| Literature DB >> 19722108 |
Abstract
The emergence of multicellular animals could only take place once evolution had produced molecular mechanisms for cell adhesion and communication. Today, all metazoans express integrin-type adhesion receptors and receptors for growth factors. Integrins recognize extracellular matrix proteins and respective receptors on other cells and, following ligand binding, can activate the same cellular signaling pathways that are regulated by growth factor receptors. Recent reports have indicated that the two receptor systems also collaborate in many other ways. Here, we review the present information concerning the role of integrins as assisting growth factor receptors and the interplay between the receptors in cell signaling and in the orchestration of receptor recycling.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19722108 PMCID: PMC2784865 DOI: 10.1007/s00441-009-0857-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Res ISSN: 0302-766X Impact factor: 5.249
Fig. 1Various forms of collaboration between integrins (green) and growth factor receptors (blue). a Integrins may directly bind to latent growth factors (LGF) and activate them. Subsequently, activation growth factors (GF) can bind to their signaling receptors. b The binding of integrins to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins often activates the same signaling pathways as GF binding to GF receptors. c Receptors can signal when located either on the cell surface or in endosomes. Co-endocytosis of integrins and GF receptors regulates cellular signaling at multiple levels. d, e Integrins can activate GF receptors in a collaborative or direct manner. In both cases, integrins create an environment in which the GF receptors can properly interact with the downstream signaling molecules. In the collaborative mechanism, the binding of GFs to their receptors precedes receptor activation (d), whereas in the direct mechanism, the GF receptors are activated without ligand binding (e). f Integrins can also activate protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTP) and suppress signaling by GF receptors
Direct binding of integrins to growth factors (VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor, NGF nerve growth factor, FGF fibroblast growth factor, NT neurotrophin)
| Integrin | Growth factor | Physiological role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| α1β1 | Semaphorin 7A | Inflammation | Suzuki et al. |
| α3β1 | VEGF-A (165) | Angiogenesis | Hutchings et al. |
| α5β1 | Angiopoietin-1 | Angiogenesis | Carlson et al. |
| Angiopoietin-2 | Angiogenesis | Carlson et al. | |
| α9β1 | VEGF-A (121, 165) | Angiogenesis | Vlahakis et al. |
| VEGF-C, VEGF-D | Lymphangiogenesis | Vlahakis et al. | |
| NGF | Cell proliferation | Staniszewska et al. | |
| Brain-derived neurotrophic factor | Staniszewska et al. | ||
| NT3 | Staniszewska et al. | ||
| αVβ3 | FGF-1 | FGF signaling | Mori et al. |
| VEGF-A (165) | Angiogenesis | Hutchings et al. | |
| αVβ6 | LTGF-β | TGF-β activation. | Munger et al. |
| Fibrosis and inflammation | |||
| αVβ8 | LTGF-β | TGF-β activation. | Cambier et al. |
| Formation of brain blood vessels. |
Integrin cross-talk with other receptor systems in endosomes (VEGFR vascular endothelial growth factor receptor, EGFR epidermal growth factor receptor, JAM-A junctional adhesion molecule-A)
| Integrin | Other receptors | Physiological role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| αvβ3 | Integrin α5β1 | Integrin αvβ3 inhibits recycling of α5β1; reduced invasion | White et al. |
| αvβ3 | EGFR | Integrin αvβ3 inhibits recycling of EGFR; reduced invasion | Caswell et al. |
| α5β1 | Neuroplilin-1 | Neuropilin-1 induces α5β1 endocytosis | Valdembri et al. |
| β1 | T-cadherin | T-cadherin inhibits β1-integrin endocytosis | Mukoyama et al. |
| β1 | JAM-A | JAM-A internalization depends on β1-integrin endocytosis; neutrophil chemotaxis | Cera et al. |
| αVβ3 | VEGFR1 | VEGFR1 stimulates recycling of αvβ3; fibronectin assembly | Jones et al. |
| αVβ3, αVβ5 | VEGFR2 | Integrin inhibition results in increased VEGFR2 recycling and angiogenesis | Reynolds et al. |