Clustering of phosphatase RPTPα promotes Src signaling and the arthritogenic action of synovial fibroblasts

Author:

Sendo Sho1ORCID,Kiosses William B.12ORCID,Yang Shen1ORCID,Wu Dennis J.1ORCID,Lee Daniel W. K.1ORCID,Liu Lin1,Aschner Yael3ORCID,Vela Allison J.1,Downey Gregory P.43567,Santelli Eugenio1ORCID,Bottini Nunzio18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.

2. La Jolla Institute for Immunology, La Jolla, CA, USA.

3. Division of Pulmonary Sciences and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.

4. Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO, USA.

5. Department of Biomedical Research, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO, USA.

6. Department of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Colorado, Aurora, CO, USA.

7. Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Health, Denver, CO, USA.

8. Department of Medicine, Kao Autoimmunity Institute, Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Abstract

Receptor-type protein phosphatase α (RPTPα) promotes fibroblast-dependent arthritis and fibrosis, in part, by enhancing the activation of the kinase SRC. Synovial fibroblasts lining joint tissue mediate inflammation and tissue damage, and their infiltration into adjacent tissues promotes disease progression. RPTPα includes an ectodomain and two intracellular catalytic domains (D1 and D2) and, in cancer cells, undergoes inhibitory homodimerization, which is dependent on a D1 wedge motif. Through single-molecule localization and labeled molecule interaction microscopy of migrating synovial fibroblasts, we investigated the role of RPTPα dimerization in the activation of SRC, the migration of synovial fibroblasts, and joint damage in a mouse model of arthritis. RPTPα clustered with other RPTPα and with SRC molecules in the context of actin-rich structures. A known dimerization-impairing mutation in the wedge motif (P210L/P211L) and the deletion of the D2 domain reduced RPTPα-RPTPα clustering; however, it also unexpectedly reduced RPTPα-SRC association. The same mutations also reduced recruitment of RPTPα to actin-rich structures and inhibited SRC activation and cellular migration. An antibody against the RPTPα ectodomain that prevented the clustering of RPTPα also inhibited RPTPα-SRC association and SRC activation and attenuated fibroblast migration and joint damage in arthritic mice. A catalytically inactivating RPTPα-C469S mutation protected mice from arthritis and reduced SRC activation in synovial fibroblasts. We conclude that RPTPα clustering retains it to actin-rich structures to promote SRC-mediated fibroblast migration and can be modulated through the extracellular domain.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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