Kramer R H, Cheng Y F, Clyman R
Department of Stomatology, University of California, San Francisco 94143-0512.
J Cell Biol. 1990 Sep;111(3):1233-43. doi: 10.1083/jcb.111.3.1233.
Microvascular endothelial cells (MEC) use a set of surface receptors to adhere not only to the vascular basement membrane but, during angiogenic stimulation, to the interstitium. We examined how cultured human MEC interact with laminin-rich basement membranes. By using a panel of monoclonal antibodies, we found that MEC cells express a number of integrin-related receptor complexes, including alpha 1 beta 1, alpha 2 beta 1, alpha 3 beta 1, alpha 5 beta 1, alpha 6 beta 1, alpha V beta 3. Attachment to laminin, a major adhesive protein in basement membranes, was studied in detail. Blocking monoclonal antibodies specific to different integrin receptor complexes showed that the alpha 6 beta 1 complex was important for MEC adhesion to laminin. In addition, blocking antibody also implicated the vitronectin receptor (alpha V beta 3) in laminin adhesion. We used ligand affinity chromatography of detergent-solubilized receptor complexes to further define receptor specificity. On laminin-Sepharose columns, we identified several integrin receptor complexes whose affinity for the ligand was dependent on the type of divalent cation present. Several beta 1 complexes, including alpha 1 beta 1, alpha 2 beta 1, and alpha 6 beta 1 bound strongly to laminin. In agreement with the antibody blocking experiments, alpha V beta 3 was found to bind well to laminin. However, unlike binding to its other ligands (e.g., vitronectin, fibrinogen, von Willebrand factor), alpha V beta 3 interaction with laminin did not appear to be Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sensitive. Finally, immunofluorescent staining demonstrated both beta 1 and beta 3 complexes in vinculin-positive focal adhesion plaques on the basal surface of MEC adhering to laminin-coated substrates. The results indicate that both these subfamilies of integrin heterodimers are involved in promoting MEC adhesion to laminin and the vascular basement membrane.
微血管内皮细胞(MEC)利用一组表面受体不仅可黏附于血管基底膜,而且在血管生成刺激过程中可黏附于间质。我们研究了培养的人MEC如何与富含层粘连蛋白的基底膜相互作用。通过使用一组单克隆抗体,我们发现MEC细胞表达多种整合素相关受体复合物,包括α1β1、α2β1、α3β1、α5β1、α6β1、αVβ3。详细研究了其与基底膜中主要黏附蛋白层粘连蛋白之间的黏附作用。针对不同整合素受体复合物的阻断性单克隆抗体显示,α6β1复合物对MEC黏附于层粘连蛋白很重要。此外,阻断抗体也表明玻连蛋白受体(αVβ3)参与层粘连蛋白黏附。我们利用去污剂溶解的受体复合物进行配体亲和层析,以进一步确定受体特异性。在层粘连蛋白-琼脂糖柱上,我们鉴定出几种整合素受体复合物,其对配体的亲和力取决于存在的二价阳离子类型。几种β1复合物(包括α1β1、α2β1和α6β1)与层粘连蛋白紧密结合。与抗体阻断实验一致,发现αVβ3与层粘连蛋白结合良好。然而,与它与其他配体(如玻连蛋白、纤维蛋白原、血管性血友病因子)的结合不同,αVβ3与层粘连蛋白的相互作用似乎对精氨酸-甘氨酸-天冬氨酸(RGD)不敏感。最后,免疫荧光染色显示,在黏附于层粘连蛋白包被底物的MEC基底表面的纽蛋白阳性黏着斑中,同时存在β1和β3复合物。结果表明,整合素异二聚体的这两个亚家族均参与促进MEC黏附于层粘连蛋白和血管基底膜。