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Integrin shedding as a mechanism of cellular adaptation during cardiac growth
Authors:Goldsmith Edie C  Carver Wayne  McFadden Alex  Goldsmith Jack G  Price Robert L  Sussman Mark  Lorell Beverly H  Cooper Garth  Borg Thomas K
Affiliation:Department of Developmental Biology and Anatomy, University of South Carolina School of Medicine, Columbia 29208, USA. ediegold@med.sc.edu
Abstract:Integrin-mediated cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions are essential for multiple cellular processes; however, little is known regarding integrin turnover during these events. Recent studies have demonstrated shedding of cell surface molecules and suggested this as a potential mechanism for integrin turnover. Confocal microscopy of mouse hearts under different physiological conditions demonstrated the presence of beta(1)-integrin-immunoreactive material in the interstitium. Culture media from neonatal rat cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts contained a 55-kDa fragment of beta(1)-integrin. Attachment to ECM components, response to phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate stimulation, and matrix metalloproteinase inhibition assays demonstrated that fibroblasts responded differently to the fragment compared with myocytes. The beta(1)-integrin fragment stimulated myocyte attachment to collagen and the fragment itself bound a variety of ECM proteins. These studies indicate that as myocytes and fibroblasts change size and shape, cellular contacts with the ECM are altered, resulting in the liberation of a beta(1)-integrin fragment from the cell surface. Integrin shedding may represent a novel mechanism of rapidly modifying cell-ECM contacts during various cellular processes.
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