Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0001511 (
Adhesion
)
5,955
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tyrosine phosphorylation of membrane-associated proteins is involved at two distinct sites of contact between cells and the extracellular matrix: adhesion plaques (cell adhesion and de-adhesion) and invadopodia (invasion into the extracellular matrix).
Adhesion
plaques from chicken embryonic fibroblasts or from cells transformed by Rous sarcoma virus contain low levels of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins (YPPs) which were below the level of detection in 0.5-microns thin, frozen sections. In contrast, intense localization of YPPs was observed at invadopodia of transformed cells at sites of degradation and invasion into the fibronectin-coated gelatin substratum, but not in membrane extensions free of contact with the extracellular matrix. Local extracellular matrix degradation and formation of invadopodia were blocked by genistein, an inhibitor of tyrosine-specific kinases, but cells remained attached to the substratum and retained their free-membrane extensions. Invadopodia reduced or lost YPP labeling after treatment of the cells with genistein, but adhesion plaques retained YPP labeling. The plasma membrane contact fractions of normal and transformed cells have been isolated form cells grown on gelatin cross-linked substratum using a novel fractionation scheme, and analyzed by immunoblotting. Four major YPPs (150, 130, 81, and 77 kD) characterize invadopodial membranes in contact with the matrix, and are probably responsible for the intense YPP labeling associated with invadopodia extending into sites of matrix degradation. YPP150 may be an invadopodal-specific YPP since it is approximately 3.6-fold enriched in the invasive contact fraction relative to the cell body fraction and is not observed in normal contacts. YPP130 is enriched in transformed cell contacts but may also be present in normal contacts. The two major YPPs of normal contacts (130 and 71 kD) are much lower in abundance than the major tyrosine-phosphorylated bands associated with invadopodial membranes, and likely represent major adhesion plaque YPPs. YPP150,
paxillin
, and tensin appear to be enriched in the cell contact fractions containing adhesion plaques and invadopodia relative to the cell body fraction, but are also present in the soluble supernate fraction. However, vinculin, talin, and alpha-actinin that are localized at invadopodia, are equally concentrated in cell bodies and cell contacts as is the membrane-adhesion receptor beta 1 integrin. Thus, tyrosine phosphorylation of the membrane-bound proteins may contribute to the cytoskeletal and plasma membrane events leading to the formation and function of invadopodia that contact and proteolytically degrade the extracellular matrix; we have identified several candidate YPPs that may participate in the regulation of these processes.
...
PMID:Tyrosine phosphorylation of membrane proteins mediates cellular invasion by transformed cells. 144 4
Expression of the leukocyte (beta 2) integrins is required for many functions of activated neutrophils (PMN), even when there is no recognized ligand for any beta 2 integrin. To investigate the hypothesis that beta 2 integrins may be involved in a signal transduction pathway related to cytoskeletal reorganization, we examined whether beta 2 integrins have a role in tyrosine phosphorylation of the cytoskeletal protein
paxillin
. Treatment of PMN in suspension with phorbol esters, f-Met-Leu-Phe, and TNF-alpha resulted in
paxillin
tyrosine phosphorylation. However, treatment of beta 2-deficient (LAD) PMN failed to induce
paxillin
tyrosine phosphorylation. Normal PMN phosphorylated
paxillin
in response to adhesion to immune complexes, while the LAD PMN did not.
Adhesion
of phorbol ester activated-LAD PMN to the extracellular matrix proteins fibronectin, laminin, and vitronectin failed to induce
paxillin
tyrosine phosphorylation. Treatment of activated normal PMN with mAb directed against the beta 2 integrin alpha chains demonstrated that CR3 (alpha M beta 2) was required for
paxillin
phosphorylation. Transfection of the cell line K562 with CR3 confirmed that CR3 ligation resulted in
paxillin
tyrosine phosphorylation. As a control, K562 transfected with CR2 (CD21) which bound equally avidly to the same complement C3-derived ligand (C3bi) as the CR3 transfectants, showed no enhanced tyrosine phosphorylation of
paxillin
upon receptor ligation. While both CR2 and CR3 transfectants showed efficient adhesion to a C3bi-coated surface, only the CR3 transfectants spread during adhesion and phosphorylated
paxillin
. Together these data demonstrate that CR3 is required for
paxillin
phosphorylation during activation of both adherent and nonadherent PMN. Even PMN activated in suspension or by adhesion to immune complexes, when no CR3 ligand is apparent, still require CR3 for a signal transduction pathway leading to
paxillin
tyrosine phosphorylation. This pathway is likely to be important for PMN function in inflammation and host defense.
...
PMID:Complement receptor 3 (CR3, Mac-1, integrin alpha M beta 2, CD11b/CD18) is required for tyrosine phosphorylation of paxillin in adherent and nonadherent neutrophils. 752 4
Adhesion
of cells to the extracellular matrix leads to an increase in the tyrosine phosphorylation of a specific set of proteins, three of which have now been identified as the focal adhesion proteins pp125FAK,
paxillin
and tensin. In addition, we have previously noted the adhesion-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of a fourth protein, with an apparent molecular mass of 130. As in the case of FAK,
paxillin
and tensin, a 130 kDa protein is also found to be highly tyrosine phosphorylated in Rous sarcoma virus (RSV)-transformed cells. This protein forms a stable complex with pp60src and is directly phosphorylated by activated forms of c-src. Using a monoclonal antibody (mAb 4F4) specific for the src-associated p130 we show that p130 is also phosphorylated in response to cell adhesion. Immunoprecipitation of p130 followed by an anti-phosphotyrosine immunoblot revealed that adhesion of rat embryo fibroblasts (REF52) to fibronectin (FN) led to a significant increase in the phosphotyrosine content of p130. Furthermore, a comparison of cell lysates before and after immunoprecipitation confirmed the absence of tyrosine phosphorylated p130 from lysates immunoprecipitated with mAb 4F4. Immunofluorescence staining of REF52s revealed that p130 is found in focal adhesions as well as along stress fibers in a pattern reminiscent of that exhibited by alpha-actinin. In addition, in many cells, we found significant staining in the nucleus, but evidence is presented that the nuclear staining is not due to tyrosine phosphorylated p130. Finally, unlike pp125FAK, p130 does not appear to be itself a kinase as evidence by immune-complex kinase assays carried out in the presence or absence of exogenous substrates.
...
PMID:Adhesion-induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the p130 src substrate. 754 55
Focal contacts are transmembrane links between the extracellular matrix and the actin cytoskeleton that play a critical role in directed cell migration, adhesion, and normal growth. Several different component proteins of the focal contact show developmentally dependent changes in expression, suggesting that this is an important mechanism by which focal contact formation is controlled during embryogenesis. In this report we examine the expression of focal contact-associated proteins in human fetal and neonatal melanocytes using Western blotting. We show that expression of
paxillin
, a 69-kDa vinculin binding protein, is fourfold higher in neonatal melanocytes than in fetal melanocytes. Further, we show that talin, a high molecular weight structural protein that links integrins to the actin cytoskeleton, is proteolytically cleaved in fetal, but not in neonatal melanocytes. Immunofluorescence microscopy of cells grown on fibronectin confirmed the presence of
paxillin
, talin, and vinculin at the ends of actin stress fibers at presumptive focal contacts in melanocytes.
Adhesion
experiments to extracellular matrix ligands revealed significant differences in adhesion of fetal and neonatal melanocytes to fibronectin. The developmentally specific changes in focal contact protein expression observed suggest that this may be an important mechanism by which focal contact assembly is controlled in human melanocytes during development.
...
PMID:Developmental regulation of focal contact protein expression in human melanocytes. 861 74
Distinctions between chemotaxis and haptotaxis of cells to extracellular matrix proteins have not been defined in terms of mechanisms or signaling pathways. Migration of A2058 human melanoma cells to soluble (chemotaxis) and substratum-bound (haptotaxis) vitronectin, mediated by alphav beta3, provided a system with which to address these questions. Both chemotaxis and haptotaxis were completely inhibited by treatment with RGD-containing peptides. Chemotaxis was abolished by a blocking antibody to alphavbeta3 (LM609), whereas haptotaxis was inhibited only by approximately 50%, suggesting involvement of multiple receptors and/or signaling pathways. However, blocking antibodies to alphavbeta5, also present on A2058 cells, did not inhibit. Pertussis toxin treatment of cells inhibited chemotaxis by >80%, but did not inhibit haptotaxis.
Adhesion
and spreading over vitronectin induced the phosphorylation of
paxillin
on tyrosine. In cells migrating over substratum-bound vitronectin, tyrosine phosphorylation of
paxillin
increased 5-fold between 45 min and 5 h. Dilutions of anti- alphavbeta3 that inhibited haptotaxis also inhibited phosphorylation of
paxillin
(by approximately 50%) and modestly reduced cell spreading. In contrast, soluble vitronectin (50-100 microg/ml) did not induce tyrosine phosphorylation of
paxillin
. The data suggest that soluble vitronectin stimulates chemotaxis predominantly through a G protein-mediated pathway that is functionally linked to alphavbeta3. Haptotaxis is analogous to directional cell spreading and requires alphavbeta3-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of
paxillin
.
...
PMID:Integrin alphavbeta3 mediates chemotactic and haptotactic motility in human melanoma cells through different signaling pathways. 862 27
Src-homology 3 (SH3) domain is a 60-70-amino acid motif present in a large variety of signal transduction and cytoskeletal proteins. We used reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction with degenerate and specific primers and chicken brain mRNA to clone a cDNA that codes for a novel SH3 domain-containing protein. The sequence predicts a 448-amino acid polypeptide with a molecular mass of 51, 971 daltons. In the amino terminus, it shows a very high propensity for alpha-helicity, suggesting coiled-coil and possibly a higher order oligomeric arrangement. In the carboxyl terminus, there is a unique SH3 sequence. In Northern blotting, a major 3.7-kilobase and a minor 7.2-kilobase transcript was detected in most chicken tissues. In immunofluorescence microscopy and immunoelectron microscopy on cultured chicken fibroblasts, the protein was localized to focal adhesions in which it showed a distinct codistribution with the focal adhesion proteins vinculin, talin, and
paxillin
. Phosphoamino acid analysis showed that in cultured chicken heart fibroblasts, the protein contains phosphoserine, but no phosphothreonine or phosphotyrosine, and that the phosphorylation is not dependent on fibronectin. We propose this protein the name FAP52, for Focal
Adhesion
Protein of 52 kDa, and suggest that it forms part of the multimolecular complex constituting focal adhesion sites.
...
PMID:FAP52, a novel, SH3 domain-containing focal adhesion protein. 928 37
Mitotic cells typically lack well-formed focal adhesions. As an approach to explore the dynamic process regulating the focal adhesion assembly, we examined states of focal adhesion proteins during mitosis of the cell cycle. We found that the amount of
paxillin
was significantly reduced during mitosis of the cell cycle, whereas other focal adhesion proteins including talin, vinculin and Focal
Adhesion
Kinase did not. Proteolytic degradation appeared to be involved in the mitotic reduction, but transcriptional and/or translational controls of the mRNA were not essential for this downregulation. Moreover, concurrent with the decreased protein level, phosphorylation status of
paxillin
altered during mitosis; mitotic
paxillin
was phosphorylated primarily on serine and dephosphorylated on tyrosine while interphase one was phosphorylated both on serine and tyrosine. We found that mitotic phosphorylation created an electrophoretically slow-migrating population of
paxillin
which was barely detected in interphase cells. This mitotic specific modification occurred with both alpha and beta isoforms of
paxillin
. We also examined the fate of
paxillin
protein by changing its protein amount. We found that majority of
paxillin
overexpressed was subjected to the specific modification but not to the downregulation in the mitotic arrested cells. On the other hand,
paxillin
exogenously expressed at a moderate level was subjected to both the mitotic modification and downregulation. Collectively, we concluded that
paxillin
's specific serine phosphorylation together with the proteolytic downregulation of a limited fraction of
paxillin
is taken place during the mitosis of the cell cycle.
...
PMID:Mitosis specific serine phosphorylation and downregulation of one of the focal adhesion protein, paxillin. 936 41
The rat L6 skeletal muscle cell line was used to study expression of the dystrophin-containing glycoprotein complex and its interaction with the integrin system involved in the cell-matrix adhesion reaction. A complex of dystrophin and its associated proteins was fully expressed in L6 myotubes, from which anti-dystrophin or anti-alpha-sarcoglycan co-precipitated integrin alpha 5 beta 1 and other focal adhesion-associated proteins vinculin, talin,
paxillin
, and focal adhesion kinase. Immunostaining and confocal microscopy revealed that dystrophin, alpha-sarcoglycan, integrin alpha 5 beta 1, and vinculin exhibited overlapping distribution in the sarcolemma, especially at focal adhesion-like, spotty structures.
Adhesion
of cells to fibronectin- or collagen type I-coated dishes resulted in induction of tyrosine phosphorylation of alpha- and gamma-sarcoglycans but not beta-sarcoglycan. The same proteins were also tyrosine-phosphorylated when L6 cells in suspension were exposed to Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser peptide. All of these tyrosine phosphorylations were inhibited by herbimycin A. On the other hand, treatment of L6 myotubes with alpha- and gamma-sarcoglycan antisense oligodeoxynucleotides resulted in complete disappearance of alpha- and gamma-sarcoglycans and in significant reduction of levels of the associated focal adhesion proteins, which caused about 50% reduction of cell adhesion. These results indicate the existence of bidirectional communication between the dystrophin-containing complex and the integrin adhesion system in cultured L6 myocytes.
...
PMID:Bidirectional signaling between sarcoglycans and the integrin adhesion system in cultured L6 myocytes. 943 Jun 99
Vascular endothelial cells are important in a variety of physiological and pathophysiological processes. The growth and functions of vascular endothelial cells are regulated both by soluble mitogenic and differentiation factors and by interactions with the extracellular matrix; however, relatively little is known about the role of the matrix. In the present study, we investigate whether integrin-mediated anchorage to a substratum coated with the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin regulates growth factor signaling events in human endothelial cells. We show that cell adhesion to fibronectin and growth factor stimulation trigger distinct initial tyrosine phosphorylation events in endothelial cells. Thus, integrin-dependent adhesion of endothelial cells leads to tyrosine phosphorylation of both focal adhesion kinase and
paxillin
, but not of several growth factor receptors. Conversely, EGF stimulation causes receptor autophosphorylation, with no effect on focal adhesion kinase or
paxillin
tyrosine phosphorylation.
Adhesion
to fibronectin, in the absence of growth factors, leads to activation of MAPK. In addition, adhesion to fibronectin also potentiates growth factor signaling to MAPK. Thus, polypeptide growth factor activation of MAPK in anchored cells is far more effective than in cells maintained in suspension. Other agonists known to activate MAPK were also examined for their ability to activate MAPK in an anchorage-dependent manner. The neuropeptide bombesin, the bioactive lipid lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), and the cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha, which signal through diverse mechanisms, were all able to activate MAPK to a much greater degree in fibronectin-adherent cells than in suspended cells. In addition, tumor necrosis factor alpha activation of c-Jun kinase (JNK) was also much more robust in anchored cells. Together, these data suggest a cooperation between integrins and soluble mitogens in efficient propagation of signals to downstream kinases. This cooperation may contribute to anchorage dependence of mitogenic cell cycle progression.
...
PMID:Integrin-mediated signaling events in human endothelial cells. 969 60
The ubiquitously expressed Na-H exchanger NHE1 functions in regulating intracellular pH and cell volume. NHE1 activity is stimulated by hormones, growth factors, and activation of integrin receptors. We recently determined that NHE1 activity is also stimulated by activation of the low molecular weight GTPase RhoA and that increases in NHE1 activity are necessary for RhoA-induced formation of actin stress fibers. We now show that NHE1 acts downstream of RhoA to modulate initial steps in integrin signaling for the assembly of focal adhesions.
Adhesion
of CCL39 fibroblasts on fibronectin was markedly delayed in the presence of the NHE inhibitor ethylisopropylamiloride. In mutant PS120 cells, derived from CCL39 fibroblasts but lacking NHE1, adhesion was also delayed but was rescued in PS120 cells stably expressing NHE1. In the absence of NHE1 activity, cell spreading was inhibited, and the accumulation of integrins,
paxillin
, and vinculin at focal contacts was impaired. Additionally, tyrosine phosphorylation of p125(FAK) induced by integrin clustering was also impaired. Inactivation of RhoA with C3 transferase and inhibition of the Rho-kinase p160ROCK with the pyridine derivative Y-27632 completely abolished activation of NHE1 by integrins but not by platelet-derived growth factor. These findings indicate that NHE1 acts downstream of RhoA to contribute a previously unrecognized critical signal to proximal events in integrin-induced cytoskeletal reorganization.
...
PMID:Na-H exchange acts downstream of RhoA to regulate integrin-induced cell adhesion and spreading. 969 82
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>