Abstract
Collagen binding proteins (CBP) are hydrophobic, cell surface polypeptides, isolated by collagen affinity chromatography. Antibodies to CBPs inhibit the attachment of embryonic chicken heart fibroblasts to native type I collagen fibrils in a dose-dependent manner. The CBP antibodies also induce rounding and detachment of cells adherent to a planar substratum. This process of antibody-mediated substratum detachment resulted in a clustering of CBP and cell-associated extracellular matrix at the cell surface, and the rearrangement of filamentous actin. Other functional studies showed that cells grown within a three-dimensional gel of type I collagen cannot be immunostained at the cell surface with CBP antibodies. However, treatment of cultures with purified collagenase, unmasks immunoreactive sites and permits strong cell surface immunolabeling. This result suggests that collagen sterically blocks antibody access to CBP. Finally, we show that antibodies to CBP recognize purified avian integrin beta subunits; and that antibodies to avian integrins recognize a 100,000 Mr CBP. These data demonstrate that chicken embryonic fibroblasts possess surface polypeptides that mediate adhesion to type I collagen, and suggest that two of these proteins are related to the integrin family.
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