Friedlander D R, Hoffman S, Edelman G M
Department of Developmental and Molecular Biology, Rockefeller University, New York 10021.
J Cell Biol. 1988 Dec;107(6 Pt 1):2329-40. doi: 10.1083/jcb.107.6.2329.
Cytotactin is an extracellular matrix glycoprotein with a restricted distribution during development. In electron microscopic images, it appears as a hexabrachion with six arms extending from a central core. Cytotactin binds to other extracellular matrix proteins including a chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (CTB proteoglycan) and fibronectin. Although cytotactin binds to a variety of cells including fibroblasts and neurons, in some cases it causes cells in culture to round up and it inhibits their migration. To relate these various effects of cytotactin on cell behavior to its binding regions, we have examined its ability to support cell-substrate adhesion and have mapped its cell-binding function onto its structure. In a cell-substrate adhesion assay, fibroblasts bound to cytotactin but remained round. In contrast, they both attached and spread on fibronectin. Neither neurons nor glia bound to cytotactin in this assay. In an assay in which cell-substrate contact was initiated by centrifugation, however, neurons and glia bound well to cytotactin; this binding was blocked by specific anti-cytotactin antibodies. The results suggest that neurons and glia can bind to cytotactin-coated substrates and that these cells, like fibroblasts, possess cell surface ligands for cytotactin. After applying methods of limited proteolysis and fractionation, these assays were used to map the binding functions of cytotactin onto its structure. Fragments produced by limited proteolysis were fractionated into two major pools: one (fraction I) contained disulfide-linked oligomers of a 100-kD fragment and two minor related fragments, and the second (fraction II) contained monomeric 90- and 65-kD fragments. The 90- and 65-kD fragments in fraction II were closely related to each other and were structurally and immunologically distinct from the fragments in fraction I. Only components in fraction I were recognized by mAb M1, which binds to an epitope located in the proximal portion of the arms of the hexabrachion and by a polyclonal antibody prepared against a 75-kD CNBr fragment of intact cytotactin. A mAb (1D8) and a polyclonal antibody prepared against a 35-kD CNBr fragment of cytotactin only recognized components present in fraction II. In cell-binding experiments, fibroblasts, neurons, and glia each adhered to substrates coated with fraction II, but did not adhere to substrates coated with fraction I. Fab fragments of the antibody to the 35-kD CNBr fragment strongly inhibited the binding of cells to cytotactin, supporting the conclusion that fraction II contains a cell-binding region. In addition, Fab fragments of this antibody inhibited the binding of cytotactin to CTB pr
细胞趋触蛋白是一种细胞外基质糖蛋白,在发育过程中分布受限。在电子显微镜图像中,它呈现为一个六臂体,有六条臂从中央核心伸出。细胞趋触蛋白能与其他细胞外基质蛋白结合,包括硫酸软骨素蛋白聚糖(CTB蛋白聚糖)和纤连蛋白。尽管细胞趋触蛋白能与多种细胞结合,包括成纤维细胞和神经元,但在某些情况下,它会使培养中的细胞变圆,并抑制其迁移。为了将细胞趋触蛋白对细胞行为的这些不同影响与其结合区域联系起来,我们研究了它支持细胞 - 底物黏附的能力,并将其细胞结合功能定位到其结构上。在细胞 - 底物黏附试验中,成纤维细胞与细胞趋触蛋白结合但仍保持圆形。相比之下,它们既能附着在纤连蛋白上,又能在其上铺展。在该试验中,神经元和神经胶质细胞都不与细胞趋触蛋白结合。然而,在通过离心启动细胞 - 底物接触的试验中,神经元和神经胶质细胞能很好地与细胞趋触蛋白结合;这种结合被特异性抗细胞趋触蛋白抗体阻断。结果表明,神经元和神经胶质细胞能与包被有细胞趋触蛋白的底物结合,并且这些细胞和成纤维细胞一样,拥有细胞趋触蛋白的细胞表面配体。在应用了有限蛋白酶解和分级分离方法后,这些试验被用于将细胞趋触蛋白的结合功能定位到其结构上。有限蛋白酶解产生的片段被分成两个主要部分:一部分(组分I)包含一个100-kD片段以及两个较小的相关片段的二硫键连接的寡聚体,另一部分(组分II)包含单体的90-kD和65-kD片段。组分II中的90-kD和65-kD片段彼此密切相关,在结构和免疫方面与组分I中的片段不同。只有组分I中的成分能被单克隆抗体M1识别,该抗体结合位于六臂体臂近端部分的一个表位,以及被针对完整细胞趋触蛋白的75-kD溴化氰片段制备的多克隆抗体识别。针对细胞趋触蛋白的35-kD溴化氰片段制备的单克隆抗体(1D8)和多克隆抗体只识别组分II中存在的成分。在细胞结合实验中,成纤维细胞、神经元和神经胶质细胞都能黏附在包被有组分II的底物上,但不黏附在包被有组分I的底物上。针对35-kD溴化氰片段的抗体的Fab片段强烈抑制细胞与细胞趋触蛋白的结合,支持了组分II包含细胞结合区域的结论。此外,该抗体的Fab片段抑制细胞趋触蛋白与CTB蛋白聚糖的结合。