Dystroglycan loss disrupts polarity and β-casein induction in mammary epithelial cells by perturbing laminin anchoring

Author:

Weir M. Lynn1,Oppizzi Maria Luisa1,Henry Michael D.2,Onishi Akiko1,Campbell Kevin P.2,Bissell Mina J.3,Muschler John L.1

Affiliation:

1. California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute, 475 Brannan Street, Suite 217, San Francisco, CA 94107, USA

2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA

3. Division of Life Sciences, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

Abstract

Precise contact between epithelial cells and their underlying basement membrane is crucial to the maintenance of tissue architecture and function. To understand the role that the laminin receptor dystroglycan (DG) plays in these processes, we assayed cell responses to laminin-111 following conditional ablation of DG gene (Dag1) expression in cultured mammary epithelial cells. Strikingly, DG loss disrupted laminin-111-induced polarity and β-casein production, and abolished laminin assembly at the step of laminin binding to the cell surface. Dystroglycan re-expression restored these deficiencies. Investigations of the mechanism revealed that DG cytoplasmic sequences were not necessary for laminin assembly and signaling, and only when the entire mucin domain of extracellular DG was deleted did laminin assembly not occur. These results demonstrate that DG is essential as a laminin-111 co-receptor in mammary epithelial cells that functions by mediating laminin anchoring to the cell surface, a process that allows laminin polymerization, tissue polarity and β-casein induction. The observed loss of laminin-111 assembly and signaling in Dag1-/- mammary epithelial cells provides insights into the signaling changes occurring in breast carcinomas and other cancers, where the binding function of DG to laminin is frequently defective.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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