| Literature DB >> 17543136 |
Yoshikazu Takada1, Xiaojing Ye, Scott Simon.
Abstract
The integrins are a superfamily of cell adhesion receptors that bind to extracellular matrix ligands, cell-surface ligands, and soluble ligands. They are transmembrane alphabeta heterodimers and at least 18 alpha and eight beta subunits are known in humans, generating 24 heterodimers. Members of this family have been found in mammals, chicken and zebrafish, as well as lower eukaryotes, including sponges, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (two alpha and one beta subunits, generating two integrins) and the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster (five alpha and one beta, generating five integrins). The alpha and beta subunits have distinct domain structures, with extracellular domains from each subunit contributing to the ligand-binding site of the heterodimer. The sequence arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) was identified as a general integrin-binding motif, but individual integrins are also specific for particular protein ligands. Immunologically important integrin ligands are the intercellular adhesion molecules (ICAMs), immunoglobulin superfamily members present on inflamed endothelium and antigen-presenting cells. On ligand binding, integrins transduce signals into the cell interior; they can also receive intracellular signals that regulate their ligand-binding affinity. Here we provide a brief overview that concentrates mostly on the organization, structure and function of mammalian integrins, which have been more extensively studied than integrins in other organisms.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17543136 PMCID: PMC1929136 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2007-8-5-215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Figure 1The members of the human integrin superfamily and how they combine to form heterodimeric integrins. At least 18 α subunits and eight β subunits have been identified in humans, which are able to generate 24 different integrins. Integrin subunits that bind to each other to form a heterodimer are connected by solid lines. Each integrin has distinct ligand-binding specificity and tissue and cell distribution.
Figure 2Phylogenetic trees of integrin subunits. Trees for (a) integrin α and (b) integrin β subunits are adapted from [58] and [59], respectively.
Human integrin subunits
| Gene symbol | Protein name | Synonyms | Gene accession number | Location (chromosome) | Protein accession number |
| α1 | CD49a | 5q11.2 | P56199 | ||
| α2 | CD49b, α2 subunit of very late antigen 2 (VLA-2) | 5q23-q31 | P17301 | ||
| αIIb | GTA, CD41, GP2B, HPA3, CD41b, GPIIb | 17q21.32 | P08514 | ||
| α3 | CD49c, α3 subunit of VLA-3 | 17q21.33 | P26006 | ||
| α4 | CD49d, α4 subunit of VLA-4 | 2q31.3 | AAB25486 | ||
| α5 | CD49e, fibronectin receptor alpha | 12q11-q13 | P08648 | ||
| α6 | CD49f, ITGA6B | 2q31.1 | P23229 | ||
| α7 | 12q13 | Q86W93 | |||
| α8 | 10p13 | P53708 | |||
| α9 | 3p21.3 | Q13797 | |||
| α10 | 1q21 | O75578 | |||
| α11 | 15q23 | Q9UKX5 | |||
| αD | 16p11.2 | Q13349 | |||
| αE | CD103, human mucosal lymphocyte antigen 1α | 17p13 | P38570 | ||
| αL | CD11a (p180), lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1) α subunit | 16p11.2 | P20701 | ||
| αM | Mac-1, CD11b, complement receptor 3 (CR3) subunit | 16p11.2 | P11215 | ||
| αV | CD51, MSK8, vitronectin receptor α (VNRα) | 2q31-q32 | P06756 | ||
| αX | CD11c, CR4 subunit | 16p11.2 | P20702 | ||
| β1 | Fibronectin receptor β, CD29, MDF2, MSK12 | 10p11.2 | P05556 | ||
| β2 | Leukocyte cell adhesion molecule, CD18, CR3 subunit, CR4 subunit | 21q22.3 | P05107 | ||
| β3 | CD61; GP3A; GPIIIa, platelet glycoprotein IIIa | 17q21.32 | P05106 | ||
| β4 | CD104 | 17q25 | P16144 | ||
| β5 | 3q21.2 | P18084 | |||
| β6 | 2q24.2 | P18564 | |||
| β7 | 12q13.13 | P26010 | |||
| β8 | 7p15.3 | P26012 |
Figure 3The extracellular region of a human integrin. (a) The crystal structure represents a net form of integrin αVβ3 with no bound RGD peptide (Protein Data Bank (PDB) code 1JV2) [3,4]. See PBD code 1L5G for the RGD-bound form. (b) The I (inserted or interactive) domain is present in seven human α subunits between β-propeller repeats 2 and 3, and is involved in ligand binding. An I-like domain is present in all human integrin β subunits along with four EGF-like repeats. Both the I and I-like domains have a Rossmann fold.
Ligand-binding specificities of human integrins
| Integrins | Ligands |
| α1β1 | Laminin, collagen |
| α2β1 | Laminin, collagen, thrombospondin, E-cadherin, tenascin |
| α3β1 | Laminin, thrombospondin, uPAR |
| α4β1 | Thrombospondin, MAdCAM-1, VCAM-1, fibronectin, osteopontin, ADAM, ICAM-4 |
| α5β1 | Fibronectin, osteopontin, fibrillin, thrombospondin, ADAM, COMP, L1 |
| α6β1 | Laminin, thrombospondin, ADAM, Cyr61 |
| α7β1 | Laminin |
| α8β1 | Tenascin, fibronectin, osteopontin, vitronectin, LAP-TGF-β, nephronectin |
| α9β1 | Tenascin, VCAM-1, osteopontin, uPAR, plasmin, angiostatin, ADAM [25], VEGF-C, VEGF-D [26] |
| α10β1 | Laminin, collagen |
| α11β1 | Collagen |
| αVβ1 | LAP-TGF-β, fibronectin, osteopontin, L1 |
| αLβ2 | ICAM, ICAM-4 |
| αMβ2 | ICAM, iC3b, factor X, fibrinogen, ICAM-4, heparin |
| αXβ2 | ICAM, iC3b, fibrinogen, ICAM-4, heparin, collagen [27] |
| αDβ2 | ICAM, VCAM-1, fibrinogen, fibronectin, vitronectin, Cyr61, plasminogen |
| αIIbβ3 | Fibrinogen, thrombospondin,, fibronectin, vitronectin, vWF, Cyr61, ICAM-4, L1, CD40 ligand [28] |
| αVβ3 | Fibrinogen, vitronectin, vWF, thrombospondin, fibrillin, tenascin, PECAM-1, fibronectin, osteopontin, BSP, MFG-E8, ADAM-15, COMP, Cyr61, ICAM-4, MMP, FGF-2 [29], uPA [30], uPAR [31], L1, angiostatin [32], plasmin [33], cardiotoxin [34], LAP-TGF-β, Del-1 |
| α6β4 | Laminin |
| αVβ5 | Osteopontin, BSP, vitronectin, CCN3 [35], LAP-TGF-β |
| αVβ6 | LAP-TGF-β, fibronectin, osteopontin, ADAM |
| α4β7 | MAdCAM-1, VCAM-1, fibronectin, osteopontin |
| αEβ7 | E-cadherin |
| αVβ8 | LAP-TGF-β |
References are included for recently discovered ligands only. Abbreviations: ADAM, a disintegrin and metalloprotease; BSP, bone sialic protein; CCN3, an extracellular matrix protein; COMP, cartilage oligomeric matrix protein; Cyr61, cysteine-rich protein 61; L1, CD171; LAP-TGF-β, TGF-β latency-associated peptide; iC3b, inactivated complement component 3; PECAM-1, platelet and endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1; uPA, urokinase; uPAR, urokinase receptor; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; vWF, von Willebrand Factor.
Phenotypes of deletions of integrin subunits in the mouse
| Integrin subunit | Viability | Fertility | Phenotype | Reference |
| α1 | + | + | Defects in bone healing and reduced tumor angiogenesis | [36] |
| α2 | + | + | Reduced branching morphogenesis and platelet adhesion | [37] |
| α3 | Perinatal lethal | + | Kidney, lung, and skin defects | [38] |
| α4 | Embryonic lethal | - | Placental and heart defects | [39] |
| α5 | Embryonic lethal | - | Mesodermal and vascular defects | [40] |
| α6 | Perinatal lethal | + | Epidermal detachment, defect in neurogenesis | [41] |
| α7 | + | + | Muscular dystrophy | [42] |
| α8 | Perinatal lethal | + | Kidney defect | [43] |
| α9 | Perinatal lethal | + | Chylothorax (defect in lymphatic drainage) | [44] |
| αv | Embryonic and perinatal lethal | + | Cerebral hemorrhage | [45] |
| αM | + | + | Neutrophil adhesion and degranulation | [46] |
| αL | + | + | Neutrophil emigration | [47] |
| αD | + | + | Reduced T-cell response and T-cell phenotypic changes | [48] |
| αE | + | + | Skin inflammation | [49] |
| β1 | Embryonic lethal | - | Fails to gastrulate | [45,50] |
| β2 | + | + | Leukocyte adhesion deficiency | [51] |
| β3 | + | + | Platelet defect | [52] |
| β4 | Perinatal lethal | + | Epidermal detachment | [53] |
| β5 | + | + | Accelerated age-related blindness | [54] |
| β6 | + | + | Inflammation in skin and lungs | [55] |
| β7 | + | + | Gut-associated lymphocyte defects | [56] |
| β8 | Embryonic and perinatal lethal | + | Cerebral hemorrhage | [57] |
Figure 4Leukocyte recruitment to the endothelial surface. (a) Binding of glycoprotein selectin ligands (yellow and purple) on the leukocyte to selectins (blue) on the endothelial surface, and weak binding of low-affinity leukocyte integrins (green) to ICAMs (pale yellow) on the endothelium facilitates cell tethering and rolling. This binding, together with signals from chemokines (pink), generates inside-out signals (yellow arrows) that shift the bound integrins to a high-affinity ligand-binding state. (b) Leukocyte arrest is mediated by clusters of high-affinity integrins (red) binding to ICAMs on the endothelial cells. These focal clusters can themselves signal outside-in to affect functions such as cell polarization and migration.