4.8 Article

Pleiotrophin disrupts calcium-dependent homophilic cell-cell adhesion and initiates an epithelial-mesenchymal transition

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0607299103

Keywords

receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase beta/xi; glioblastoma; cadherin; beta-catenin; cytoskeleton

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01 CA066029, CA66029, CA88440] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [2 T32 DK007022-26, T32 DK007022] Funding Source: Medline

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Regulation of the levels of tyrosine phosphorylation is essential to maintain the functions of proteins in different signaling pathways and other cellular systems, but how the steady-state levels of tyrosine phosphorylation are coordinated in different cellular systems to initiate complex cellular functions remains a formidable challenge. The receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase (RPTP)beta/xi is a transmembrane tyrosine phosphatase whose substrates include proteins important in intracellular and transmembrane protein-signaling pathways, cytoskeletal structure, cell-cell adhesion, endocytosis, and chromatin remodeling. Pleiotrophin (PTN the protein and Ptn the gene) is a ligand for RPTP beta/xi: PTN inactivates RIPTP beta/xi, leaving unchecked the continued endogenous activity of tyrosine kinases that increase phosphorylation of the substrates of RPTP beta/xi at sites dephosphorylated by RPTP beta/xi in cells not stimulated by PTN. Thus, through the regulation of the tyrosine phosphatase activity of RPTP beta/xi the PTN/RIPTP beta/xi signaling pathway coordinately regulates the levels of tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins in many cellular systems. We now demonstrate that PTN disrupts cytoskeletal protein complexes, ablates calcium-dependent homophilic cell-cell adhesion, stimulates ubiquitination and degradation of N-cadherin, reorganizes the actin cytoskeleton, and induces a morphological epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in PTN-stimulated U373 cells. The data suggest that increased tyrosine phosphorylation of the different substrates of RPTP beta/xi in PTN-stimulated cells alone is sufficient to coordinately stimulate the different functions needed for an EMT; it is possible that PTN initiates an EMT in cells at sites where PTN is expressed in development and in malignant cells that inappropriately express Ptn.

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