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Obstructive Lung Disease In A Never-Smoker Patient With Colon Cancer And Pulmonary Nodules Attributed To Pulmonary Neuroendocrine Tumorlets And Noncaseating Granuloma [Meeting Abstract]

Kugler, Matthias C; Brandman, Scott; Rajmane, Ravindra C
ORIGINAL:0007517
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 167533

Integrin alpha3beta1-dependent beta-catenin phosphorylation links epithelial Smad signaling to cell contacts

Kim, Young; Kugler, Matthias C; Wei, Ying; Kim, Kevin K; Li, Xiaopeng; Brumwell, Alexis N; Chapman, Harold A
Injury-initiated epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) depends on contextual signals from the extracellular matrix, suggesting a role for integrin signaling. Primary epithelial cells deficient in their prominent laminin receptor, alpha3beta1, were found to have a markedly blunted EMT response to TGF-beta1. A mechanism for this defect was explored in alpha3-null cells reconstituted with wild-type (wt) alpha3 or point mutants unable to engage laminin 5 (G163A) or epithelial cadherin (E-cadherin; H245A). After TGF-beta1 stimulation, wt epithelial cells but not cells expressing the H245A mutant internalize complexes of E-cadherin and TGF-beta1 receptors, generate phospho-Smad2 (p-Smad2)-pY654-beta-catenin complexes, and up-regulate mesenchymal target genes. Although Smad2 phosphorylation is normal, p-Smad2-pY654-beta-catenin complexes do not form in the absence of alpha3 or when alpha3beta1 is mainly engaged on laminin 5 or E-cadherin in adherens junctions, leading to attenuated EMT. These findings demonstrate that alpha3beta1 coordinates cross talk between beta-catenin and Smad signaling pathways as a function of extracellular contact cues and thereby regulates responses to TGF-beta1 activation.
PMCID:2654298
PMID: 19171760
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 789212

Epithelial cell alpha3beta1 integrin links beta-catenin and Smad signaling to promote myofibroblast formation and pulmonary fibrosis

Kim, Kevin K; Wei, Ying; Szekeres, Charles; Kugler, Matthias C; Wolters, Paul J; Hill, Marla L; Frank, James A; Brumwell, Alexis N; Wheeler, Sarah E; Kreidberg, Jordan A; Chapman, Harold A
Pulmonary fibrosis, in particular idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), results from aberrant wound healing and scarification. One population of fibroblasts involved in the fibrotic process is thought to originate from lung epithelial cells via epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Indeed, alveolar epithelial cells (AECs) undergo EMT in vivo during experimental fibrosis and ex vivo in response to TGF-beta1. As the ECM critically regulates AEC responses to TGF-beta1, we explored the role of the prominent epithelial integrin alpha3beta1 in experimental fibrosis by generating mice with lung epithelial cell-specific loss of alpha3 integrin expression. These mice had a normal acute response to bleomycin injury, but they exhibited markedly decreased accumulation of lung myofibroblasts and type I collagen and did not progress to fibrosis. Signaling through beta-catenin has been implicated in EMT; we found that in primary AECs, alpha3 integrin was required for beta-catenin phosphorylation at tyrosine residue 654 (Y654), formation of the pY654-beta-catenin/pSmad2 complex, and initiation of EMT, both in vitro and in vivo during the fibrotic phase following bleomycin injury. Finally, analysis of lung tissue from IPF patients revealed the presence of pY654-beta-catenin/pSmad2 complexes and showed accumulation of pY654-beta-catenin in myofibroblasts. These findings demonstrate epithelial integrin-dependent profibrotic crosstalk between beta-catenin and Smad signaling and support the hypothesis that EMT is an important contributor to pathologic fibrosis.
PMCID:2613463
PMID: 19104148
ISSN: 0021-9738
CID: 789192

Urokinase receptors are required for alpha 5 beta 1 integrin-mediated signaling in tumor cells

Wei, Ying; Tang, Chi-Hui; Kim, Young; Robillard, Liliane; Zhang, Feng; Kugler, Matthias C; Chapman, Harold A
Up-regulation of urokinase receptors is common during tumor progression and thought to promote invasion and metastasis. Urokinase receptors bind urokinase and a set of beta1 integrins, but it remains unclear to what degree urokinase receptor/integrin binding is important to beta1 integrin signaling. Using site-directed mutagenesis, single amino acid mutants of the urokinase receptor were identified that fail to associate with either alpha3beta1 (D262A) or alpha5beta1 (H249A) but associate normally with urokinase. To study the effects of these mutations on beta1 integrin function, endogenous urokinase receptors were first stably silenced in tumor cell lines HT1080 and H1299, and then wild type or mutant receptors were expressed. Knockdown of urokinase receptors resulted in markedly reduced fibronectin and alpha5beta1-dependent ERK activation and metalloproteinase MMP-9 expression. Re-expression of wild type or D262A mutant receptors but not the alpha5beta1 binding-deficient H249A mutant reconstituted fibronectin responses. Because urokinase receptor.alpha5beta1 complexes bind in the fibronectin heparin-binding domain (Type III 12-14) whereas alpha5beta1 primarily binds in the RGD-containing domain (Type III 7-10), signaling pathways leading to ERK and MMP-9 responses were dissected. Binding to III 7-10 led to Src/focal adhesion kinase activation, whereas binding to III 7-14 caused Rac 1 activation. Tumor cells engaging fibronectin required both Type III 7-10- and 12-14-initiated signals to activate ERK and up-regulate MMP-9. Thus urokinase receptor binding to alpha5beta1 is required for maximal responses to fibronectin and tumor cell invasion, and this operates through an enhanced Src/Rac/ERK signaling pathway.
PMID: 17145753
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 789232

Alveolar epithelial cell mesenchymal transition develops in vivo during pulmonary fibrosis and is regulated by the extracellular matrix

Kim, Kevin K; Kugler, Matthias C; Wolters, Paul J; Robillard, Liliane; Galvez, Michael G; Brumwell, Alexis N; Sheppard, Dean; Chapman, Harold A
Mechanisms leading to fibroblast accumulation during pulmonary fibrogenesis remain unclear. Although there is in vitro evidence of lung alveolar epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), whether EMT occurs within the lung is currently unknown. Biopsies from fibrotic human lungs demonstrate epithelial cells with mesenchymal features, suggesting EMT. To more definitively test the capacity of alveolar epithelial cells for EMT, mice expressing beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) exclusively in lung epithelial cells were generated, and their fates were followed in an established model of pulmonary fibrosis, overexpression of active TGF-beta1. beta-gal-positive cells expressing mesenchymal markers accumulated within 3 weeks of in vivo TGF-beta1 expression. The increase in vimentin-positive cells within injured lungs was nearly all beta-gal-positive, indicating epithelial cells as the main source of mesenchymal expansion in this model. Ex vivo, primary alveolar epithelial cells cultured on provisional matrix components, fibronectin or fibrin, undergo robust EMT via integrin-dependent activation of endogenous latent TGF-beta1. In contrast, primary cells cultured on laminin/collagen mixtures do not activate the TGF-beta1 pathway and, if exposed to active TGF-beta1, undergo apoptosis rather than EMT. These data reveal alveolar epithelial cells as progenitors for fibroblasts in vivo and implicate the provisional extracellular matrix as a key regulator of epithelial transdifferentiation during fibrogenesis.
PMCID:1551904
PMID: 16924102
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 789242

Regulation of alpha5beta1 integrin conformation and function by urokinase receptor binding

Wei, Ying; Czekay, Ralf-Peter; Robillard, Liliane; Kugler, Matthias C; Zhang, Feng; Kim, Kevin K; Xiong, Jian-Ping; Humphries, Martin J; Chapman, Harold A
Urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptors (uPARs), up-regulated during tumor progression, associate with beta1 integrins, localizing urokinase to sites of cell attachment. Binding of uPAR to the beta-propeller of alpha3beta1 empowers vitronectin adhesion by this integrin. How uPAR modifies other beta1 integrins remains unknown. Using recombinant proteins, we found uPAR directly binds alpha5beta1 and rather than blocking, renders fibronectin (Fn) binding by alpha5beta1 Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) resistant. This resulted from RGD-independent binding of alpha5beta1-uPAR to Fn type III repeats 12-15 in addition to type III repeats 9-11 bound by alpha5beta1. Suppression of endogenous uPAR by small interfering RNA in tumor cells promoted weaker, RGD-sensitive Fn adhesion and altered overall alpha5beta1 conformation. A beta1 peptide (res 224NLDSPEGGF232) that models near the known alpha-chain uPAR-binding region, or a beta1-chain Ser227Ala point mutation, abrogated effects of uPAR on alpha5beta1. Direct binding and regulation of alpha5beta1 by uPAR implies a modified "bent" integrin conformation can function in an alternative activation state with this and possibly other cis-acting membrane ligands.
PMCID:2171741
PMID: 15684035
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 789252

Isolation and characterization of Rac1 pseudogenes (psi1Rac1-psi4Rac1) in the human genome

Kugler, Matthias Christian; Gerhard, Markus; Schnelzer, Andreas; Borzym, Katja; Reinhardt, Richard; Schmitt, Manfred; Lengyel, Ernst
Ras-related C3 toxin substrate 1 (Rac1) is a small Rho-GTPase with important functions in fundamental cellular processes such as cytoskeleton rearrangements, signal transduction, cell cycle progression and malignant transformation. Using Rac1 primer, we identified a 5.5-kb DNA sequence on chromosome 4 (Chr. 4) in the human genome, containing the intronless protein coding sequence of Rac1. Sequence analysis revealed features of a processed pseudogene, which we named psi1Rac1, that could be detected by Southern blot and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on genomic DNA. A psi1Rac1 pseudogene transcript was not detected by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), nor had the psi1Rac1 promoter any transcriptional activity. In addition, three other intronless pseudogenes of Rac1 on chromosomes 4, 13 and X were identified (psi1Rac1-psi4Rac1) sharing an 86-96% sequence similarity with Rac1. Neither RT-PCR with pseudogene specific restriction enzymes, nor the sequencing of 130 cDNA clones from benign and malignant breast tissue and cell lines, detected the transcription of any of the Rac1 pseudogenes (psi2Rac1-psi4Rac1). Existence of Rac1 pseudogenes should be taken into consideration when analyzing genomic alterations of the human Rac1 gene.
PMID: 15474301
ISSN: 0378-1119
CID: 789262

Distinct ligand binding sites in integrin alpha3beta1 regulate matrix adhesion and cell-cell contact

Zhang, Feng; Tom, Clifford C; Kugler, Matthias C; Ching, Tsui-Ting; Kreidberg, Jordan A; Wei, Ying; Chapman, Harold A
The integrin alpha3beta1 mediates cellular adhesion to the matrix ligand laminin-5. A second integrin ligand, the urokinase receptor (uPAR), associates with alpha3beta1 via a surface loop within the alpha3 beta-propeller (residues 242-246) but outside the laminin binding region, suggesting that uPAR-integrin interactions could signal differently from matrix engagement. To explore this, alpha3-/- epithelial cells were reconstituted with wild-type (wt) alpha3 or alpha3 with Ala mutations within the uPAR-interacting loop (H245A or R244A). Wt or mutant-bearing cells showed comparable expression and adhesion to laminin-5. Cells expressing wt alpha3 and uPAR dissociated in culture, with increased Src activity, up-regulation of SLUG, and down-regulation of E-cadherin and gamma-catenin. Src kinase inhibition or expression of Src 1-251 restored the epithelial phenotype. The H245A and R244A mutants were unaffected by coexpression of uPAR. We conclude that alpha3beta1 regulates both cell-cell contact and matrix adhesion, but through distinct protein interaction sites within its beta-propeller. These studies reveal an integrin- and Src-dependent pathway for SLUG expression and mesenchymal transition.
PMCID:2173444
PMID: 14557254
ISSN: 0021-9525
CID: 789202

Urokinase receptor and integrin interactions

Kugler, Matthias C; Wei, Ying; Chapman, Harold A
Urokinase receptors (uPAR) were initially thought to function simply as a mechanism to concentrate the urokinase/plasmin system toward the cell surface. However, extensive evidence has accumulated that this glycolipid-anchored receptor also functions in both the adhesive and signaling pathways of many migratory cells. Mechanisms by which uPAR exercises these functions involve complexing with other membrane proteins for signal transduction. One set of functional partners for uPAR on the cell surface are integrins. Recent studies point to important structural features of uPAR:integrin interactions, indicating uPAR to be a cis-acting integrin ligand. In vivo data reveal altered integrin function and cell migration when uPAR:integrin interactions are impaired. Together these observations support the idea that uPAR:integrin interactions may be a focal point of intervention in pathobiology where integrin function is crucial, such as tumor metastasis.
PMID: 12871068
ISSN: 1381-6128
CID: 789272

Die Bedeutung intrazellulaerer Signalwege in gynkologischen Tumoren-Von der Grundlagenforschung zur Therapie (Importance of Intracellular Signaling Pathways in Gynecologic Malignancies - from Basic Science to Therapy)

Lengyel, E; Kugler, MC; Linnemann, T
ORIGINAL:0008668
ISSN: 0721-8249
CID: 789662