Abstract
Adhesion of monocytes to the extracellular matrix is mediated by a direct high affinity interaction between cell-surface urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) receptor (uPAR) and the extracellular matrix protein vitronectin. We demonstrate a tight connection between uPA-regulated uPAR oligomerization and high affinity binding to immobilized vitronectin. We find that binding of soluble uPAR (suPAR) to immobilized vitronectin is strictly ligand-dependent with a linear relationship between the observed binding and the concentration of ligand added. Nevertheless, a comparison of experimentally obtained binding curves to those generated using a simple equilibrium model suggests that the high affinity vitronectin-binding pro-uPA.suPAR complex contains two molecules of suPAR. In co-immunoprecipitation experiments, using different epitope-tagged suPAR molecules, suPAR/suPAR co-immunoprecipitation displayed a similar uPA dose dependence as that observed for vitronectin binding, demonstrating that the high affinity vitronectin-binding complex indeed contains oligomeric suPAR. Structurally, the kringle domain of uPA was found to be critical for the formation of the vitronectin-binding competent complex because the amino-terminal fragment, but not the growth factor-like domain, behaved as a full-length uPA. Our data represent the first demonstration of functional, ligand-induced uPAR oligomerization having extensive implications for glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored receptors in general, and for the biology of the uPA/uPAR system in particular.
Highlights
Cell migration and invasion are important processes in many patho/physiological conditions such as tumor invasion, angiogenesis, and inflammation
We demonstrate a tight connection between urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA)-regulated uPAR oligomerization and high affinity binding to immobilized vitronectin
Extracellular proteolysis is controlled by the production of plasmin that is generated by plasminogen activators, mainly urokinase1 (1), which binds to a specific membrane receptor, uPAR
Summary
Cell migration and invasion are important processes in many patho/physiological conditions such as tumor invasion, angiogenesis, and inflammation. A comparison of experimentally obtained binding curves to those generated using a simple equilibrium model suggests that the high affinity vitronectin-binding pro-uPA1⁄7suPAR complex contains two molecules of suPAR.
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