4.6 Article

Laminin-10/11 and fibronectin differentially regulate integrin-dependent rho and rac activation via p130Cas-CrkII-DOCK180 pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 276, Issue 29, Pages 27090-27097

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M102284200

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The alpha (5) chain-containing laminin isoforms, laminins-10 and -11 (laminin-10/11), are the major components of the basement membrane, having potent cell-adhesive activity. Ne examined the cell-adhesive and integrin-mediated signaling activities of laminin-10/11 in comparison to fibronectin, the best characterized extracellular adhesive ligand. We found that laminin-10/11 are more active than fibronectin in promoting cell migration and preferentially activate Rac, not Rho, via the p130(Cas)- CrkII-DOCK180 pathway. Cells adhering to fibronectin develop stress fibers and focal contacts, whereas cells adhering to laminin-10/11 do not, consistent with the high cell migration-promoting activity of laminin-10/11. Pull-down assays of GTP-loaded Rac and Rho demonstrated the preferential activation of Rac on laminin-10/11, in contrast to the activation of Rho on fibronectin. Activation of Rac by laminin-10/11 was associated with the phosphorylation of p130(Cas) and an increased formation of a p130(Cas)-CrkII-DOCK180 complex. Cell migration on laminin-10/11 was suppressed by the expression of either a dominant-negative Rac or CrkII mutants defective in p130(Cas) or DOCK180 binding This is the first report demonstrating a distinct activation of Rho family GTPases resulting from adhesion to different extracellular ligands.

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