β1-Integrin Cytoplasmic Subdomains Involved in Dominant Negative Function

Author:

Retta S. Francesco12,Balzac Fiorella1,Ferraris Piercarlo1,Belkin Alexey M.3,Fässler Reinhard4,Humphries Martin J.5,De Leo Giacomo2,Silengo Lorenzo1,Tarone Guido1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, Biology, and Medical Chemistry, University of Torino, 10126 Torino, Italy;

2. Institute of Biology, University of Palermo, 90133 Palermo, Italy;

3. Department of Biochemistry, American Red Cross, Rockville, MD 20855;

4. Department of Experimental Pathology, Lund University S-22285 Lund, Sweden; and

5. School of Biological Sciences, University of Manchester, M13 9PT Manchester, United Kingdom

Abstract

The β1-integrin cytoplasmic domain consists of a membrane proximal subdomain common to the four known isoforms (“common” region) and a distal subdomain specific for each isoform (“variable” region). To investigate in detail the role of these subdomains in integrin-dependent cellular functions, we used β1A and β1B isoforms as well as four mutants lacking the entire cytoplasmic domain (β1TR), the variable region (β1COM), or the common region (β1ΔCOM-B and β1ΔCOM-A). By expressing these constructs in Chinese hamster ovary and β1 integrin-deficient GD25 cells (Wennerberg et al., J Cell Biol132, 227–238, 1996), we show that β1B, β1COM, β1ΔCOM-B, and β1ΔCOM-A molecules are unable to support efficient cell adhesion to matrix proteins. On exposure to Mn++ ions, however, β1B, but none of the mutants, can mediate cell adhesion, indicating specific functional properties of this isoform. Analysis of adhesive functions of transfected cells shows that β1B interferes in a dominant negative manner with β1A and β3/β5 integrins in cell spreading, focal adhesion formation, focal adhesion kinase tyrosine phosphorylation, and fibronectin matrix assembly. None of the β1 mutants tested shows this property, indicating that the dominant negative effect depends on the specific combination of common and B subdomains, rather than from the absence of the A subdomain in the β1B isoform.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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