An Uncleavable uPAR Mutant Allows Dissection of Signaling Pathways in uPA-dependent Cell Migration

Author:

Mazzieri Roberta1,D'Alessio Silvia1,Kenmoe Richard Kamgang1,Ossowski Liliana2,Blasi Francesco13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Biology and Functional Genomics, Università Vita Salute San Raffaele and S. Raffaele Scientific Institute, 20132 Milan, Italy

2. Division of Hematology/Oncology, Department of Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 11029

3. FIRC Institute of Molecular Oncology, 20116 Milan, Italy

Abstract

Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) binding to uPAR induces migration, adhesion, and proliferation through multiple interactions with G proteins-coupled receptor FPRL1, integrins, or the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor (EGFR). At least two forms of uPAR are present on the cell surface: full-length and cleaved uPAR, each specifically interacting with one or more transmembrane proteins. The connection between these interactions and the effects on the signaling pathways activation is not clear. We have exploited an uPAR mutant (hcr, human cleavage resistant) to dissect the pathways involved in uPA-induced cell migration. This mutant is not cleaved by proteases, is glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchored, and binds uPA with a normal Kd. Both wild-type (wt) and hcr-uPAR are able to mediate uPA-induced migration, are constitutively associated with the EGFR, and associate with α3β1 integrin upon uPA binding. However, they engage different pathways in response to uPA. wt-uPAR requires both integrins and FPRL1 to mediate uPA-induced migration, and association of wt-uPAR to α3β1 results in uPAR cleavage and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activation. On the contrary, hcr-uPAR does not activate ERK and does not engage FPRL1 or any other G protein-coupled receptor, but it activates an alternative pathway initiated by the formation of a triple complex (uPAR-α3β1-EGFR) and resulting in the autotyrosine phosphorylation of EGFR.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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