Balzar M, Bakker H A, Briaire-de-Bruijn I H, Fleuren G J, Warnaar S O, Litvinov S V
Department of Pathology, Leiden University Medical Centre, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Mol Cell Biol. 1998 Aug;18(8):4833-43. doi: 10.1128/MCB.18.8.4833.
Ep-CAM, an epithelium-specific cell-cell adhesion molecule (CAM) not structurally related to the major families of CAMs, contains a cytoplasmic domain of 26 amino acids. The chemical disruption of the actin microfilaments, but not of the microtubuli or intermediate filaments, affected the localization of Ep-CAM at the cell-cell boundaries, suggesting that the molecule interacts with the actin-based cytoskeleton. Mutated forms of Ep-CAM were generated with the cytoplasmic domain truncated at various lengths. All of the mutants were transported to the cell surface in the transfectants; however, the mutant lacking the complete cytoplasmic domain was not able to localize to the cell-cell boundaries, in contrast to mutants with partial deletions. Both the disruption of the actin microfilaments and a complete truncation of the cytoplasmic tail strongly affected the ability of Ep-CAM to mediate aggregation of L cells. The capability of direct aggregation was reduced for the partially truncated mutants but remained cytochalasin D sensitive. The tail truncation did not affect the ability of the transfectants to adhere to solid-phase-adsorbed Ep-CAM, suggesting that the ability to form stable adhesions and not the ligand specificity of the molecule was affected by the truncation. The formation of intercellular adhesions mediated by Ep-CAM induced a redistribution to the cell-cell boundaries of alpha-actinin, but not of vinculin, talin, filamin, spectrin, or catenins. Coprecipitation demonstrated direct association of Ep-CAM with alpha-actinin. Binding of alpha-actinin to purified mutated and wild-type Ep-CAMs and to peptides representing different domains of the cytoplasmic tail of Ep-CAM demonstrates two binding sites for alpha-actinin at positions 289 to 296 and 304 to 314 of the amino acid sequence. The results demonstrate that the cytoplasmic domain of Ep-CAM regulates the adhesion function of the molecule through interaction with the actin cytoskeleton via alpha-actinin.
上皮细胞黏附分子(Ep-CAM)是一种上皮特异性细胞间黏附分子,在结构上与主要的黏附分子家族无关,其含有一个由26个氨基酸组成的胞质结构域。肌动蛋白微丝而非微管或中间丝的化学破坏影响了Ep-CAM在细胞间边界的定位,这表明该分子与基于肌动蛋白的细胞骨架相互作用。构建了胞质结构域在不同长度处被截断的Ep-CAM突变体形式。所有突变体均在转染细胞中转运至细胞表面;然而,与部分缺失的突变体相比,缺乏完整胞质结构域的突变体无法定位于细胞间边界。肌动蛋白微丝的破坏和胞质尾部的完全截断均强烈影响Ep-CAM介导L细胞聚集的能力。部分截断的突变体直接聚集能力降低,但对细胞松弛素D仍敏感。尾部截断不影响转染细胞与固相吸附的Ep-CAM的黏附能力,这表明形成稳定黏附的能力而非该分子的配体特异性受截断影响。由Ep-CAM介导的细胞间黏附的形成诱导α-辅肌动蛋白重新分布至细胞间边界,但纽蛋白、踝蛋白、细丝蛋白、血影蛋白或连环蛋白则没有。共沉淀证明Ep-CAM与α-辅肌动蛋白直接结合。α-辅肌动蛋白与纯化的突变型和野生型Ep-CAM以及代表Ep-CAM胞质尾部不同结构域的肽段结合,证明在氨基酸序列的第289至296位和304至314位有两个α-辅肌动蛋白结合位点。结果表明,Ep-CAM的胞质结构域通过与α-辅肌动蛋白相互作用来调节分子的黏附功能,进而与肌动蛋白细胞骨架相互作用。