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Query: UNIPROT:B0FTZ7 (
catenin
)
18,795
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Ca(2+)-dependent
cell adhesion molecule
uvomorulin is a member of the cadherin gene family. Its cytoplasmic region complexes with structurally defined proteins termed alpha-, beta-, and gamma-catenins. Here we show that A-CAM (N-cadherin), another member of this gene family, also associates with catenins suggesting that this complex formation may be a general property of the cadherins. For uvomorulin it has been found that this association with catenins is of crucial importance for the adhesive function, but little is known about the molecular organization of the uvomorulin-
catenin
complex. Using a combination of biochemical analyses we show that a single complex is composed of one molecule of uvomorulin, one or two molecules of beta-catenin, and one molecule of alpha-catenin. Furthermore, beta-catenin seems to interact more directly with uvomorulin. In pulse-chase experiments beta-catenin is already associated with the 135-kD uvomorulin precursor molecule but the assembly of the newly synthesized alpha-catenin into the complex is only detected around the time of endoproteolytic processing.
...
PMID:Molecular organization of the uvomorulin-catenin complex. 173 27
Three cytoplasmic proteins, called catenins, bind to the cytoplasmic tail of the epithelial cell-
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin. The complementary DNA sequence was determined for the 92-kilodalton beta catenin of Xenopus laevis. The sequence is homologous to mammalian plakoglobin, a protein of desmosomal and zonula adherens cell junctions, and to the plakoglobin homolog in Drosophila melanogaster, the product of the segment polarity gene armadillo. A monoclonal antibody to bovine plakoglobin recognizes the analogous beta catenin in the Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cell line. Armadillo plakoglobin may link E-cadherin to the underlying actin cytoskeleton at cell-cell junctions; the E-cadherin-
catenin
protein complex may also participate in the transmission of developmental information.
...
PMID:A homolog of the armadillo protein in Drosophila (plakoglobin) associated with E-cadherin. 196 94
We have recently found that the cytoplasmic region of the
cell adhesion molecule
uvomorulin associates with three proteins named
catenin
alpha, beta, and gamma. Here we show by analysis of various mutant uvomorulin polypeptides expressed in mouse L cells that this association is mediated by a specific domain in the cytoplasmic region. A specific recognition site for catenins is located in a 72-amino acid domain. Interestingly, 69 of the 72 amino acid residues are encoded by a single exon of the uvomorulin gene. To demonstrate the direct interaction between catenins and the 72-amino acid domain, cDNA constructs composed of H-2Kd cDNA and various 3' sequences of uvomorulin were expressed in L cells. Chimeric proteins between H-2Kd and the 72-amino acid domain of uvomorulin were shown, by immunoprecipitation with anti-H-2Kd antibodies, to complex with
catenin
alpha, beta, and gamma. Catenins connect uvomorulin to cytoskeletal structures. We provide biochemical evidence for an association of the uvomorulin-
catenin
complex with actin bundles. Our results suggest that
catenin
alpha plays a key role in the association with actin filaments, whereas
catenin
beta binds more directly to the cytoplasmic region of uvomorulin. In cell aggregation assays with transfected cells expressing normal or mutant uvomorulin, the adhesive function was expressed only when uvomorulin was associated with catenins. From these results we conclude that the cytoplasmic anchorage of uvomorulin is of major biological importance.
...
PMID:Uvomorulin-catenin complex formation is regulated by a specific domain in the cytoplasmic region of the cell adhesion molecule. 234 35
Loss of epithelioid organization in carcinoma cell lines has been related to invasiveness and poor differentiation of tumors. We investigated the invasion in vitro of various human colon cancer cell lines. Most cell lines were noninvasive into chick heart fragments, and this correlated with an epithelioid morphotype. Only cell lines COLO320DM, SW620, and variants of HCT-8 and DLD-1 were invasive and nonepithelioid. We examined in these cell lines whether invasiveness was related to changes in the structure and function of the E-cadherin/
catenin
complex. E-cadherin functions as an invasion suppressor and as a cell-
cell adhesion molecule
when linked to the cytoskeleton via alpha-catenin plus beta- or gamma-catenin. All noninvasive cell lines showed E-cadherin linked to these catenins. The E-cadherin-dependent cell-cell adhesion function in these cell lines was demonstrated by two assays in vitro. It was interesting that all invasive cell lines showed a dysfunctional E-cadherin/
catenin
complex. COLO320DM, SW480, and SW620 cells were defective in E-cadherin expression, whereas the invasive variants of HCT-8 and DLD-1 lacked the alpha-catenin protein. From clonal epithelioid HCT-8 cultures with functional E-cadherin/
catenin
complexes, we subcloned, repeatedly, round cell variants that were again invasive and expressed no alpha-catenin protein. Our data suggest that reproducible transformations toward a more invasive phenotype in HCT-8 cells are associated with down-regulation of alpha-catenin. The mechanisms of this transformation and the level of alpha-catenin down-regulation are currently investigated.
...
PMID:Transition from the noninvasive to the invasive phenotype and loss of alpha-catenin in human colon cancer cells. 755 55
Mutations in the APC gene are linked to the development of sporadic colorectal tumors as well as to familial adenomatous polyposis. Recently, the APC protein was reported to associated with catenins, proteins that bind to the
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin. In the present study, we examined the distribution and localization of the APC protein and alpha -
catenin
in the normal mouse intestine by light and immunoelectron microscopy using specific antibodies. The APC protein was found to be localized in microvilli and in the apical and lateral cytoplasm of the epithelial cells, whereas alpha-catenin was detected only in the lateral cytoplasm. Double-labeling immunoelectron microscopy showed colocalization of the APC protein with alpha-catenin in the lateral cytoplasm, especially along the lateral plasma membrane, although a certain portion of the APC protein in this region was distributed independently of alpha-catenin. These results suggest that a portion of the APC protein localized in the lateral cytoplasm of intestinal epithelial cells functions in cooperation with catenins, whereas the APC protein in microvilli and in the apical cytoplasm has other functions independent of catenins.
...
PMID:Subcellular localization of the APC protein: immunoelectron microscopic study of the association of the APC protein with catenin. 762 36
Various structural components of intercellular junctions have recently been found to represent (or be related to) products of tumor-suppressor genes. The tumor-suppressor gene product adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) binds to beta 2-
catenin
(homologous to the product of Drosophila armadillo), which is cytoplasmically associated with the
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin.
...
PMID:Tumor-suppressor gene products in cell contacts: the cadherin-APC-armadillo connection. 783 51
Genetic characteristics of scirrhous gastric carcinomas are overviewed. Scirrhous carcinomas of the stomach frequently show amplification of c-met and K-sam oncogenes as well as overexpression of 6.0 kb c-met abnormal transcript. For the formation of productive fibrosis and the diffuse infiltrative growth pattern of this malignancy, the essential factors would be not only the loss of
cell adhesion molecule
function through depressed expression or loss of cadherin or
catenin
, but also the synchronous overexpression of growth factors from the cancer cells including TGF-beta, PDGF, IGF-II and basic FGF with intimate cancer-stromal interaction through paracrine loop of IL-1 alpha/HGF system.
...
PMID:[Genetic characteristics of scirrhous gastric carcinomas]. 794 79
Because the
cell adhesion molecule
epithelial cadherin (E-cadherin) is absent in many invasive carcinomas, we transfected the E-cadherin gene into E-cadherin-negative, invasive breast cancer cell lines BT549 and HS578t to investigate the role of E-cadherin in invasive behavior. Although the transfected E-cadherin could mediate calcium-dependent aggregation to E-cadherin-transfected L-cells, morphology and invasiveness of the breast cancer cells were not altered. We investigated the strength of the linkage of the transfected E-cadherin to the actin cytoskeleton by examining the Triton X-100 solubility of the transfected E-cadherin. In BT549 and HS578t cells, a large proportion of the transfected E-cadherin was Triton soluble, whereas in E-cadherin-positive MCF-7 cells, Triton-insoluble E-cadherin was apparent at cell-cell borders. Interaction of E-cadherin with the actin cytoskeleton is thought to be mediated by the E-cadherin-binding proteins alpha-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin. We found normal levels of alpha-catenin and beta-catenin in BT549 and HS578t cells; however, low levels of plakoglobin were expressed in these cells compared to those found in weakly invasive MCF-7 cells. Furthermore, levels of tyrosine phosphorylation of beta-catenin were elevated in E-cadherin-transfected BT549 and HS578t cells compared to MCF-7 cells. We conclude that other factors such as the expression and appropriate posttranslational modification of cadherin-associated proteins must be in place for E-cadherin to be fully functional, i.e., to alter invasiveness. During cancer progression, loss of E-cadherin expression itself or multiple other mechanisms that lead to loss of cell-cell adhesion (mutation, loss of
catenin
expression, alterations in phosphorylation) may contribute to a more metastatic phenotype.
...
PMID:Alterations in beta-catenin phosphorylation and plakoglobin expression in human breast cancer cells. 801 79
Analysis of the calcium-dependent
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin has led to the identification of catenins, which are necessary for cadherin function. Growing evidence that cadherins and catenins are subjected to genetic alterations in carcinogenesis makes it especially important to understand protein-protein interactions within the cadherin-
catenin
complex. Here we report the identification and analysis of the alpha-catenin binding site in plakoglobin (gamma-catenin). Using N- and C-terminal truncations of plakoglobin, we identified a domain of 29 amino acids necessary and sufficient for binding alpha-catenin. The alpha-catenin binding site is fully encoded within exon 3 of plakoglobin but only partially represented in Armadillo repeat 1. This suggests that exons rather than individual Arm repeats encode functional domains of plakoglobin. Site-directed mutagenesis identified residues in the alpha-catenin binding site indispensable for binding in vitro. Analogous mutations in beta-catenin and Armadillo had identical effects. Our results indicate that single amino acid mutations in the alpha-catenin binding site of homologs of Armadillo could prevent a stable association with alpha-catenin, thus affecting cadherin-mediated adhesion.
...
PMID:Single amino acid substitutions in proteins of the armadillo gene family abolish their binding to alpha-catenin. 857 47
p120cas (CAS) is a protein tyrosine kinase substrate that associates directly with the cytoplasmic tail of the cell-
cell adhesion molecule
E-cadherin. CAS is thus part of a multimolecular complex that, along with other cadherin-binding proteins (catenins), mediates interactions between E-cadherin and the actin cytoskeleton. Down-regulation of E-cadherin expression and defects in
catenin
function have been implicated in tumor metastasis, but the role of CAS in these processes has not been addressed. Recently, the study of CAS was complicated when new anti-CAS antibodies revealed the presence of at least four putative CAS isoforms that appeared to vary in abundance between cell types. Here, we identify the four major isoforms expressed in murine fibroblasts, and we show that they are products of alternative splicing. Analysis of CAS isoforms in a variety of murine cell lines indicates that motile cells like fibroblasts and macrophages preferentially express CAS1 (i.e., CAS1A and CAS1B isoforms), and epithelial cells preferentially express CAS2 (i.e., CAS2A and CAS2B isoforms), whereas nonadherent cells (e.g., B cells, T cells, and myeloid cells) do not express detectable levels of CAS. Interestingly, CAS1 expression is dramatically up-regulated in a Src-transformed Madin-Darby canine kidney cell line, indicating that the pattern of isoform expression can be altered by cell transformation. Analysis of a variety of differentiated and metastatic human tumor cell lines reveals that CAS isoform expression in these cells is quite heterogeneous. Furthermore, several poorly differentiated cell lines fail to express particular isoforms that are typically observed in well-differentiated cell lines. These data raise the possibility that unbalanced expression of CAS isoforms in human carcinomas may influence cadherin function and contribute to malignant or metastatic cell phenotypes.
...
PMID:Identification of murine p120 isoforms and heterogeneous expression of p120cas isoforms in human tumor cell lines. 865 9
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