Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:B0FTZ7 (catenin)
18,795 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The cadherin-catenin complex is important for mediating homotypic, calcium-dependent cell-cell interactions in diverse tissue types. Although proteins of this complex have been identified, little is known about their interactions. Using a genetic assay in yeast and an in vitro protein-binding assay, we demonstrate that beta-catenin is the linker protein between E-cadherin and alpha-catenin and that E-cadherin does not bind directly to alpha-catenin. We show that a 25-amino acid sequence in the cytoplasmic domain of E-cadherin and the amino-terminal domain of alpha-catenin are independent binding sites for beta-catenin. In addition to beta-catenin and plakoglobin, another member of the armadillo family, p120 binds to E-cadherin. However, unlike beta-catenin, p120 does not bind alpha-catenin in vitro, although a complex of p120 and endogenous alpha-catenin could be immunoprecipitated from cell extracts. In vitro protein-binding assays using recombinant E-cadherin cytoplasmic domain and alpha-catenin revealed two catenin pools in cell lysates: an approximately 1000- to approximately 2000-kDa complex bound to E-cadherin and an approximately 220-kDa pool that did not contain E-cadherin. Only beta-catenin in the approximately 220-kDa pool bound exogenous E-cadherin. Delineation of these molecular linkages and the demonstration of separate pools of catenins in different cell lines provide a foundation for examining regulatory mechanisms involved in the assembly and function of the cadherin-catenin complex.
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PMID:Genetic and biochemical dissection of protein linkages in the cadherin-catenin complex. 776 49

Tight junction permeability control is important in a variety of physiological and pathological processes. We have investigated the role of tyrosine phosphorylation in the regulation of tight junction permeability. MDCK epithelial cells and brain endothelial cells were grown on filters and tight junction permeability was determined by transcellular electrical resistance (TER). The tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor pervanadate caused a concentration- and time-dependent decrease in TER in both MDCK and brain endothelial cells. However, as expected, pervanadate resulted in the tyrosine phosphorylation of many proteins; hence interpretation of its effects are extremely difficult. Phenylarsine oxide, a more selective tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor, caused the tyrosine phosphorylation of relatively few proteins as analyzed by immunoblotting of whole cell lysates. This inhibitor, like pervanadate, also elicited a decrease in TER in the two cell types. In the MDCK cells, the action of phenylarsine oxide could be reversed by the subsequent addition of the reducing agent 2,3-dimercaptopropanol. Immunocytochemistry revealed that phenylarsine oxide rapidly stimulated the tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins associated with intercellular junctions. Because of the known influence of the adherens junction on tight junctions, we analyzed immunoprecipitates of the E-cadherin/catenin complex from MDCK cells treated with phenylarsine oxide. This revealed an increase in the tyrosine phosphorylation of beta-catenin, but not of alpha-catenin. However, the tight junction associated protein ZO-1 was also tyrosine phosphorylated after PAO treatment. These data indicate that tight junction permeability may be regulated via mechanisms involving tyrosine phosphorylation of adherens junction and tight junction proteins.
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PMID:Evidence that tyrosine phosphorylation may increase tight junction permeability. 776 5

Cadherins are Ca(2+)-dependent, cell surface glycoproteins involved in cell-cell adhesion. Extracellularly, transmembrane cadherins such as E-, P-, and N-cadherin self-associate, while intracellularly they interact indirectly with the actin-based cytoskeleton. Several intracellular proteins termed catenins, including alpha-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin, are tightly associated with these cadherins and serve to link them to the cytoskeleton. Here, we present evidence that in fibroblasts alpha-actinin, but not vinculin, colocalizes extensively with the N-cadherin/catenin complex. This is in contrast to epithelial cells where both cytoskeletal proteins colocalize extensively with E-cadherin and catenins. We further show that alpha-actinin, but not vinculin, coimmunoprecipitates specifically with alpha- and beta-catenin from N- and E-cadherin-expressing cells, but only if alpha-catenin is present. Moreover, we show that alpha-actinin coimmunoprecipitates with the N-cadherin/catenin complex in an actin-independent manner. We therefore propose that cadherin/catenin complexes are linked to the actin cytoskeleton via a direct association between alpha-actinin and alpha-catenin.
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PMID:Interaction of alpha-actinin with the cadherin/catenin cell-cell adhesion complex via alpha-catenin. 779 Mar 78

p120 was originally identified as a substrate of pp60src and several receptor tyrosine kinases, but its function is not known. Recent studies revealed that this protein shows homology to a group of proteins, beta-catenin/Armadillo and plakoglobin (gamma-catenin), which are associated with the cell adhesion molecules cadherins. In this study, we examined whether p120 is associated with E-cadherin using the human carcinoma cell line HT29, as well as other cell lines, which express both of these proteins. When proteins that copurified with E-cadherin were analyzed, not only alpha-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin but also p120 were detected. Conversely, immunoprecipitates of p120 contained E-cadherin and all the catenins, although a large subpopulation of p120 was not associated with E-cadherin. Analysis of these immunoprecipitates suggests that 20% or less of the extractable E-cadherin is associated with p120. When p120 immunoprecipitation was performed with cell lysates depleted of E-cadherin, beta-catenin was no longer coprecipitated, and the amount of plakoglobin copurified was greatly reduced. This finding suggests that there are various forms of p120 complexes, including p120/E-cadherin/beta-catenin and p120/E-cadherin/plakoglobin complexes; this association profile contrasts with the mutually exclusive association of beta-catenin and plakoglobin with cadherins. When the COOH-terminal catenin binding site was truncated from E-cadherin, not only beta-catenin but also p120 did not coprecipitate with this mutated E-cadherin. Immunocytological studies showed that p120 colocalized with E-cadherin at cell-cell contact sites, even after non-ionic detergent extraction. Treatment of cells with hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor altered the level of tyrosine phosphorylation of p120 as well as of beta-catenin and plakoglobin. These results suggest that p120 associates with E-cadherin at its COOH-terminal region, but the mechanism for this association differs from that for the association of beta-catenin and plakoglobin with E-cadherin, and thus, that p120, whose function could be modulated by growth factors, may play a unique role in regulation of the cadherin-catenin adhesion system.
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PMID:Association of p120, a tyrosine kinase substrate, with E-cadherin/catenin complexes. 787 18

The tumor suppressor APC protein associates with the cadherin-binding proteins alpha- and beta-catenin. To examine the relationship between cadherin, catenins, and APC, we have tested combinatorial protein-protein interactions in vivo, using a yeast two-hybrid system, and in vitro, using purified proteins. beta-Catenin directly binds to APC at high and low affinity sites. alpha-Catenin cannot directly bind APC but associates with it by binding to beta-catenin. Plakoglobin, also known as gamma-catenin, directly binds to both APC and alpha-catenin and also to the APC-beta-catenin complex, but not directly to beta-catenin. beta-Catenin binds to multiple independent regions of APC, some of which include a previously identified consensus motif and others which contain the centrally located 20 amino acid repeat sequences. The APC binding site on beta-catenin may be discontinuous since neither the carboxyl- nor amino-terminal halves of beta-catenin will independently associate with APC, although the amino-terminal half independently binds alpha-catenin. The catenins bind to APC and E-cadherin in a similar fashion, but APC and E-cadherin do not associate with each other either in the presence or absence of catenins. Thus, APC forms distinct heteromeric complexes containing combinations of alpha-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin which are independent from the cadherin-catenin complexes.
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PMID:The APC protein and E-cadherin form similar but independent complexes with alpha-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin. 789 Jun 74

PC9 lung carcinoma cells cannot tightly associate with one another, and therefore grow singly, despite their expression of E-cadherin, because of their lack of alpha-catenin, a cadherin-associated protein. However, when the E-cadherin is activated by transfection with alpha-catenin cDNA, they form spherical aggregates, each consisting of an enclosed monolayer cell sheet. In the present work, we examined whether the alpha-catenin-transfected cell layers expressed epithelial phenotypes, by determining the distribution of various cell adhesion molecules on their surfaces, including E-cadherin, ZO-1, desmoplakin, integrins, and laminin. In untransfected PC9 cells, all these molecules were randomly distributed on their cell surface. In the transfected cells, however, each of them was redistributed into a characteristic polarized pattern without a change in the amount of expression. Electron microscopic study demonstrated that the alpha-catenin-transfected cell layers acquired apical-basal polarity typical of simple epithelia; they formed microvilli only on the outer surface of the aggregates, and a junctional complex composed of tight junction adherens junction, and desmosome arranged in this order. These results indicate that the activation of E-cadherin triggered the formation of the junctional complex and the polarized distribution of cell surface proteins and structures. We also found that, in untransfected PC9 cells, ZO-1 formed condensed clusters and colocalized with E-cadherin, but that other adhesion molecules rarely showed such colocalization with E-cadherin, suggesting that there is some specific interaction between ZO-1 and E-cadherin even in the absence of cell-cell contacts. In addition, we found that the activation of E-cadherin caused a retardation of PC9 cell growth. Thus, we concluded that the E-cadherin-catenin adhesion system is essential not only for structural organization of epithelial cells but also for the control of their growth.
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PMID:Induction of polarized cell-cell association and retardation of growth by activation of the E-cadherin-catenin adhesion system in a dispersed carcinoma line. 792 67

At least three proteins (alpha, beta, and gamma catenin) comprise the cytoplasmic domain of the cadherin cell-cell adhesion complex. We have cloned and sequenced human epithelial alpha(E)-catenin and have identified two distinct transcripts, designated alpha 1- and alpha 2-. The human alpha 1(E)-catenin transcript predicts a 907 aa sequence 97% identical to mouse alpha-catenin. The second transcript, alpha 2(E)-catenin, displays a 24 amino acid insertion after codon 812, yielding a 931 amino acid protein (GenBank #L23805). Analysis by RT-PCR and Northern blotting detects one or both transcripts in epithelial and non-epithelial tissues. Southern blotting indicates that both arise from a single gene. The alternative transcription site in alpha-catenin is analogous to the splice site in vinculin that creates met alpha-vinculin, extending the homology between alpha-catenin and vinculin. These data with the reported structure of other catenin genes suggest that vinculin and alpha-catenin generate a superfamily of proteins mediating membrane-cytoskeletal associations.
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PMID:Molecular cloning reveals alternative splice forms of human alpha(E)-catenin. 794 18

Cadherin cell adhesion molecules play an essential role in creating tight intercellular association and are considered to work as an invasion suppressor system of cancer cells. They form a molecular complex with catenins, a group of cytoplasmic proteins including alpha- and beta-catenins. While alpha-catenin has been demonstrated to be crucial for cadherin function, the role of beta-catenin is not yet fully understood. In this study, we analyzed the cadherin-catenin system in two human cell lines, HSC-39 and its putative subline HSC-40A, derived from a signet ring cell carcinoma of stomach. These cells grow as loose aggregates or single cells, suggesting that their cadherin system is not functional. In these cell lines, an identical 321-base pair in-frame mRNA deletion of beta-catenin was identified; this led to a 107-amino-acid deletion in the NH2-terminal region of the protein. Southern blot analysis disclosed a homozygous deletion in part of the beta-catenin gene. On the other hand, these cells expressed E-cadherin, alpha-catenin, and plakoglobin of normal size. Immunoprecipitation analyses showed that E-cadherin was coprecipitated with the mutated beta-catenin but not with alpha-catenin, and antibodies against beta-catenin did not copurify alpha-catenin. However, the recombinant fusion protein containing wild-type beta-catenin precipitated alpha-catenin from these cells. These results suggest that the dysfunction of E-cadherin in these cell lines is due primarily to its failure to interact with alpha-catenin, and that this defect results from the mutation in beta-catenin. Thus, it is most likely that the association between E-cadherin and alpha-catenin is mediated by beta-catenin, and that this process is blocked by NH2-terminal deletion in beta-catenin. These findings indicate that genetic abnormality of beta-catenin is one of the mechanisms responsible for loosening of cell-cell contact, and may be involved in enhancement of tumor invasion in human cancers.
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PMID:A truncated beta-catenin disrupts the interaction between E-cadherin and alpha-catenin: a cause of loss of intercellular adhesiveness in human cancer cell lines. 795 78

alpha-Catenins are a group of proteins associated with cadherin cell-cell adhesion molecules, and play indispensable roles in the function of the cadherins. alpha N-catenin, a subtype, was identified as a protein associated with N-cadherin. In this study, we investigated the expression pattern of alpha N-catenin in early chicken embryos, and compared it with that of N-cadherin. alpha N-catenin was first detected in the closed somites and neural tube, and, at later stages, in many other tissues including the central nervous system (CNS), skeletal muscles, various regions of the overlying ectoderm, and some endodermal layers. In the CNS and skeletal muscles, both alpha N-catenin and N-cadherin were strongly expressed, and their distribution patterns were similar. However, in some parts of the ectoderm and endoderm, only alpha N-catenin was expressed. On the other hand, various mesenchymal tissues and peripheral nerves strongly expressed N-cadherin, but their alpha N-catenin expression was, in general, weak. Thus, the expression of these two proteins did not always correlate with each other. These results suggest that cells use different combinations of a cadherin and an alpha-catenin in a tissue-specific manner.
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PMID:Differential expression of alpha N-catenin and N-cadherin during early development of chicken embryos. 798 Oct 48

Catenins are peripheral cytoplasmic proteins originally identified in association with the mouse epithelial cell adhesion molecule E-cadherin. Molecular cloning and primary structure analysis demonstrated that alpha-catenin is homologous to vinculin and the beta-catenin is homologous to human plakoglobin and the Drosophila gene product armadillo. With the use of peptide-specific anti plakoglobin antibodies were confirm here that plakoglobin is a component of the cadherin-catenin complex and that it is most likely identical to gamma-catenin. We show that plakoglobin binds directly to E-cadherin. We consolidate the biochemical evidence for the existence of two distinct and separable E-cadherin-catenin complexes in the same cell. One complex is composed of E-cadherin, alpha- and beta-catenin, the other of E-cadherin, alpha-catenin and plakoglobin. A similar distinct association with catenins is also found for other cadherins. Comparison of different cell lines revealed that the relative amounts of the two complexes vary depending on cell types.
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PMID:Distinct cadherin-catenin complexes in Ca(2+)-dependent cell-cell adhesion. 798


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