antiserum specific for mouse laminin. The same antiserum was shown to stain basement membranes of adult newt organs as expected.  相似文献   

19.
Fibronectin (FN) matrix assembly is an integrin-mediated process that is regulated by both the extracellular environment and intracellular signaling pathways. The activity of Src-family kinases is important for initiation of FN assembly by normal fibroblasts. Here we report that in HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells, Src kinase activity is required not only for the assembly of FN matrix but also for the maintenance of FN matrix fibrils at the cell surface. Dexamethasone-induced FN fibril formation by these cells was completely blocked for at least 24 h when Src-family kinase activity was inhibited by either PP1 or SU6656. Inhibition of Src after significant matrix had already been assembled, resulted in an increased rate of loss of detergent-insoluble FN. Binding of activation-dependent integrin antibodies reveals a role for Src in maintaining integrin activity. The requirement for Src kinase activity appears to depend, in part, on phosphorylation of paxillin at tyrosine 118 (Y118). Phospho-paxillin co-localized with FN fibrils, and overexpression of GFP-paxillin but not of GFP-paxillinY118F enhanced cell-mediated assembly of FN. Our results indicate that Src maintains FN matrix at the cell surface through its effect on integrin activity and paxillin phosphorylation.  相似文献   

20.
The assembly of fibronectin (FN) into a fibrillar matrix is a complex stepwise process that involves binding to integrin receptors as well as interactions between FN molecules. To follow the progression of matrix formation and determine the stages during which specific domains function, we have developed cell lines that lack an endogenous FN matrix but will form fibrils when provided with exogenous FN. Recombinant FNs (recFN) containing deletions of either the RGD cell- binding sequence (RGD-) or the first type III repeats (FN delta III1-7) including the III1 FN binding site were generated with the baculovirus insect cell expression system. After addition to cells, recFN matrix assembly was monitored by indirect immunofluorescence and by insolubility in the detergent deoxycholate (DOC). In the absence of any native FN, FN delta III1-7 was assembled into fibrils and was converted into DOC-insoluble matrix. This process could be inhibited by the amino- terminal 70 kD fragment of FN, showing that FN delta III1-7 follows an assembly pathway similar to FN. The progression of FN delta III1-7 assembly differed from native FN in that the recFN became DOC-insoluble more quickly. In contrast, RGD- recFNs were not formed into fibrils except when added in combination with native FN. These results show that the RGD sequence is essential for the initiation step but fibrils can form independently of the III1-7 modules. The altered rate of FN delta III1-7 assembly suggests that one function of the missing repeats might be to modulate an early stage of matrix formation.  相似文献   

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