Literature DB >> 14729615

Expression and activation of signal regulatory protein alpha on astrocytomas.

Thomas T Chen1, Eric J Brown, Eric J Huang, William E Seaman.   

Abstract

High-grade astrocytomas and glioblastomas are usually unresectable because they extensively invade surrounding brain tissue. Here, we report the expression and function of a receptor on many astrocytomas that may alter both the proliferative and invasive potential of these tumors. Signal regulatory protein (SIRP) alpha1 is an immunoglobulin superfamily transmembrane glycoprotein that is normally expressed in subsets of myeloid and neuronal cells. Transfection of many cell types with SIRPalpha1, including glioblastomas, has been shown to inhibit their proliferation in response to a range of growth factors. Furthermore, the expression of a murine SIRPalpha1 mutant has been shown to enhance cell adhesion and initial cell spreading but to inhibit cell extension and movement. The extracellular portion of SIRPalpha1 binds CD47 (integrin-associated protein), although this interaction is not required for integrin-mediated activation of SIRPalpha1. On phosphorylation, SIRPalpha1 recruits the tyrosine phosphatases SHP-1 and SHP-2, which are important in its functions. Although SHP-1 is uniquely expressed on hematopoietic cells, SHP-2 is ubiquitously expressed, so that SIRPalpha1 has the potential to function in many cell types, including astrocytomas. Because SIRPalpha1 regulates cell functions that may contribute to the malignancy of these tumors, we examined the expression of SIRPs in astrocytoma cell lines by flow cytometry using a monoclonal antibody against all SIRPs. Screening of nine cell lines revealed clear cell surface expression of SIRPs on five cell lines, whereas Northern blotting for SIRPalpha transcripts showed mRNA present in eight of nine cell lines. All nine cell lines expressed the ligand for SIRPalpha1, CD47. To further examine the expression and function of SIRPs, we studied the SF126 and U373MG astrocytoma cell lines, both of which express SIRPs, in greater detail. SIRP transcripts in these cells are identical in sequence to SIRPalpha1. The expressed deglycosylated protein is the same size as SIRPalpha1, but in the astrocytoma cells, it is underglycosylated compared with SIRPalpha1 produced in transfected Chinese hamster ovary cells. It is nonetheless still capable of binding soluble CD47. Moreover, SIRPalpha1 in each of the two cell lines recruited SHP-2 on phosphorylation, and SIRPalpha1 phosphorylation in cultured cells is CD47 dependent. Finally, examination of frozen sections from 10 primary brain tumor biopsies by immunohistochemistry revealed expression of SIRPs on seven of the specimens, some of which expressed high levels of SIRPs. Most of the tumors also expressed CD47. This is the first demonstration that astrocytomas can express SIRPalpha. Given the known role of SIRPalpha in regulating cell adhesion and responses to mitogenic growth factors, the expression of SIRPalpha1 on astrocytomas may be of considerable importance in brain tumor biology, and it offers the potential of a new avenue for therapeutic intervention.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14729615     DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.can-3455-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  6 in total

1.  Species- and cell type-specific interactions between CD47 and human SIRPalpha.

Authors:  Shyamsundar Subramanian; Ranganath Parthasarathy; Shamik Sen; Eric T Boder; Dennis E Discher
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2005-11-15       Impact factor: 22.113

2.  SIRP Alpha Protein Downregulates in Human Astrocytoma: Presumptive Involvement of Hsa-miR-520d-5p and Hsa-miR-520d-3p.

Authors:  Ravindra Pramod Deshpande; Y B V K Chandra Sekhar; Manas Panigrahi; Phanithi Prakash Babu
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2016-11-29       Impact factor: 5.590

3.  Functional elements on SIRPalpha IgV domain mediate cell surface binding to CD47.

Authors:  Yuan Liu; Qiao Tong; Yubin Zhou; Hsiau-Wei Lee; Jenny J Yang; Hans-Jörg Bühring; Yi-Tien Chen; Binh Ha; Celia X-J Chen; Yang Yang; Ke Zen
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2006-10-03       Impact factor: 5.469

Review 4.  Molecular functions of SIRPα and its role in cancer.

Authors:  Shinichiro Takahashi
Journal:  Biomed Rep       Date:  2018-05-23

Review 5.  Glioma targeted therapy: insight into future of molecular approaches.

Authors:  Keyang Yang; Zhijing Wu; Hao Zhang; Nan Zhang; Wantao Wu; Zeyu Wang; Ziyu Dai; Xun Zhang; Liyang Zhang; Yun Peng; Weijie Ye; Wenjing Zeng; Zhixiong Liu; Quan Cheng
Journal:  Mol Cancer       Date:  2022-02-08       Impact factor: 27.401

6.  Comprehensive behavioral analysis of cluster of differentiation 47 knockout mice.

Authors:  Hisatsugu Koshimizu; Keizo Takao; Takashi Matozaki; Hiroshi Ohnishi; Tsuyoshi Miyakawa
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-02-24       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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