| Literature DB >> 28260841 |
D Dreymueller1, K Theodorou2, M Donners2, A Ludwig1.
Abstract
Cell migration is an instrumental process involved in organ development, tissue homeostasis, and various physiological processes and also in numerous pathologies. Both basic cell migration and migration towards chemotactic stimulus consist of changes in cell polarity and cytoskeletal rearrangement, cell detachment from, invasion through, and reattachment to their neighboring cells, and numerous interactions with the extracellular matrix. The different steps of immune cell, tissue cell, or cancer cell migration are tightly coordinated in time and place by growth factors, cytokines/chemokines, adhesion molecules, and receptors for these ligands. This review describes how a disintegrin and metalloproteinases interfere with several steps of cell migration, either by proteolytic cleavage of such molecules or by functions independent of proteolytic activity.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28260841 PMCID: PMC5316459 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9621724
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Figure 1Catalytic and noncatalytic functions of ADAM proteases facilitating cell migration. ADAM proteases interfere with distinct steps of cell migration via a number different effector molecules. This involves proteolytic cleavage or nonproteolytic interactions of the proteases. ADAMs consist of a C-terminal cytoplasmic tail (CC) followed by a transmembrane domain (TM), an EGF-like domain (EL), a cysteine-rich domain (CR), and a disintegrin domain (D) and an extracellular metalloproteinase domain (MP) (ADAM). ADAM proteases cleave transmembrane surface molecules close to the plasma membrane, a process called shedding, requiring a zinc atom in the active site of the metalloproteinase domain (I). This results in the release of a soluble ectodomain and the production of a cell-associated fragment consisting of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domain. The remaining fragment can undergo further regulated intramembrane proteolysis by γ-secretase (II) at last functioning as transcription factor (e.g., Notch). ADAM activity can be regulated by activation of a precursor protein (e.g., pro-MMP9). The released ectodomain may function either as agonist like the chemokine CXCL16 and the ErbB ligands HB-EGF and neuregulin or as antagonist like soluble JAM-A or RAGE (III). The release of ErbB ligands leads to transactivation of ErbB receptors in cis and trans (IV). The inactivation of ligands (i.e., adhesion molecules (AM)) can lead to the detachment of bound receptor complexes and attached cells (i.e., L-selectin, MAC-1) (V). The cleavage of junction molecules (JM, i.e., cadherins) results in changes of permeability (VI), facilitating the transmigration of inflammatory cells, the invasion of cancer cells, and the dissemination resulting in metastasis and angiogenic processes (VII). The permeability is further regulated by ECM degradation, by either direct action of ADAM proteases (i.e., ADAM9) or the regulation of MMPs (VIII). With their disintegrin-like domain, ADAMs can directly interact with adhesion molecules and ECM proteins (IX). The integrin (indicated by α/β) interaction/activation results in cytoskeletal rearrangement, focal adhesion formation, and podosome extension (X). Integrin, ADAM activation, and ErbB receptor transactivation result in different signaling pathways including the activation of Rho, Rac, FAK, PI3K, AKT, p38, and ERK, all further regulating ADAM and integrin activity as well as gene expression (XI). The exact mechanism of cell migration can differ between rapidly migrating leukocytes and tissue cells. However, the involved surface molecules, the signal transduction pathways, and the molecular machinery show a considerable degree of overlap for the action of ADAM proteases in inflammatory cell recruitment, angiogenesis, reepithelialization, cancer cell detachment and adhesion, and the intra- and extravasation during metastasis.
Catalytic and noncatalytic functions of leukocytic ADAM proteases in cell migration.
| Protease | Domain | Cell type | Substrate or interaction partner | Process | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADAM7 | D | Lymphocytes |
| Adhesion | [ |
| ADAM8 | ? | T cells, eosinophils, dendritic cells, monocytes | ? | Migration | [ |
| un | ? | Leukocytes |
| Migration | Unpublished |
| MP | Leukocytes | PSGL-1 | Adhesion, migration | [ | |
| ADAM9 | D | Neutrophils |
| Migration | [ |
| ADAM10 | MP | Myeloid cells, hematopoietic stem cells | c-met | Migration (ECM degradation) | [ |
| MP | Neutrophils | CD44 | Migration (ECM interaction) | [ | |
| indirect; MP | Mast cells | Collagen IV | SCF-induced migration | [ | |
| MP | Monocytes | CX3CL1 | Chemotaxis | [ | |
| MP | Neutrophils/monocytes/lymphocytes | DDR1 | Migration (pseudopod extension) | [ | |
| MP | Neutrophils/monocytes | EGFR ligands | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Monocytes | Meprin A | Migration (ECM degradation) | [ | |
| MP | Monocytes | Meprin B | Migration (ECM degradation) | [ | |
| MP | Neutrophils | RAGE | Negative regulation of adhesion/spreading/migration | [ | |
| MP and/or D | Leukocytes |
| Adhesion and migration | [ | |
| ADAM17 | MP | Monocytes, lymphocytes | ALCAM | Reduced extravasation (loss of adhesion) | [ |
| MP | Neutrophils | CD44 | Migration (ECM interaction) | [ | |
| MP | Monocytes | CX3CL1 | Chemotaxis | [ | |
| MP | Neutrophils | CXCR2 | Reduction of recruitment | [ | |
| MP | B lymphocytes | Jagged-1/Delta-like 4/Notch | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Neutrophils | L-selectin | Rolling, reduction of transmigration (higher velocity, reduced adhesion), resolution of transmigration | [ | |
| MP | Monocytes | Mac-1 | End of transmigration | [ | |
| MP | Langerhans cells, lymphocytes | TNFR1 | Migration | [ | |
| ADAM28 | D | Lymphocytes |
| Adhesion | [ |
| ADAM33 | D | Lymphocytes | | Adhesion | [ |
The process indicates the function in the presence of the ADAM protease. MP: metalloproteinase domain; D: disintegrin-like domain; ?: unknown.
Catalytic and noncatalytic functions of tissue ADAM proteases in cell migration.
| Protease | Domain | Cell type | Substrate or interaction partner | Process | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADAM8 | D, CR | Endothelial cells | PECAM-1, isolectin B4, Tie2, VEGFR1/2, EphB2, VE-cadherin | Angiogenesis | [ |
| ADAM9 | MP | Keratinocytes | Collagen XVII, | Reduced migration/wound healing | [ |
| MP | Epithelial cells | EGFR ligands | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Vascular smooth muscle cells | HB-EGF | Migration | [ | |
| D, CR | Fibroblasts |
| Cell-cell interaction and ECM degrading capacity | [ | |
| ADAM10 | MP | Epithelial cells | Betacellulin | Migration | [ |
| MP | Trophoblasts | c-met | Block of invasion | [ | |
| MP | Glial precursor cells | CXCL16 | Migration, invasion | [ | |
| MP | Mesangial cells | CXCL16 | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | CXCL16, CX3CL1 | Chemotaxis, migration, transmigration | [ | |
| ? | Fibroblast-like synoviocytes | Cytoskeletal rearrangement, VEGFA, MMP1 and MMP3 expression, CX3CL1 | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Epithelial cells | DDR1 | Collagen-adhesion, migration | [ | |
| MP | Vascular smooth muscle cells | DDR1 | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Epithelial cells | E-cadherin | Transmigration, keratinocyte migration | [ | |
| MP | Neural cells | L1CAM | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells, epithelial cells | Meprin A, meprin B | Transmigration (ECM degradation) | [ | |
| MP | Neural progenitor cells | N-cadherin | Migration | [ | |
| MP, ? | Vascular smooth muscle cells | N-cadherin, | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endometriotic cells | Neuregulins | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Border cells | Notch | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | Notch | Limitation of vascular sprouting | [ | |
| MP | Vascular smooth muscle cells | Notch1, Notch3 | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Pericytes, smooth muscle cells | PDGFR | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells, epithelial cells | RAGE | Block of transmigration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | VE-cadherin | Transmigration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | VEGFR2 | Limitation of sprouting | [ | |
| ADAM12 | MP | Trophoblasts | ? | Cell invasion placental development | [ |
| MP | Keratinocytes | HB-EGF, IGF | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | VEGFR2 | Limitation of sprouting | [ | |
| ADAM13 | MP | Cranial neural crest | Cadherin-11 | Migration (avoidance of contact inhibition) | [ |
| ADAM15 | ? | Intestinal epithelial cells | ? | Inhibition of migration (wound healing) | [ |
| MP | Glomerular mesangial cells | Collagen IV, gelatin, fibronectin | Migration (matrix degradation) | [ | |
| ? | Fibroblast-like synoviocytes | VEGFA, MMP1, and MMP3 expression | Migration | [ | |
| D, ? | Endothelial cells |
| Angiogenesis, transmigration | [ | |
| D | Airway smooth muscle cells |
| Adhesion, migration | [ | |
| ADAM17 | MP | Endothelial cells | ALCAM | Block of transmigration | [ |
| ADAM17 | MP | Endometriotic cells | Amphiregulin | Migration | [ |
| MP | Mesenchymal progenitors | Amphiregulin | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Trophoblasts | c-met | Block of invasion | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | CX3CL1 | Transmigration, chemotaxis | [ | |
| MP | Mesangial cells | CXCL16 | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | HB-EGF | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | JAM-A | Block of leukocyte transmigration and endothelial migration | [ | |
| MP | Neural progenitor cells | L1-CAM, HB-EGF | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Pericytes, smooth muscle cells | PDGFR | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Epithelial cells | Syndecan-1 | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Epithelial cells (e.g., keratinocytes) | TGF | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | TNF | Time-dependent regulation of angiogenesis | [ | |
| MP | Epithelial cells | TNFR | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | VE-cadherin | Transmigration | [ | |
| MP | Endothelial cells | VEGFR2 | Angiogenesis | [ |
The process indicates the function in the presence of the ADAM protease. MP: metalloproteinase domain; D: disintegrin-like domain; CR: cysteine-rich; ?: unknown.
Catalytic and noncatalytic functions of cancer cell ADAM proteases in cell migration.
| Protease | Domain | Cell type | Substrate or interaction partner | Process | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADAM8 | D | TNBC, pancreatic cancer |
| Invasion, metastasis | [ |
| ADAM8 | ? | Glioma cells | ? | invasion | [ |
| L-ADAM9 | D | Breast cancer | ? | Inhibition of migration | [ |
| S-ADAM9 | MP | Breast cancer | ? | migration | [ |
| ADAM9 | MP | Pancreatic cancer cells, esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | E-cadherin | Invasion, metastasis | [ |
| D, CR | Melanoma cells |
| Cell-cell interaction and ECM degrading capacity, invasion | [ | |
| D | Prostate cancer |
| Inhibition of migration and invasion | [ | |
| D, CR | Colon carcinoma, hepatic stellate and breast cancer cells |
| Liver metastasis | [ | |
| ADAM10 | MP | Pituitary adenocarcinoma, glioblastoma, tumor cells in general | CD44 | Cell-contact inhibition, metastasis | [ |
| MP | Ovarian cancer cells, prostate cancer cells | CXCL16, | Migration, metastasis, attraction of cancer cells | [ | |
| MP | Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, breast cancer, pancreatic cancer | E-cadherin, cadherin-catenin-interaction | Cell-cell contact, invasion, migration | [ | |
| MP | Pituitary adenocarcinoma, glioma | L1CAM | Migration | [ | |
| MP | glioblastoma | N-cadherin, cytoskeletal rearrangement, RAGE | Migration | [ | |
| MP | Melanoma, gastric cancer cells, non-small-cell lung cancer | Notch1 | Migration and invasion | [ | |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | PI3K/AKT activation | Invasion | [ | ||
| ? | Gliobastoma sphere-forming cells |
| Inhibition metastasis | [ | |
| D | Oral squamous cell carcinoma |
| Migration and invasion | [ | |
| ADAM12 | ? | Breast cancer cells | ? | Invasion, metastasis | [ |
| D, CR | Melanoma cells |
| Migration | [ | |
| MP | Lung tumor cells | Ephrin A1 | Extravasation | [ | |
| ADAM15 | MP | Breast cancer cells | E-cadherin | Migration | [ |
| MP | Non-small lung cancer | Pro-MMP9 | Migration (ECM degradation) | [ | |
| MP | Breast cancer cells | HB-EGF | Migration | [ | |
| D | Ovarian cancer cells |
| Decrease of migration | [ | |
| MP | Prostate cancer cells | ? | Block of extravasation and bone metastasis | [ | |
| ADAM17 | MP | Ovarian carcinoma, thyroid tumors | ALCAM | Invasion (loss of adhesion), metastasis | [ |
| MP | Adenoma cells | CD44 | Invasion (loss of adhesion) | [ | |
| MP | Breast cancer, glioblastoma | EGFR ligands | Invasion | [ | |
| MP | Nasopharyngeal carcinoma | EGFR ligands, E-cadherin | Migration, invasion | [ | |
| MP | Gastric cancer cells, liver cancer | Notch1 | Migration | [ | |
| ADAM17 | MP | Colon carcinoma | PTK7 | Migration | [ |
| MP | Lung cancer cells | Syndecan-1 | Metastasis, invasion | [ | |
| ? | Gliobastoma sphere-forming cells |
| Inhibition metastasis | [ | |
| ADAM19 | MP | Retinoblastoma cells, non-small-cell lung cancer, glioma | ? | Invasion, metastasis | [ |
| ADAM23 | MP | Breast cancer |
| Metastasis | [ |
The process indicates the function in the presence of the ADAM protease. MP: metalloproteinase domain; D: disintegrin-like domain; CR. cysteine-rich; ?: unknown.