Abstract

Osteopontin (OPN) is a multifunctional phosphorylated protein containing the integrin binding sequence Arg-Gly-Asp through which it interacts with several integrin receptors, such as the α(V)β(3)-integrin. OPN exists in many different isoforms differing in phosphorylation status that are likely to interact differently with integrins. The C-terminal region of OPN is particularly well conserved among mammalian species, which suggests an important functional role of this region. In this study, we show that modification of the extreme C terminus of OPN plays an important regulatory role for the interaction with the α(V)β(3)-integrin. It is demonstrated that highly phosphorylated OPN has a much reduced capability to promote cell adhesion via the α(V)β(3)-integrin compared with lesser phosphorylated forms. The cell attachment promoted by highly phosphorylated OPN could be greatly increased by both dephosphorylation and proteolytic removal of the C terminus. Using recombinantly expressed OPN containing a tag in the N or C terminus, it is shown that a modification in the C-terminal part significantly reduces the adhesion of cells to OPN via the α(V)β(3)-integrin, whereas modification of the N terminus does not influence the binding. The inhibited binding of the α(V)β(3)-integrin to OPN could be restored by proteolytic removal of the C terminus by thrombin and plasmin. These data illustrate a novel mechanism regulating the interaction of OPN and the α(V)β(3)-integrin by modification of the highly conserved C-terminal region of the protein.

Highlights

  • Ible conformation largely devoid of secondary structure [8]

  • OPN is extensively altered through posttranslational modifications, such as phosphorylation, glycosylation, sulfation, and proteolytic processing which significantly influence the function of the protein [5, 13, 17]

  • In the present study we show that phosphorylation and other modification of the highly conserved C-terminal region of OPN inhibits its interaction with the ␣V␤3-integrin

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Cell Lines and Culture—The MDA-MB-435 human melanoma cell line For generation of a C-terminally tagged fragment consisting of residues 1–228 (rOPN-228C), human cDNA was amplified by PCR using the same forward primer as above and the reverse primer 5Ј-GATCACGGAAGCTTTCTGGACTGCTTGTGGCTGTG-3Ј, which contained a HindIII restriction site (underlined) and the residues HSHKQSR228 of OPN. The amplified fragments were cloned into the BamHI/HindIII sites of pcDNA3.1/Myc-His(-)A (Invitrogen) These constructs encoded OPN residues 1–298 (full-length) and the fragment consisting of residues 1–228, both followed immediately by residues KLGP, the myc epitope (EQKLISEEDL), residues NSAVD and H6, increasing the molecular mass by 2.9 kDa. For generation of N-terminally tagged full-length OPN, the residues 1–298 of OPN (without the signal peptide) were amplified by PCR using the forward primer 5Ј-GCTAGCAGAGGATCGCATCACCATCACCATCACGGGGGGATACCAGTTAAACAGGCTGATTCTGG-3Ј, which include an NheI restriction site (underlined), a H6 tag (italic), and the first 8 residues of the secreted OPN sequence (I1PVKQADS). Difference was considered to be statistically significant at p Ͻ 0.05

RESULTS
Mass determination of native and recombinant OPNs
Carbohydrate composition
DISCUSSION
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