Abstract

The adhesion G-protein-coupled receptor CD97/ADGRE5 is present in adherens junctions of human normal intestinal cells and upregulated in colorectal carcinomas. Here, we examined whether CD97 directly interacts with junctional proteins in normal and malignant colorectal tissue. We identified an association of CD97 with β-catenin using a proximity ligation assay and confirmed the interaction between both endogenous proteins at the biochemical level by co-immunoprecipitation in human and mouse tissues and cell lines. Glutathione S-transferase-pulldown revealed that CD97 binds β-catenin through its seven-span transmembrane/intracellular domain(s). To study tumor-associated changes in the interaction of CD97 and β-catenin in situ, we quantified and correlated both proteins at the membrane, and in the cytoplasm and nuclei of colorectal carcinomas and their corresponding normal tissues (n = 111). In normal colon, membranous levels of CD97 and β-catenin correlated strongly (p < 0.0001). To some degree both molecules disappeared in carcinomas simultaneously from the membrane of tumor cells (p = 0.017). CD97 accumulated in the cytoplasm, whereas β-catenin emerged in the cytoplasm and nuclei. CD97 and β-catenin levels in the cytoplasm correlated well (p < 0.0001). Irrespective of their subcellular localization, interaction of CD97 with β-catenin in tumor cells was also restricted to the cell contacts. Accordingly, CD97 did not regulate β-catenin-dependent TCF-mediated transcriptional activity. In summary, while CD97 and β-catenin interact in adherens junctions, their interaction is lost and both molecules follow different functional paths inside tumor cells.

Highlights

  • Epithelial cells stick together by lateral cell contacts in which molecules, bridging the intercellular space, are anchored by connecting proteins to the cytoskeleton, ensuring tightening, mechanical stability, paracellular transport, and signal transduction [1]

  • Β-catenin emerged in the cytoplasm and nuclei, whereas CD97 accumulated in the cytoplasm of tumor cells

  • To detect CD97 interaction with junctional proteins, a Proximity Ligation Assay (PLA) was performed in human colorectal HT-29/B6 (Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Epithelial cells stick together by lateral cell contacts in which molecules, bridging the intercellular space, are anchored by connecting proteins to the cytoskeleton, ensuring tightening, mechanical stability, paracellular transport, and signal transduction [1]. CD97/ADGRE5 Interacts With β-Catenin in Adherens Junctions and translocate into or accumulate in the cytoplasm and/or nuclei [2,3,4]. Their relocation implies changes in the function of junctional proteins, caused by new molecular interactions. In adherens junctions it links the transmembrane receptor E-cadherin (Ecad), which mediates strong homotypic adhesion between neighboring cells, via connecting proteins to the actin cytoskeleton [5]. Accumulated in the nucleus, β-catenin binds to TCF/ LEF transcription factors, activating genes driving colorectal carcinogenesis [6]

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