Abstract

Pleiotrophin (PTN) is a secreted growth factor that induces neurite outgrowth and is mitogenic for fibroblasts, epithelial, and endothelial cells. During tumor growth PTN can serve as an angiogenic factor and drive tumor invasion and metastasis. To identify a receptor for PTN, we panned a phage display human cDNA library against immobilized PTN protein as a bait. From this we isolated a phage insert that was homologous to an amino acid sequence stretch in the extracellular domain (ECD) of the orphan receptor tyrosine kinase anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK). In parallel with PTN, ALK is highly expressed during perinatal development of the nervous system and down-modulated in the adult. Here we show in cell-free assays as well as in radioligand receptor binding studies in intact cells that PTN binds to the ALK ECD with an apparent Kd of 32 +/- 9 pm. This receptor binding is inhibited by an excess of PTN, by the ALK ECD, and by anti-PTN and anti-ECD antibodies. PTN added to ALK-expressing cells induces phosphorylation of both ALK and of the downstream effector molecules IRS-1, Shc, phospholipase C-gamma, and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. Furthermore, the growth stimulatory effect of PTN on different cell lines in culture coincides with the endogenous expression of ALK mRNA, and the effect of PTN is enhanced by ALK overexpression. From this we conclude that ALK is a receptor that transduces PTN-mediated signals and propose that the PTN-ALK axis can play a significant role during development and during disease processes.

Highlights

  • Polypeptide growth factors induce their effects by interacting with cell surface receptors

  • Several rounds of panning against purified, biologically active PTN resulted in the isolation of a phage cDNA insert that coded for a peptide sequence homologous to a region in the extracellular domain (ECD) of the orphan tyrosine kinase receptor anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)

  • Our current studies provide evidence that PTN is a ligand for the orphan receptor ALK

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Summary

Introduction

Polypeptide growth factors induce their effects by interacting with cell surface receptors These receptors are composed of an extracellular ligand-binding domain (ECD), a sin-. We panned a human fetal brain cDNA phage display library over several rounds against purified PTN that had been tested for biological activity [15]. From this we isolated a phage insert homologous to an amino acid sequence stretch in the ECD of the receptor tyrosine kinase anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), a recently described orphan receptor with an apparent molecular mass of. Similar to PTN, ALK is highly expressed during perinatal development of the nervous system and downmodulated in the adult [3, 22, 23]

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