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Processing of Laminin-5 and its Physiological Consequences: Role of Plasmin and Tissue-type Plasminogen Activator.

journal contribution
posted on 2022-09-28, 00:00 authored by J C Jones, L E Goldfinger, Sharon StackSharon Stack
The laminin-5 component of the extracellular matrices of certain cultured cells such as the rat epithelial cell line 804G and the human breast epithelial cell MCF-10A is capable of nucleating assembly of cell- matrix adhesive devices called hemidesmosomes when other cells are plated upon them. These matrices also impede cell motility. In contrast,cells plated onto the laminin-5-rich matrices of pp126 epithelial cells fail to assemble hemidesmosomes and are motile. To understand these contradictory phenomena,we have compared the forms of heterotrimeric laminin-5 secreted by 804G and MCF-10A cells with those secreted by pp126 cells,using a panel of laminin-5 subunit-specific antibodies. The alpha3 subunit of laminin-5 secreted by pp126 cells migrates at 190 kD,whereas that secreted by 804G and MCF-10A cells migrates at 160 kD. The pp126 cell 190-kD alpha3 chain of laminin-5 can be specifically proteolyzed by plasmin to a 160-kD species at enzyme concentrations that do not apparently effect the laminin-5 beta and gamma chains. After plasmin treatment,pp126 cell laminin-5 not only impedes cell motility but also becomes competent to nucleate assembly of hemidesmosomes. The possibility that plasmin may play an important role in processing laminin-5 subunits is supported by immunofluorescence analyses that demonstrate colocalization of laminin-5 and plasminogen in the extracellular matrix of MCF-10A and pp126 cells. Whereas tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA),which converts plasminogen to plasmin,codistributes with laminin-5 in MCF-10A matrix,tPA is not present in pp126 extracellular matrix. Treatment of pp126 laminin-5-rich extracellular matrix with exogenous tPA results in proteolysis of the laminin-5 alpha3 chain from 190 to 160 kD. In addition,plasminogen and tPA bind laminin-5 in vitro. In summary,we provide evidence that laminin-5 is a multifunctional protein that can act under certain circumstances as a motility and at other times as an adhesive factor. In cells in culture,this functional conversion appears dependent upon and is regulated by tPA and plasminogen.

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2022-09-29

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  • English

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Journal of Cell Biology

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