Abstract

Syndecans comprise a major family of cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs). Syndecans bind and modulate a wide variety of biological molecules through their heparan sulfate (HS) moiety. Although all syndecans contain the ligand binding HS chains, they likely perform specific functions in vivo because their temporal and spatial expression patterns are different. However, how syndecan expression is regulated has yet to be clearly defined. In this study, we examined how syndecan-1 expression is regulated in epithelial cells. Our results showed that among several bioactive agents tested, only forskolin and three isoforms of TGFbeta (TGFbeta1-TGFbeta3) significantly induced syndecan-1, but not syndecan-4, expression on various epithelial cells. Steady-state syndecan-1 mRNA was not increased by TGFbeta treatment and cycloheximide did not inhibit syndecan-1 induction by TGFbeta, indicating that TGFbeta induces syndecan-1 in a post-translational manner. However, TGFbeta induction of syndecan-1 was inhibited by transient expression of a dominant-negative construct of protein kinase A (PKA) and by specific inhibitors of PKA. Further (i) syndecan-1 cytoplasmic domains were Ser-phosphorylated when cells were treated with TGFbeta and this was inhibited by a PKA inhibitor, (ii) PKA was co-immunoprecipitated from cell lysates by anti-syndecan-1 antibodies, (iii) PKA phosphorylated recombinant syndecan-1 cytoplasmic domains in vitro, and (iv) expression of a syndecan-1 construct with its invariant Ser(286) replaced with a Gly was not induced by TGFbeta. Together, these findings define a regulatory mechanism where TGFbeta signals through PKA to phosphorylate the syndecan-1 cytoplasmic domain and increases syndecan-1 expression on epithelial cells.

Highlights

  • Syndecans bind and regulate a wide variety of soluble and insoluble ligands, such as growth factors, extracellular matrix (ECM) components, and chemokines, through their heparan sulfate (HS) chains (1, 2, 4, 5)

  • Induction of syndecan-1 by TGF␤ was inhibited by transfection of a dominantnegative construct of protein kinase A (PKA) and by specific inhibitors of PKA

  • Because epithelial cells express both p55 and p75 TNF␣ receptors (27) and proliferate in response to FGF-2 (28), these findings suggest that downstream signaling components that are essential in the regulation of syndecan-1 expression by TNF␣ and FGF-2 are lacking in epithelial cells

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Summary

Introduction

Syndecans bind and regulate a wide variety of soluble and insoluble ligands, such as growth factors, extracellular matrix (ECM) components, and chemokines, through their HS chains (1, 2, 4, 5). Our results showed that the syndecan-1 cytoplasmic domain is Ser-phosphorylated by PKA when epithelial cells are treated with TGF␤. These data support a regulatory mechanism in which TGF␤, PKA, and the syndecan-1 cytoplasmic domain coordinate to induce cell surface expression of syndecan-1 in epithelial cells.

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