Abstract

Integrin adhesion receptors mediate cell–cell and cell–extracellular matrix interactions, which control cell morphology and migration, differentiation, and tissue integrity. Integrins recruit multimolecular adhesion complexes to their cytoplasmic domains, which provide structural and mechanosensitive signaling connections between the extracellular and intracellular milieux. The different functions of specific integrin heterodimers, such as α4β1 and α5β1, have been attributed to distinct signal transduction mechanisms that are initiated by selective recruitment of adhesion complex components to integrin cytoplasmic tails. Here, we report the isolation of ligand-induced adhesion complexes associated with wild-type α4β1 integrin, an activated α4β1 variant in the absence of the α cytoplasmic domain (X4C0), and a chimeric α4β1 variant with α5 leg and cytoplasmic domains (α4Pα5L), and the cataloguing of their proteomes by MS. Using hierarchical clustering and interaction network analyses, we detail the differential recruitment of proteins and highlight enrichment patterns of proteins to distinct adhesion complexes. We identify previously unreported components of integrin adhesion complexes and observe receptor-specific enrichment of molecules with previously reported links to cell migration and cell signaling processes. Furthermore, we demonstrate colocalization of MYO18A with active integrin in migrating cells. These datasets provide a resource for future studies of integrin receptor-specific signaling events.

Highlights

  • Adhesion to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and to adjacent cells is essential for a multicellular existence

  • The molecular composition of adhesion signaling complexes plays a central role in determining their function, – like other membrane receptor-associated signaling complexes – integrin adhesion complexes have been difficult to analyze by proteomic techniques due to their lability and inaccessibility

  • We have developed a methodology for the affinity isolation and mass spectrometric analysis of stabilized, ligand-induced integrin adhesion complexes [15, 16]

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Summary

Introduction

Adhesion to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and to adjacent cells is essential for a multicellular existence. In support of the observation using clustering that some tubulin-binding proteins were enriched using K562-␣4P␣5L cells (Fig. 1G), interaction www.proteomics-journal.com network analysis showed that microtubule-actin cross-linking factor 1 (MACF1, known as ACF7) was enriched using K562-␣4P␣5L cells (Fig. 2).

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