Abstract

Laminin, the major glycoprotein of basement membranes, actively supports cell migration in development, tissue repair, tumor growth, metastasis, and other pathological processes. Previously we have shown that the locomotion of murine skeletal myoblasts is specifically and significantly enhanced on laminin but not on other matrix proteins. One of the major laminin receptors of myoblasts is the alpha 7 beta 1 integrin, which was first described in human MeWo melanoma cells and Rugli glioblastoma cells. In order to investigate and directly test the role of the alpha 7 integrin in cell migration on laminin, we expressed the murine alpha 7B splice variant in human 293 kidney cells and 530 melanoma cells which cannot migrate on laminin and are devoid of endogenous alpha 7. Northern blotting of the transfected cells showed that the alpha 7 mRNA was expressed efficiently, and the protein was detected on the cell surface by immunofluorescence and fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis. Cell motility measurements by computer-assisted time-lapse videomicroscopy of the alpha 7-transfected cells revealed an 8-10-fold increase in motility on laminin-1 and its E8 fragment, but not on fibronectin. Mock-transfected cells did not migrate significantly of alpha 7-transfected 293 cells through laminin-coated filters in a Boyden chamber assay was significantly enhanced in comparison to mock transfected cells. These findings prove that alpha 7 integrin expression confers a gain of function-motile phenotype to immobile cells and may be responsible for transduction of the laminin-induced cell motility.

Highlights

  • Cells utilize extracellular matrix to migrate during embryonic development, tissue regeneration, and invasion of tissues in inflammation and tumor metastasis

  • The major laminin-binding integrin isolated from murine skeletal myoblasts is ␣7␤1 [11, 20], which exists in three cytoplasmic and two extracellular splice variants [21, 22]

  • Immunofluorescence staining with an affinity-purified polyclonal antibody raised against the recombinant extracellular domain of ␣72 revealed high levels of surface fluorescence on 35% of the transfected 293 cells, a result which was confirmed by fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis (Fig. 3 and Table I)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cells utilize extracellular matrix to migrate during embryonic development, tissue regeneration, and invasion of tissues in inflammation and tumor metastasis (reviewed in Ref. 1). While much has been published on the involvement of these receptors in cell adhesion, the role of the integrins in cell migration on laminin remains to be investigated.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call