Abstract

Cells in mechanically active tissues undergo constant plasma membrane damage that must be repaired to allow survival. To identify wound-associated proteins, a cell-impermeant, thiol-reactive biotinylation reagent was used to label and subsequently isolate intracellular proteins that become exposed on the surface of cultured cells after plasma membrane damage induced by scraping from substratum or crushing with glass beads. Scrape-damaged cells survived injury and were capable of forming viable colonies. Proteins that were exposed to the cell surface were degraded or internalized a few seconds to several minutes after damage, except for vimentin, which was detectable on the cell surface for at least an hour after injury. Seven major biotinylated protein bands were identified on SDS-PAGE gels. Mass spectrometric studies identified cytoskeletal proteins (caldesmon-1 and vimentin), endoplasmic reticulum proteins (ERp57, ERp5, and HSP47), and nuclear proteins (lamin C, heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein F, and nucleophosmin-1) as major proteins exposed after injury. Although caldesmon was a major wound-associated protein in calpain small subunit knock-out fibroblasts, it was rapidly degraded in wild-type cells, probably by calpains. Lamin C exposure after wounding was most likely the consequence of nuclear envelope damage. These studies document major intracellular proteins associated with the cell surface of reversibly damaged somatic cells. The studies also show that externalization of some proteins reported to have physiologic or pathologic roles on the cell surface can occur in cells undergoing plasma membrane damage and subsequent repair.

Highlights

  • Cells in tissues of multicellular organisms are often subjected to mechanical stresses that result in PM2 damage (1– 4)

  • Cells that had attached to the culture dish displayed a prominent streptavidin-HRP-positive band at 57 kDa (Fig. 1A, lane L, asterisk) that co-migrated with vimentin immunoreactivity, confirming previous studies that identified this intermediate filament protein as a major cytoplasmic protein detected at membrane injury sites (9)

  • Among the major intracellular proteins associated with PM damage (Table 1), only annexin A1 had been previously shown to participate in repair (8)

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Summary

A Plasma Membrane Wound Proteome

REVERSIBLE EXTERNALIZATION OF INTRACELLULAR PROTEINS FOLLOWING REPARABLE MECHANICAL DAMAGE Ronald L. Alerts: When this article is cited When a correction for this article is posted. This article cites 49 references, 20 of which can be accessed free at http://www.jbc.org/content/285/47/36597.full.html#ref-list-1

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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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