4.7 Article

The RGD motif in fibronectin is essential for development but dispensable for fibril assembly

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue 1, Pages 167-178

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200703021

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Fibronectin (FN) is secreted as a disulfide-bonded FN dimer. Each subunit contains three types of repeating modules: FN-I, FN-II, and FN-III. The interactions of alpha 5 beta 1 or alpha v integrins with the RGD motif of FN-III repeat 10 (FN-III10) are considered an essential step in the assembly of FN fibrils. To test this hypothesis in vivo, we replaced the RGD motif with the inactive RGE in mice. FN-RGE homozygous embryos die at embryonic day 10 with shortened posterior trunk, absent tail bud-derived somites, and severe vascular defects resembling the phenotype of alpha 5 integrin-deficient mice. Surprisingly, the absence of a functional RGD motif in FN did not compromise assembly of an FN matrix in mutant embryos or on mutant cells. Matrix assembly assays and solid-phase binding assays reveal that alpha v beta 3 integrin assembles FN-RGE by binding an isoDGR motif in FN-I-5,which is generated by the nonenzymatic rearrangement of asparagines (N) into an iso-aspartate (iso-D). Our findings demonstrate that FIN contains a novel motif for integrin binding and fibril formation whose activity is controlled by amino acid modification.

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