4.7 Article

Inhibition of migration and invasion of carcinoma cells by urokinase-derived antagonists of αvβ5 integrin activation

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 124, Issue 2, Pages 316-325

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.23933

Keywords

uPA phosphorylation; cell migration inhibitors; alpha v beta 5 antagonist; cell cytoskeleton; in vivo carcinoma invasion

Categories

Funding

  1. European Union Framework Programme 6 [LSHC-CT-2003-503297]
  2. USPHS Research [CA-40578]
  3. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC)
  4. Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation

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We previously showed that, while binding to urokinase receptor (uPAR) through its growth factor domain (GFD, residues 1-49), urokinase (uPA) can engage alpha v beta 5 integrin through an internal domain (CP, residues 132-158). This novel uPA/alpha v beta 5 interaction promotes cytoskeletal rearrangements and directional cell migration (Franco et al., J Cell Sci 2006;119:3424-34). We now show that treatment of cells with phosphomimic uPA (uPA(138E/303E), serine 138 and 303 substituted with glutamic acid) strongly inhibits matrix-induced cell migration. Unlike uPA, binding of uPA(138E/303E) to cell surface did not induce F-actin enriched protruding structures and caused a 5-fold reduction in cell translocation speed, as determined by video tracking of living cells. Inhibition of migration was found to be independent of uPAR, since uPA variants lacking the GFD domain, but carrying the relevant Ser to Glu substitutions were as effective inhibitor as uPA(138E/303E). Through several independent approaches, we established that the phosphomimics specifically bind to alpha v beta 5 integrin through the CP region carrying the S138E mutation. This interaction blocks integrin activation, as determined by a decreased affinity of alpha v beta 5 to vitronectin and a reduced association of the beta 5 cytoplasmic tail with talin. Finally, stable expression of uPA(138E/303E) in human squamous carcinoma cells prevented tumor cell invasion in vivo. Thus, when expressed in cancer cells, the inhibitory phosphomimic effect was dominant over the effect of endogenously produced uPA. These results shed light on the regulation of cell migration by uPA phosphorylation and provide a realistic opportunity for a novel antiinvasive/metastatic therapeutic intervention. (C) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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