Abstract

The alpha6beta4 integrin is a laminin 332 (LN332) receptor central to the formation of hemidesmosomes in epithelial layers. However, the integrin becomes phosphorylated by keratinocytes responding to epidermal growth factor in skin wounds or by squamous cell carcinomas that overexpress/hyperactivate the tyrosine kinase ErbB2, epidermal growth factor receptor, or c-Met. We show here that the beta4-dependent signaling in A431 human squamous carcinoma cells is dependent on the syndecan family of matrix receptors. Yeast two-hybrid analysis identifies an interaction within the distal third (amino acids 1473-1752) of the beta4 cytoplasmic domain and the conserved C2 region of the syndecan cytoplasmic domain. Via its C2 region, Sdc1 forms a complex with the alpha6beta4 integrin along with the receptor tyrosine kinase ErbB2 and the cytoplasmic kinase Fyn in A431 cells. Engagement of LN332 or clustering of the alpha6beta4 integrin with integrin-specific antibodies causes phosphorylation of ErbB2, Fyn, and the beta4 subunit as well as activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and Akt and their assimilation into this complex. This leads to phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-dependent cell spreading and Akt-dependent protection from apoptosis. This is disrupted by RNA interference silencing of Sdc1 but can be rescued by mouse Sdc1 or Sdc4 but not by syndecan mutants lacking their C-terminal C2 region. This disruption does not prevent the phosphorylation of ErbB2 or Fyn but blocks the Fyn-mediated phosphorylation of the beta4 tail. We propose that syndecans engage the distal region of the beta4 cytoplasmic domain and bring it to the plasma membrane, where it can be acted upon by Src family kinases.

Highlights

  • The ␣6␤4 integrin is a laminin 332 (LN332,2 known as LN5 or kalinin) receptor that forms hemidesmosomes in epithelial cells

  • Conducting the screen using the cytoplasmic domain of syndecan 1 (Sdc1) in the bait vector isolated a keratinocyte-derived cDNA clone encoding a partial fragment of the ␤4 integrin cytoplasmic domain, identifying the ␣6␤4 integrin as a potential syndecan binding partner

  • We expressed Sdc1 cytoplasmic domain truncations in which the C2 region, C1 region, or both C1 and C2 regions were deleted. This showed that the interaction depends on the C2 region, which is conserved in the cytoplasmic domains of all four syndecans and has previously been described as a PDZ domain binding motif [45, 46]

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Summary

Introduction

The ␣6␤4 integrin is a laminin 332 (LN332,2 known as LN5 or kalinin) receptor that forms hemidesmosomes in epithelial cells (reviewed in Refs. 1– 4). Silencing of Sdc1 expression blocks phosphorylation of the ␤4 subunit but does not affect the activation of ErbB2 or Fyn upstream of the integrin.

Results
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