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Vol. 8, Issue 10, 2055-2075, October 1997

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*Friedrich-Miescher Institut, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland;
Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy, School of
Medicine, University of California, Davis, California 95616-8643; and
MRC-1, Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology and
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University College
London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
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ABSTRACT |
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Tenascin-C is an adhesion-modulating matrix glycoprotein that has multiple effects on cell behavior. Tenascin-C transcripts are expressed in motile cells and at sites of tissue modeling during development, and alternative splicing generates variants that encode different numbers of fibronectin type III repeats. We have examined the in vivo expression and cell adhesive properties of two full-length recombinant tenascin-C proteins: TN-190, which contains the eight constant fibronectin type III repeats, and TN-ADC, which contains the additional AD2, AD1, and C repeats. In situ hybridization with probes specific for the AD2, AD1, and C repeats shows that these splice variants are expressed at sites of active tissue modeling and fibronectin expression in the developing avian feather bud and sternum. Transcripts incorporating the AD2, AD1, and C repeats are present in embryonic day 10 wing bud but not in embryonic day 10 lung. By using a panel of nine cell lines in attachment assays, we have found that C2C12, G8, and S27 myoblastic cells undergo concentration-dependent adhesion to both variants, organize actin microspikes that contain the actin-bundling protein fascin, and do not assemble focal contacts. On a molar basis, TN-ADC is more active than TN-190 in promoting cell attachment and irregular cell spreading. The addition of either TN-190 or TN-ADC in solution to C2C12, COS-7, or MG-63 cells adherent on fibronectin decreases cell attachment and results in decreased organization of actin microfilament bundles, with formation of cortical membrane ruffles and retention of residual points of substratum contact that contain filamentous actin and fascin. These data establish a biochemical similarity in the processes of cell adhesion to tenascin-C and thrombospondin-1, also an "antiadhesive" matrix component, and also demonstrate that both the adhesive and adhesion-modulating properties of tenascin-C involve similar biochemical events in the cortical cytoskeleton. In addition to these generic properties, TN-ADC is less active in adhesion modulation than TN-190. The coordinated expression of different tenascin-C transcripts during development may, therefore, provide appropriate microenvironments for regulated changes in cell shape, adhesion, and movement.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Tenascin-C, the prototypic member of the tenascin gene family, is
a matrix glycoprotein that is prominently expressed in developing tissues and in pathophysiological situations such as the matrix surrounding tumors (Chiquet-Ehrismann et al., 1986
;
Erickson, 1993
). Many functional properties have been identified for
tenascin-C in cell biological assays, including effects on cell
adhesion, neurite outgrowth, cell migration, proliferation, and
differentiation (reviewed by Erickson and Bourdon, 1989
;
Chiquet-Ehrismann, 1991
; Sage and Bornstein, 1991
; Chiquet-Ehrismann,
1995a
). The effects of tenascin-C on cell adhesion are complex, in that
substratum-bound tenascin-C supports attachment of some cell types but
is nonadhesive or even repulsive for other cell types (Erickson and
Taylor, 1987
; Chiquet-Ehrismann et al., 1988
; Bourdon and
Ruoslahti, 1989
; Spring et al., 1989
; Prieto et
al., 1992
; Joshi et al., 1993
). The nature of the
attachment appears to be of low mechanical strength and often does not
involve cell spreading (Lotz et al., 1989
). Because some
fragments of tenascin-C are more adhesive than the intact molecule, it
appears that the latter contains both adhesive and counteradhesive
domains (Friedlander et al., 1988
; Spring et al., 1989
; Prieto et al., 1992
; Aukhil et al., 1993
;
Joshi et al., 1993
; Götz et al., 1996
).
Tenascin-C in solution also has adhesion-modulating properties in that
it prevents cell adhesion to fibronectin (Chiquet-Ehrismann et
al., 1988
) and disrupts preformed focal contacts in spread bovine
aortic endothelial cells (Murphy-Ullrich et al., 1991
).
The regulated expression and functional properties of tenascin-C have
similarities with those of two other matrix glycoproteins, thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) and SPARC/osteonectin (reviewed by Frazier, 1991
; Sage and Bornstein, 1991
; Lahav, 1993
; Lane and Sage, 1994
; Bornstein, 1995
). These common properties have led these glycoproteins to be grouped functionally as so-called "antiadhesive" or
"adhesion-modulating" glycoproteins and it has been proposed that
they may play important roles in the coordinated regulation of cell
adhesive, motile, and proliferative behavior at sites of tissue
modeling during normal development and in pathophysiological situations
(Chiquet-Ehrismann, 1991
; Sage and Bornstein, 1991
; Chiquet-Ehrismann,
1993
, 1995b
). To discover whether a common process of antiadhesion or
adhesion modulation exists, it is necessary to determine whether these functional similarities are matched by mechanistic similarities.
One approach to this question is to examine cytoskeletal organization
in adherent cells. In the case of TSP-1, various cell types attach but
do not spread (for example, Tuszynski et al., 1987
; Lawler
et al., 1988
; Varani et al., 1988
), whereas other cells display a substantial degree of spreading (Asch et
al., 1991
, Stomski et al., 1992
; Adams and Lawler,
1993
, 1994
; reviewed by Adams et al., 1995
). Cell spreading
on TSP-1 involves organization of filamentous actin (F-actin; Stomski
et al., 1992
; Adams and Lawler, 1994
) yet does not correlate
with organization of focal contacts or focal adhesions, the substratum
contact structures that characterize cell adhesion to matrix components
such as fibronectin and vitronectin (reviewed by Turner and Burridge,
1991
; Hynes, 1992
; Burridge and Chrzanowska-Wodnicka, 1996
) but rather
correlates with the assembly of radial microspikes that contain the
55-kDa actin-bundling protein fascin (Adams, 1995
). Given that adhesion to TSP-1 involves formation of a distinctive type of substratum contact, it is important to determine whether adhesion to tenascin-C elicits similar cellular responses.
In structure, tenascin-C consists of six subunits, each of which is
composed of multiple domains containing an amino-terminal interchain
cross-linking domain, a series of epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like
repeats, a series of fibronectin type III repeats, and a C-terminal
fibrinogen homology domain (reviewed by Erickson, 1993
;
Chiquet-Ehrismann, 1995a
). Several splice variants have been identified
that differ in the number of fibronectin type III repeats spliced in
between the fifth and sixth of the eight constant repeats. Initially,
three alternatively spliced repeats termed A, B, and D were identified
in chicken and human tenascin-Cs. Additional alternatively spliced
repeats, including the repeat now termed repeat C, were also identified
in human tenascin-C (Siri et al., 1991
; Sriramarao and
Bourdon, 1993
) and in chicken, in which an additional repeat termed AD2
has been identified as well (Tucker et al., 1994
). In
chicken genomic DNA, these exons are ordered as A, B, AD2, AD1, C, and
D. Chicken embryo fibroblasts produce a variety of tenascin-C
transcripts that incorporate different combinations of the
alternatively spliced repeats including AD2, AD1, and C. Transcripts
containing repeat C are concentrated at sites of epithelial/mesenchymal
interactions in chicken embryos (Tucker et al., 1994
).
Several lines of evidence indicate that tenascin-C splice variants have
different functional activities. Splice variants incorporating the ABD
repeats bind less well to fibronectin (Chiquet-Ehrismann et
al., 1991
) and to the cell surface glycoprotein contactin/F11 (Zisch et al., 1992
). Experiments using bacterially
expressed protein domains have implicated various constant fibronectin
type III repeats as playing a role in cell adhesion to tenascin-C
(Spring et al., 1989
; Prieto et al., 1992
;
Joshi et al., 1993
; Yokosaki et al., 1996
). In
contrast, the alternatively spliced repeats ABCD have been implicated
in the ability of tenascin-C to disrupt focal contacts (Murphy-Ullrich
et al., 1991
; Chung et al., 1996
). The functional
activities of the AD2AD1C repeats are currently unknown.
In this study, we have used a panel of cell lines to examine cell attachment and cytoskeletal organization in response to two full-length recombinant tenascin-Cs: TN-190, which contains only the constant repeats, and TN-ADC, which contains the three novel additional repeats AD2, AD1, and C. We have found that substratum-bound TN-ADC is more adhesive than TN-190 and in solution is less effective at causing detachment of cells spread on fibronectin in two of three cell lines tested. Cells that spread on either tenascin-C variant do not assemble focal contacts but exhibit clustered arrays of fascin microspikes. F-actin and fascin-containing substratum contacts remain when cells on fibronectin are treated with soluble tenascin-Cs. The significance of these results is discussed with respect to possible mechanisms for the adhesion-modulating properties of tenascin-C.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Construction, Expression, and Isolation of Full-Length Recombinant Tenascin-Cs
A cDNA corresponding to the smallest naturally occurring avian
splice variant, tenascin 190 (pCTN 190), was constructed as described
(Fischer et al., 1995
). To construct a tenascin including the recently discovered additional fibronectin type III repeats AD2,
AD1, and C (Tucker et al., 1994
), cDNA encoding repeats AD2, AD1, and C (nucleotides 1-800 of the EMBL data base entry X73833) was
inserted into pCTN190, precisely between fibronectin type III repeats 5 and 6, by using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based method called
"splicing by overlap extension" (Horton et al., 1989
),
creating the plasmid pCTN ADC. This coding sequence was subcloned into
the eukaryotic expression vector pCDNAI/neo (InVitrogen, San Diego,
CA). Recombinant proteins were expressed in HT1080 cells and isolated
and purified by affinity chromatography as described (Fischer et
al., 1995
). Schematic models of the variable repeats domain are
shown in Figure 3D.
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Characterization of Recombinant Tenascin-Cs
The purified recombinant tenascin-Cs were analyzed by SDS-PAGE
under reducing conditions using 6% polyacrylamide gels (Laemmli, 1970
)
and by transmission electron microscopy. For rotary shadowing and
electron microscopy, proteins were processed as described (Chiquet-Ehrismann et al., 1988
).
Cell Culture
The cell lines used in this study included C2C12 murine skeletal
myoblasts (Blau et al., 1985
), the S27 variant subline that is deficient in proteoglycans (Gordon and Hall, 1989
; a gift from Dr.
Zach Hall, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke,
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD), G8 murine skeletal
myoblasts (Christian et al., 1977
), A10 rat aortic smooth muscle cells (Kimes and Brandt, 1976
), A549 human lung carcinoma cells,
C32 human melanoma cells, COS-7 green monkey kidney cells (Gluzman,
1981
), G361 human melanoma cells, HT1080 human fibrosarcoma (Rasheed
et al., 1974
), MDCK canine kidney cells, and MG-63 human osteosarcoma cells. Most cell lines were cultured in DMEM containing 10% fetal calf serum; however, the myoblast cell lines were cultured in DMEM containing 20% fetal calf serum. All cells were maintained in
a humidified 10% CO2 atmosphere at 37°C.
Cell Adhesion Assays
Fibronectin was isolated from horse serum (Life Technologies,
Gaithersburg, MD) by affinity chromatography using a gelatin-agarose column (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). After washing the column with PBS, bound
fibronectin was eluted with 4 M urea in PBS. Fibronectin-containing fractions were dialyzed overnight against PBS and then stored frozen at
70°C. Chick tenascin-C (CEF-TN) was purified from the conditioned
medium of confluent cultures of primary chicken embryo fibroblasts
grown in DMEM containing 10% FCS (Life Technologies), as described by
Fischer et al. (1995)
. For cell adhesion assays, fibronectin, CEF-TN, or recombinant tenascin-Cs were diluted to 50 nM and allowed to adsorb to glass coverslips at 4°C overnight. Coverslips were then blocked with 1 mg/ml heat-denatured bovine serum
albumin (BSA) in PBS for 1 h at room temperature and finally washed with PBS. The cell lines were trypsinized from stock cultures, washed once in DMEM containing 10% fetal calf serum and twice in
serum-free medium, and resuspended at a concentration of 2 × 105 cells/ml, and a 30-µl aliquot was added to each
coverslip. Cell attachment was carried out at 37°C for 1.5 h.
Nonadherent cells were removed by washing in PBS and adherent cells
were fixed either in 3.7% formaldehyde or in absolute methanol at
20°C and processed for immunofluorescence as described below. Cells
were also scored for round or spread morphology. Cells with protrusive
actin-rich processes were scored as irregularly spread (for example,
see Figure 6, c and f); smooth-edged polygonal cells which had a larger spread area were scored as fully spread (see Figure 6a). In a separate
series of experiments, polyclonal antiserum to tenascin-C (Chiquet-Ehrismann et al., 1986
) or fibronectin (Ehrismann
et al., 1981
) was added to the coverslips at the same time
as the cells. To examine the effects of tenascin-Cs on cell adhesion to
fibronectin, tenascin-Cs were added in solution at a final concentration of 35 nM at the time of plating cells on fibronectin substrata. At the end of the assay period, residual adherent cells were
either counted or processed for immunofluorescence. Statistical significance was calculated using a two-tailed t test.
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Immunofluorescent Staining of Adhesion Assays
Immunofluorescence experiments were carried out as previously
described (Adams, 1995
). The staining reagents included
tetramethylrhodamineisothiocyanate (TRITC)-phalloidin, mouse monoclonal
antibody VIN 11.5 (both from Sigma), or mouse monoclonal antibody to
human fascin (Yamashiro-Matsumura and Matsumura, 1986
; a gift from Dr.
George Mosialos, Harvard Medical School). The distribution of primary
antibodies was visualized by using fluorescein
isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (ICN Immunobiologicals,
Thame, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom). Samples were examined under
epifluorescence by using a Zeiss Axiophot microscope and photographs
were taken by using Kodak TMAX 100 film. For laser confocal microscopy,
a Leica TCS 4D was used. Optical sections ranged from 0.8 µm to 3 µm and were recorded in the line average mode with picture size of
512 × 512 pixels. Images from optical sections were captured
electronically and processed digitally. Figures were arranged and
labeled by using Micrografx Designer 4.1 and printed by using Fujix
Pictrography 3000.
Production of cDNA Probes for Tenascin-C by PCR
A cDNA probe corresponding to a portion of the EGF-like repeats
domain of chicken tenascin-C, which is included in all TN-C transcripts, was prepared by reverse transcription-coupled PCR (RT-PCR)
amplification (Perkin Elmer-Cetus, Norwalk, CT) from whole embryonic
day (E) 10 brain poly(A) RNA (Micro Fast Track, Invitrogen) as
template. The primers (5
-AAATGCATCTGCGAGGGC-3
and
5
-GGAAGCTTGTTATTGCAGTCCTTCGG-3
) generated a 540-bp product (TN-EGF).
RT-PCR was also used to make a 258-bp cDNA probe corresponding to the
novel alternatively spliced fibronectin type III repeat, AD1 (primer
pair: 5
-CGAATTCACGCTCACACTCACAAATGT-3
and
5
-CGAATTCCTGTCATGACAAAAGCAGTG-3
) and a 246-bp DNA probe
corresponding to the novel AD2 repeat (primer pair:
5
-CGAATTCGAACCTCTCCTTAGCAAACT-3
and
5
-CGAATTCTGTGGTTGCCAGTGCTGTCA-3
). The identity of each of these
probes was confirmed by restriction map analysis, and the specificity
of each probe for the corresponding repeat was demonstrated empirically
by Southern blot analysis as described above. A cDNA probe
corresponding to the novel C repeat has been described previously
(Tucker et al., 1994
). A 955-bp pUC19 restriction fragment
was used as a negative control for spurious hybridization and probe
trapping.
RT-PCR and Southern Blot Analysis
Poly(A) RNA was prepared from tissues dissected from E10 embryos
using the MicroFast Track kit (InVitrogen). RT-PCR (RT-PCR kit, Perkin
Elmer-Cetus-Cetus) was carried out using random primers in the reverse
transcriptase reaction. Primer pairs that spanned the novel repeats
AD2, AD1, and C (Tucker et al., 1994
) were then used.
Products were separated on a 1% agarose gel, denatured for 45 min in
1.5 M NaCl and 0.5 M NaOH, neutralized in 1 M
Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane hydrochloride, pH 7.4, and 1.5 M NaCl,
and transferred to nitrocellulose by capillary action. The filters were
baked, prehybridized in 5× SSC, 5× Denhardt's solution, 100 µg/ml
salmon sperm DNA, and 50% deionized formamide for 3 h at 42°C
and then hybridized in the same solution with the addition of 10%
dextran sulfate and 32P-labeled cAD2 (5 × 105 cpm/ml) for 3 h. Filters were then rinsed in 0.5×
SSC at room temperature for 20 min and at 40°C for 20 min and then
exposed to x-ray film at
70°C (Sambrook et al., 1989
).
To control empirically for probe specificity, a lane overloaded with
repeat C PCR product was also hybridized with cAD2 probe.
In Situ Hybridization
The cDNA probes described above were used for in situ
hybridization on frozen sections of chick embryos, using methods
adapted from those described previously (Tucker et al.,
1994
, 1995
). Chick embryos (Univeristy of California at Davis,
Department of Avian Sciences) were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS
overnight, rinsed in PBS, and then cryoprotected overnight in 25%
sucrose in PBS. Embryos were embedded in TBS brand tissue freezing
medium (Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA), and sections were cut at 12- to 14-µm intervals in a Bright cryostat. Sections were collected, air-dried on subbed slides, and then incubated for 1 h at room temperature in prehybridization buffer composed of 5× SSC, 5× Denhardt's solution, 100 µg/ml salmon sperm DNA, and 20 µM
2-mercaptoethanol; all reagents were obtained from Sigma. The cDNA
probes were labeled with 35S-labeled dCTP (New England
Nuclear, Boston, MA) by using random primers (Promega, Madison, WI) and
unincorporated nucleotides were removed with a G-50 Sephadex spin
column (Worthington Biochemicals, Freehold, NJ). The slides were dipped
in absolute ethanol, allowed to dry, and incubated in hybridization
buffer, which corresponded to prehybridization buffer with the addition
of 50% deionized formamide and 0.1% sarkosyl and contained 5 × 105 cpm/slide of the appropriate probe, at 42°C
overnight. The slides were then rinsed with 1× SSC at room temperature
and at 42°C, dried, dipped in LM-1 emulsion (Amersham, Arlington
Heights, IL), and exposed for an appropriate length of time. Processed
slides were counterstained with the nuclear dye bisbenzimide (H33258, Boehringer-Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN), and viewed under dark-field illumination.
Immunohistochemistry
Sections adjacent to those used for in situ hybridization were
stained with antibodies to tenascin-C or cellular fibronectin. Sections
were rinsed in PBS, blocked in 0.5% BSA (Sigma) in PBS, and then
incubated overnight in a humid chamber with either a mouse monoclonal
antibody to chick tenascin-C (M1, hybridoma supernatant diluted 1:1 in
BSA/PBS; Chiquet and Fambrough, 1984
) or a mouse monoclonal antibody to
human cellular fibronectin, clone FN-3E2 (Sigma) diluted 1:50 in
BSA/PBS. Sections were then rinsed in PBS and incubated in a
TRITC-labeled rabbit anti-mouse IgG secondary antibody (Accurate
Chemical and Scientific, Westbury, NY) for 2 h. After washing in
PBS, the slides were mounted in PBS/glycerol and viewed under an
epifluorescence microscope.
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RESULTS |
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Tenascin-C Variants containing the Novel Repeats AD2, AD1, or C Colocalize with Fibronectin in the Developing Avian Feather Bud and Sternum
The expression of tenascin-Cs containing the AD2, AD1, or C
repeats was examined in vivo, in two structures within the avian embryo
that are known to express tenascin-C: developing feather buds (Tucker,
1991
) and sternum (Mackie and Tucker, 1992
; Tucker, 1993
; reviewed by
Mackie, 1994
). First, sections made through the E10 dorsal feather
tract were stained with antibodies to fibronectin or tenascin-C.
Whereas tenascin-C immunoreactivity was restricted to areas of
mesenchyme at the base of the developing feather buds (Figure
1A), fibronectin immunoreactivity was
widespread and uniformly distributed throughout the dermis including
the base of the feather buds, thus overlapping with sites of
tenascin-C expression (Figure 1B; Tucker, 1991
; Jiang and Chong,
1992). Adjacent sections were then used for in situ hybridization with
a series of cDNA probes corresponding to the individual repeats AD2,
AD1, or C or a universal tenascin-C probe corresponding to a portion of
the EGF repeats. The universal tenascin-C probe TN-EGF hybridized
within the mesenchyme at the base of the feather buds (Figure 1D). The
AD2 and AD1 probes also hybridized within this region, the AD1 probe
displaying a more restricted distribution (Figure 1, C and E).
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To assess whether tenascin-C transcripts in the wing bud include the AD2AD1C repeat combination, mRNA isolated from E10 tissues was examined by RT-PCR and Southern blotting. Although embryonic lung contained transcripts encoding the AD2 repeat in tandem with the C repeat, no intervening AD1 repeat was detected (Figure 1G, lane 1). In contrast, tenascin-C transcripts that incorporated the AD2, AD1, and C repeats were detected in wing bud (Figure 1G, lane 2). The cAD2 probe did not hybridize with purified PCR product amplified from the C repeat (Figure 1G, lane 3), indicating the specificity of the hybridization reaction. Thus, tenascin-C transcripts containing the AD2, AD1, and C repeats are present in certain embryonic tissues.
Tenascin-C protein in E10 sternum and keel was distributed throughout the keel and was also present in the perichondrium surrounding the sternal anlage (Figure 2A). Fibronectin protein colocalized with tenascin-C in the keel and perichondrium and was also present at the fusion point between the two sternal anlage and in the mesenchyme surrounding the pectoral muscles (Figure 2B). When matched cross-sections were hybridized with the set of tenascin-C probes, the universal TN-EGF probe was found to hybridize throughout the keel and in the perichondrium of the sternum, thus showing good correspondence with the sites of protein localization (Figure 2C). In contrast, the AD1, AD2, or C probes hybridized only within the keel, a more intense signal being obtained with the AD1 probe (Figure 2, D-F). Thus, in these two developing structures, the AD2-, AD1-, or C-containing splice variants are expressed at sites of active tissue modeling and high fibronectin expression by a subset of the cells that express tenascin-C.
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Production of Recombinant Tenascin-Cs
Full-length chicken TN-190 protein has previously been expressed
in stably transfected HT1080 cells (Fischer et al., 1995
). This system was used to express a tenascin-C variant that included the
AD2/AD1/C repeats. This recombinant protein has been termed TN-ADC
(Figure 3D). SDS-PAGE analysis of the
recombinant proteins under reducing conditions indicated that
recombinant TN-ADC had an apparent molecular mass of about 230 kDa,
clearly larger than recombinant TN-190, which migrated with an apparent
molecular mass of about 190 kDa. As expected, purified CEF-TN contained three proteins of 190 kDa, 200 kDa, and 230 kDa, corresponding to
splice variants containing 8, 10, and 11 fibronectin type III repeats,
respectively (Figure 3A; Chiquet-Ehrismann et al., 1988
; Jones et al., 1989
; Spring et al., 1989
). The
200-kDa and 230-kDa proteins contain various combinations of the six
possible alternatively spliced repeats (Tucker et al., 1994
;
Figure 3D).
The recombinant tenascin-Cs were also examined by electron microscopy after rotary shadowing to determine their states of oligomerization. Both TN-190 and TN-ADC were detected as six-armed oligomers. The arms of the TN-ADC hexabrachions were longer than those of TN-190, consistent with the insertion of three additional fibronectin type III repeats (Figure 3, B and C). Thus, recombinant TN-ADC is correctly assembled into hexabrachions by HT1080 cells.
Cell Adhesive Behavior in Response to CEF-TN and Recombinant Tenascin-Cs
To evaluate and compare the adhesive activities of the natural and recombinant tenascin-Cs, a large panel of cell lines were tested for their ability to attach to tenascin C-coated substrata in short-term serum-free assays. Cells that attached were scored with respect to their morphology as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS. Attachment to tenascins was tested in parallel with adhesion to the well-characterized adhesive glycoprotein fibronectin. MDCK cells and A549 cells attached in small numbers to both fibronectin and CEF-TN and the attached cells remained round on both substrata. COS-7, C32, MG-63, and HT1080 cells underwent spreading on fibronectin; HT1080 cells and MG-63 cells did not adhere to CEF-TN; and COS-7 and C32 cells attached in small numbers (less than 5% of the input cells) and remained round. Thus, CEF-TN is clearly much less adhesive for these cell types than fibronectin. When the attachment of these six cell lines to recombinant TN-190 and TN-ADC were compared, TN-190 was found to be nonadhesive for all six cell lines, whereas about 5% of the input cells attached to TN-ADC. Only C32 cells showed some degree of spreading on TN-ADC. Because the attachment of these cells lines to TN-ADC was not significantly above their level of attachment to a BSA substratum, it appeared both splice variants were nonadhesive for these cell lines (our unpublished observations).
In contrast, the attachment assays revealed that CEF-TN had adhesive
activity toward cells derived from murine skeletal muscle. C2C12 and G8
were derived from C3H or Swiss Webster mouse hindlimb muscle,
respectively (Christian et al., 1977
; Blau et
al., 1985
) and S27 is a proteoglycan-deficient subline of C2C12
that was derived by ethyl methanesulfonate mutagenesis (Gordon and
Hall, 1989
). These cells did not attach to BSA substrata, attached in large numbers to fibronectin substrata, and displayed intermediate levels of attachment on the tenascin-C preparations. Quantitative attachment assays demonstrated that C2C12 cells underwent
concentration-dependent attachment to both fibronectin and tenascin-Cs.
Of the three tenascin-C preparations, CEF-TN was the most adhesive in
terms of cell number, TN-ADC had intermediate activity, and TN-190 had
low activity at high coating concentrations (Figure
4A). Maximal levels of cell attachment to
tenascin-Cs represented 48% of the numbers of cells attached to
fibronectin in the case of CEF-TN, 40% in the case of TN-ADC, or 20%
of cells attached to TN-190 (Figure 4A). The difference in cell
attachment to TN-190 or TN-ADC at the 50 nM coating concentration was
significant at p < 0.001. C2C12 cells attached on the various
tenascin-C preparations underwent irregular partial spreading even at
maximal coating concentrations: similar morphologies were observed with
G8 and S27 cells.
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To quantify these observations, attachment and spreading on the different substrata were quantified for C2C12 and S27 cells, using maximally adhesive coating concentrations of fibronectin or tenascin-Cs. In terms of the total number of attached cells, attachment of C2C12 cells to CEF-TN was 44% of the level of cell attachment to fibronectin and attachment of S27 cells to CEF-TN was 86% of the level of adhesion to fibronectin. For both cell types, attachment to fibronectin corresponded to 90% of the input cells (Table 1). Next, the ratio of spread to attached cells was examined for C2C12 and S27 cells. In adhesion assays using CEF-TN or TN-ADC, between 74% and 98% of the attached C2C12 cells or S27 cells underwent irrregular spreading, whereas on TN-190, only about 53% of the cells that attached then spread irregularly (Table 1). Thus, the TN-ADC splice variant is more active with respect to cell spreading than is TN-190. Similar results were obtained with G8 cells (our unpublished observation).
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To confirm that the observed cell attachment was directly to tenascin-C, attachment assays were carried out with C2C12 cells in the presence of antibodies to fibronectin or tenascin-C. A polyclonal antiserum to fibronectin had no effect on attachment to any of the tenascin-C substrata but reduced attachment to fibronectin by 87%. In contrast, an antiserum to chicken tenascin-C reactive with all splice variants decreased cell attachment to all the tenascin-C substrata by 76% to 95% and had no effect on cell attachment to fibronectin (Figure 4B). Thus, the cell attachment assays are measuring direct cellular responses to tenascin-C.
Cell Adhesion on Tenascin-C Correlates with a Distinctive Organization of Actin Microfilaments
To examine the consequences of cell spreading on TN-C in detail, actin microfilament organization was examined in adherent G8, S27, and C2C12 cells. By using epifluorescence microscopy, it was apparent that S27 and G8 cells spread on fibronectin assembled longitudinal arrays of microfilaments (shown for S27 and G8, Figure 5; for C2C12, Figure 6 and see Figure 11). The G8 and S27 cells irregularly spread on CEF-TN and TN-ADC showed some organization of microfilaments, particularly at cell peripheries, but also tended to display a punctate F-actin staining pattern in the cell body (Figure 5). The more rounded cells on TN-190 displayed diffuse F-actin staining within the cell body. A striking feature of F-actin organization in S27 and G8 cells, observed in cells adherent on both TN-190 and TN-ADC, was the presence of large arrays of actin-rich ruffles and microspikes at points of cell spreading or at the tips of cellular protrusions (Figure 5).
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To enable actin organization to be analyzed in more detail, adherent
C2C12 and S27 cells were examined by confocal microscopy. C2C12 cells
spread on fibronectin organized prominent microfilament bundles that
were located at the cell margins or ran longitudinally across the cell
body (Figure 6a, see also Adams and Lawler, 1994
). In contrast, cells
adherent to CEF-TN spread less, tended to be irregular in shape, and
displayed diffuse or punctate patterns of TRITC-phalloidin staining
within the cell body and intense staining within areas of membrane
ruffles and microspikes at the points of the spread cells (Figure 6c).
Similar staining patterns were observed in C2C12 cells adherent on
TN-190 or TN-ADC; however, the cells on TN-190 tended to remain round,
with irregular cytoplasmic protrusions that bore areas of ruffles or
microspikes at their tips (Figure 6e), whereas the cells on TN-ADC that
had undergone spreading, assumed irregular angular morphologies and
exhibited clustered arrays of microspikes and ruffles (Figure 6g).
S27 cells also spread extensively on fibronectin, although the overall cell morphology tended to be more irregular than that of C2C12 cells. These cells contained prominent arrays of actin microfilament bundles (Figure 6b). On CEF-TN, spreading was less extensive than on fibronectin. F-actin again localized as punctate spots rather that microfilament bundles, and microspikes and ruffles enriched in F-actin were apparent at points of substratum contact (Figure 6d). Similar TRITC-phalloidin staining patterns were observed in S27 cells adherent on CEF-TN, TN-190, and TN-ADC; however, it was clear that the S27 cells spread much less on a TN-190 substratum (Figure 6f) than they did on the TN-ADC substratum (Figure 6h). S27 differed from C2C12 cells in that many S27 cells displayed more elongated and prominent microspikes than C2C12 cells, irrespective of the substratum used (see Figure 6). The results of these experiments demonstrate for three cell lines that TN-190 is less adhesive than TN-ADC in terms of cell spreading and, furthermore, indicate that cell spreading on tenascin-C is irregular and involves formation of cortical actin microspikes rather than large microfilament bundles.
Cells Adherent on Tenascin-Cs Lack Focal Contacts and Display Fascin Microspikes
The organization of cortical F-actin in C2C12 cells adherent on
tenascin-C substrata was reminiscent of the organization observed in
cells adherent on TSP-1, which involves formation of prominent large
arrays of actin microspikes at cell margins (Adams and Lawler, 1994
).
Therefore, the consequences of cell spreading on tenascin-C substrata
were examined with respect to the formation of focal contacts and
fascin microspikes, cell-substratum contact structures that
distinguish the processes of cell adhesion on fibronectin or on TSP-1
(Adams, 1995
).
In these experiments, C2C12 and S27 cells were allowed to adhere to
fibronectin or CEF-TN and then stained with an antibody to vinculin to
visualize focal contacts (Geiger, 1979
) or with an antibody to fascin
(Yamashiro-Matsumura and Matsumura, 1986
) to detect fascin microspikes.
Both C2C12 and S27 cells formed abundant focal contacts when adherent
on fibronectin (Figure 7, a and b). In
contrast, no defined localization of vinculin was apparent in cells
adherent on CEF-TN: vinculin did not localize to the cytoplasmic
protrusions or regions of actin microspikes and ruffles but remained
diffusely distributed throughout the cytoplasm (Figure 7, c and d).
Thus, the cells adherent on CEF-TN did not organize focal contacts.
|
In C2C12 and S27 cells spread on fibronectin, fascin remained diffusely
distributed through the cytoplasm, as previously reported for other
cell types (Adams, 1995
; Figure 8, a and
b). Some colocalization of fascin with actin microfilament bundles was
detectable in S27 cells. In cells adherent on CEF-TN, fascin staining
was diffuse within the cell body and appeared concentrated in the
microspikes and ruffles present at the points of spread cells (Figure
8, c and d). In the more rounded cells attached to TN-190, fascin was prominent in regions of microspikes at the ends of cytoplasmic protrusions (Figure 8, e and f). The more extensively spread cells on
TN-ADC displayed arrays of fascin microspikes at their margins, at
points of substratum contact (Figure 8, g and h). Thus, it appears that
cell adhesion to tenascin-C differs from adhesion to fibronectin in
that it does not involve the assembly of focal contacts but does
trigger the formation of fascin microspikes and ruffles at cell
margins. These properties are shared by S27 cells and C2C12 cells and
both TN-190 and TN-ADC elicit these responses. The fascin microspikes
formed in response to tenascin-Cs differ in morphology from those
assembled in response to TSP-1 (Adams, 1995
) in that they are not
formed circumferentially around cell margins but are present in
clusters at discrete points along cell margins. Because these
protrusions do not have the pronounced elongated shape of filopodia, we
continue to term these structures microspikes.
|
Given that cells adherent on tenascin-C undergo irregular spreading in comparison with sister cells adherent on fibronectin, it was of interest to examine whether another situation of limited cell spreading would evoke fascin microspike formation. Therefore, C2C12 attachment assays were carried out by using substrata coated with low concentrations of fibronectin and the cells were fixed and stained for F-actin or fascin. On substrata coated with 1.25 µg/ml fibronectin, cells attached and tended to remain round, although examples of cells that had extended a smooth lamella on one side could be found. In all cells, F-actin and fascin appeared diffuse (Figure 9, A and B). On substrata coated with 2.5 µg/ml fibronectin, the extent of cell spreading was generally greater, although the cells still had a rounded shape. Formation of irregular F-actin-rich microspikes and ruffles was apparent at the margins of some cells (Figure 9C). These regions tended to stain positively for fascin (Figure 9D).
|
On substrata coated with 5 µg/ml fibronectin, the extent of cell spreading was greater and many cells had assumed a polygonal spread shape. Organization of F-actin into microfilament bundles was apparent in the central regions of the cells (Figure 9E) and fascin staining was diffuse throughout the cell body (Figure 9F). Full cell spreading was achieved on the surfaces coated with 20 µg/ml fibronectin and in these cells, as expected, large numbers of actin microfilament bundles were apparent and fascin staining was diffuse (Figure 9, G and H). Thus, although fascin-containing protrusions are present in poorly spread C2C12 cells attached to low concentrations of fibronectin, these structures are not present in more extensively spread cells and the very irregular protrusive morphologies bearing fascin microspikes that are observed on optimal coating concentrations of tenascin-C are not achieved.
Tenascin-Cs Cause Cytoskeletal Reorganization in Cells Adherent on Fibronectin
In addition to providing a less adhesive substratum than
fibronectin, tenascin-C in solution has the property of preventing cell
attachment to fibronectin (Chiquet-Ehrismann et al., 1988
). To examine the activity of the recombinant tenascin-Cs in modulating cell adhesion to fibronectin, quantitative cell attachment assays were
performed in which cells were allowed to adhere to fibronectin substrata in the presence or absence of the various tenascin-Cs. Three
cell types were used in these assays: MG-63 and COS-7 cells, which do
not attach to substratum-bound tenascin-C, and C2C12 cells, which
undergo irregular spreading. For each cell line, all tenascin-Cs
decreased cell adhesion to fibronectin, but TN-190 and TN-ADC displayed
different levels of activity with respect to MG-63 and COS-7 cells. For
C2C12 cells, CEF-TN decreased cell attachment by 80%, TN-190 decreased
the number of attached cells by 83%, and TN-ADC decreased attachment
by 65% (Figure 10). TN-190 inhibited
MG-63 or COS-7 cell adhesion by around 95%, whereas TN-ADC was
significantly less active and inhibited MG-63 cells attachment by 77%
and COS-7 cell attachment by 57% (Figure 10). For each cell line, the
differences in activity of TN-190 and TN-ADC were significant at p < 0.001. Thus, in assays using three cell types, both tenascin-C
splice variants were capable of blocking cell attachment to
fibronectin, yet TN-ADC was consistently less active on a molar basis
than TN-190. A dot-blot binding assay was used to examine whether the
distinct effects of TN-190 or TN-ADC were caused by differential
binding to fibronectin. In assays using either 250 ng of fibronectin or
tenascin-C as the solid-phase ligand, both splice variants bound
fibronectin equivalently (our unpublished observation).
|
A second set of assays examined cytoskeletal organization in
cells adherent on fibronectin in the presence or absence of tenascin-C. Soluble tenascin-C has been shown to cause loss of actin microfilament bundles and focal contacts in preadherent endothelial cells and fibroblasts, without causing changes in cell attachment or spreading. This property has been linked to the A, B, C, and D fibronectin type
III repeats (Murphy-Ullrich et al., 1991
). To determine
whether the alterations in cell adhesion caused by soluble tenascin-Cs in our assay systems involved alterations in the actin cytoskeleton or
in fascin distribution, fibronectin adhesion assays were carried out in
the presence of soluble tenascin-Cs under conditions that led to cell
rounding but not complete cell detachment and then stained with
TRITC-phalloidin or fascin antibody. Whereas control untreated C2C12
cells spread extensively on fibronectin and displayed prominent actin
microfilament bundles and a uniform distribution of fascin (Figure
11, a and e), cells that had adhered in
the presence of CEF-TN were less spread, contained fewer organized
microfilament bundles, and exhibit diffuse F-actin staining. Many cells
displayed actin-rich ruffles or microspikes at the periphery (Figure
11f). These F-actin-rich residual points of substratum attachment
stained strongly for fascin (Figure 11b). Cells that had attached in
the presence of an equimolar concentration of TN-190 tended to be more
rounded and also displayed decreased F-actin organization and increased
peripheral actin-containing ruffles (Figure 11g). Fascin staining
appeared diffuse within the rounded cell bodies and was also
concentrated at the tips of areas of ruffling or in irregular
projections (Figure 11c). TN-ADC, like CEF-TN, did not cause such a
large decrease in cell spreading as did TN-190 (Figure 11, compare h
with g) but did cause a decrease in actin microfilament organization.
Actin-rich ruffles were again present at residual points of substratum
contact (Figure 11h). In these cells, intense fascin staining localized
to the residual points of attachment and in the cell body (Figure 11d).
Similar changes in cell shape and cortical F-actin organization were observed in COS-7 and MG-63 cells when plated on fibronectin in the presence of soluble tenascin-Cs. These cell types spread but did not assemble prominent actin microfilament bundles when adherent on fibronectin (Figure 11, i and m). The addition of soluble tenascin-Cs resulted in decreased cell spreading of both COS-7 and MG-63 cells, with a somewhat greater effect on cell rounding being caused by TN-190 (Figure 11, k and o). The addition of CEF-TN, TN-190, or TN-ADC correlated with the formation of extensive peripheral F-actin-rich membrane ruffles, microspikes, and fingerlike protrusions by both COS-7 or MG-63 cells (Figure 11, compare j-l with i or n-p with m). Thus, in assays using three cell lines of different tissue origins, alterations in actin cytoskeletal organization occur in response to both recombinant tenascin-C variants.
| |
DISCUSSION |
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|
|
|---|
Our studies offer several major novel conclusions. We have identified a mechanistic similarity between the processes of cell adhesion to tenascin-C and adhesion to TSP-1 in that cells adherent on tenascin-C form fascin microspikes and do not assemble focal contacts. This property is common to two tenascin-C splice variants, TN-190 and TN-ADC, and is observed in three cell lines capable of undergoing irregular spreading on tenascin-C substrata. Because the alterations in cell adhesion and cytoskeletal organization that occur when adherent cells are exposed to soluble tenascin-C also involve formation of fascin substratum contacts, our data also establish a biochemical similarity between the adhesive and adhesion-modulating properties of tenascin-C. This is the first report of expression and functional characterization of full-length tenascin-C containing the AD2, AD1, and C repeats. In addition to these generic responses of cells to tenascin-Cs, we obtained evidence for different levels of adhesive and adhesion-modulating activity in TN-190 and TN-ADC.
Our experiments have made use of recombinant TN-190 and a novel
full-length recombinant tenascin-C, TN-ADC, that incorporates the newly
identified AD2, AD1, and C fibronectin type III repeats and have
examined the adhesive properties of these molecules in short-term in
vitro assays. Since tenascin-C functions as a cell-type-dependent adhesion molecule, a large panel of cell lines were used to examine the
activity of the tenascin-Cs in cell-substratum attachment assays.
These experiments identified three cell lines that attached to CEF-TN
and the recombinant proteins although, as predicted by the results of
previous studies (Spring et al., 1989
; Prieto et
al., 1992
; Aukhil et al., 1993
; Joshi et
al., 1993
), the level of cell attachment in terms of cell number
did not reach the level observed on a fibronectin substratum. Also in
agreement with previous reports (Lotz et al., 1989
; Spring
et al., 1989
; Prieto et al., 1992
), CEF-TN and
the recombinant proteins were essentially nonadhesive toward some of
the cell lines tested.
Cell spreading on other extracellular matrix substrata depends on actin
polymerization (Orlando and Cheresh, 1991
; Adams, 1995
); therefore,
cell adhesion to tenascin-Cs was analyzed with respect to organization
of the actin-based cytoskeleton. Cells partially spread on tenascin-C
substrata assumed irregular shapes in comparison with sister cells
spread on fibronectin substrata. These irregular shapes presumably
result from a nonuniform distribution of cell-substratum adhesion
points. Irregular shapes have also been described for cells adherent on
TSP-1 substrata (Asch et al., 1991
; Stomski et
al., 1992
; Adams and Lawler, 1993
; Adams and Lawler, 1994
).
Irregular cell spreading on both CEF-TN and TN-ADC correlated with
organization of F-actin into microfilament bundles, although the large
longitudinal bundles typical of cells adherent on fibronectin were not
observed. This organization of F-actin distinguished cells on TN-ADC or
CEF-TN from the less-spread cells attached to TN-190, in which small
points or dots of F-actin were observed against a diffuse background of
staining. However, the most striking feature of F-actin organization,
observed in cells adherent on CEF-TN, TN-190, or TN-ADC, was the
presence of arrays of actin-rich microspikes or large ruffles at
discrete points along the cell margins that represent sites of
cell-substratum adhesion. The presence of these structures in
irregularly spread cells contrasts with the membrane activity observed
in cells initiating spreading on fibronectin, either at early time
points in cells exposed to optimal fibronectin coating concentrations
(Adams, 1995
) or in the limited spreading achieved on low coating
concentrations of fibronectin (this study).
To examine the nature of these contacts in more detail, the adherent
cells were stained for markers of two types of substratum adhesion
contacts. The most well-characterized type of cell-substratum contact
is the focal contact, or focal adhesion, that forms the closest point
of apposition between the ventral surface of cells and their substratum
(Izzard and Lochner, 1976
; Heath and Dunn, 1978
). In well-spread cells,
focal contacts are typically distributed over the entire ventral plasma
membrane, at the termini of actin microfilament bundles. Focal contacts
are rapidly assembled by cells spread on adhesive glycoproteins such as
fibronectin, vitronectin, and collagen (reviewed by Burridge et
al., 1988
). Cells adherent on TSP-1 lack focal contacts and form
substratum contacts characterized by fascin microspikes (Adams, 1995
).
Fascin is an 55-kDa actin-bundling protein that is found in several
types of actin-containing structures in different organisms and that
forms stable bundles with actin in vitro (reviewed by Edwards and
Bryan, 1995
). By using two cell lines, we found that cell adhesion to
tenascin-C variants does not correlate with formation of focal contacts
but does correlate with the formation of clusters of fascin microspikes
and ruffles.
Because tenascin-C and fibronectin colocalize at sites of active
morphogenesis during development, it appears likely that interactions
between these proteins are involved in facilitating cell
rearrangements. Our in situ hybridization data obtained from developing
feather buds and sternum indicate that tenascin-C splice variants
containing the AD2, AD1, or C repeats are expressed by subsets of the
cells within these structures that express tenascin-C. Feather bud
growth in organ culture is a tenascin-C-dependent process (Jiang and
Chuong, 1992
) and it is known that bud growth involves both cell
proliferation and cell migration into the extending feather shaft
(Wessels, 1965
; Jiang and Chuong, 1992
). Similarly, the keel, which
forms a few hours after the fusion of two cartilagenous primordia give
rise to the sternum, first appears as a mass of chondrogenic cells
along the ventral midline of the sternal body that are amoeboid in
shape and that appear to stream caudally toward the abdomen as the keel
grows (Fell, 1939
). Thus, the AD2, AD1, and C splice variants are
expressed at sites of tissue modeling and may participate with other
tenascin-C splice variants in modulating cell adhesive behavior in
fibronectin matrices and in providing appropriate microenvironments to
support regulated changes in cell growth and movement.
It is well-established that tenascin-C in solution modulates cell
adhesive behavior on fibronectin substrata (Chiquet-Ehrismann et
al., 1988
). Even cell types that do not attach to tenascin-C are
sensitive to adhesion modulation, presumably because the biophysical requirements for cell surface binding of tenascin-C in solution are
less stringent than the requirements for formation of a mechanically strong substratum attachment. In endothelial cells and fibroblasts, disassembly of focal contacts is observed in the absence of alterations in cell spreading (Murphy-Ullrich et al., 1991
). Peptides
from the heparin-binding domain of TSP-1 also evoke this response and in both cases, activation of protein kinase G is required
(Murphy-Ullrich et al., 1996
). Our data establish a
biochemical similarity between cell adhesion on tenascin-Cs and
adhesion modulation by tenascin-Cs, in that both processes involve
formation of cortical microspikes and ruffles that contain F-actin and
fascin. Thus, as would be expected if the same sets of cell-surface
binding proteins are ligated, we propose that both processes may
involve similar intracellular signals and cytoskeletal organization
events that then serve to promote or antagonize cell adhesion in a
context-dependent manner, depending on the manner in which tenascin-C
is presented to the cells.
S27 myoblasts differ from the C2C12 parental cell line by their
deficiency in production of heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate
proteoglycans (Gordon and Hall, 1989
). S27 myotubes, unlike C2C12
myotubes, do not cause preferential accumulation of neurites containing
synaptic vesicles in cocultured neurons (Lupa et al., 1990
)
and themselves display decreased clustering of acetylcholine receptors
in response to soluble agrin (Ferns et al., 1993
). The principal biochemical defect in S27 proteoglycan production appears to
reside in decreased glycosaminoglycan chain length (Bowen et al., 1996). Several cell-surface proteoglycans are known to bind to tenascin-C. These include syndecan-1 (Salmivirta et al.,
1991
) and possibly heparan sulfate proteoglycans (Aukhil et
al., 1993
) and also chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans such as
neurocan and phosphacan/receptor tyrosine kinase
(Barnea et
al., 1994
; Grumet et al., 1994
). Although C2C12 and S27
cells attached equally well to fibronectin, S27 cells attached in much
larger numbers to the tenascin-C variants and also tended to display
larger arrays of fascin microspikes. Because the heparin-binding site
of tenascin-C is located in the fibrinogen-like globular domain
(Fischer et al., 1995
), it would be expected that, as
observed with S27 cells, alterations in proteoglycan-mediated adhesion
would be apparent on both TN-190 and TN-ADC.
Several other cell-surface tenascin-C binding proteins have been
identified in various cell types. These include F3/F11/contactin (Zisch
et al., 1992
), annexin II (Chung and Erickson, 1994
), the integrin
2
1 on endothelial cells (Sriramarao et
al., 1993
),
8
1 on neurons and in 293 transfectants (Schnapp
et al., 1995
; Varnum-Finney et al., 1995
),
9
1 in transfected cell lines (Yokosaki et al., 1994
,
1996
),
v
3 on various cell types (Salmivirta et al.,
1991
; Joshi et al., 1993
; Prieto et al., 1993
),
and also
v
6 (Prieto et al.,
1993
; Yokosaki et al., 1996
). Most of the mapped binding
sites fall within the constant domains of the tenascin-C molecule
(Zisch et al., 1992
; Joshi et al., 1993
;
Varnum-Finney et al., 1995
), but annexin II provides an
example of a protein for which the binding site lies within the A, B,
C, and D variable repeats (Chung et al., 1996
). It will be
of interest to identify the binding sites used by C2C12 and S27 cells.
In addition to the generic cellular responses to tenascin-C
variants identified in our studies, the TN-ADC variant exhibited distinctive activities. On a molar basis, TN-ADC was quantitatively more active in supporting cell attachment and irregular cell spreading. This result was observed for both C2C12 cells and S27 cells and is the
first report of a difference in adhesive properties between full-length
tenascin-C splice variants. CEF-TN also supported a higher level of
cell spreading than TN-190, presumably because this preparation
contains a mixture of splice variants including ABAD2AD1C (Tucker
et al., 1994
). TN-ADC was also less active on a molar basis
in terms of antiadhesive activity in preventing cell attachment to
fibronectin. We did not detect differential fibronectin binding by
TN-ADC or TN-190, thus this difference in activity may result from
different mechanisms of interaction at the cell surface. For example,
differences in cell spreading could result either from greater
mechanical strength of initial cell attachment to TN-ADC (Lotz et
al., 1989
) or from activation of intracellular signaling pathways
that are required to promote the cytoskeletal organization involved in
cell spreading (reviewed by Schwartz et al., 1995
; Yamada
and Miyamoto, 1995
). Activation of such pathways by soluble
TN-ADC would also serve to limit the extent of cell rounding. Such
mechanical and/or biochemical differences might result from direct
interactions of the additional fibronectin type III repeats with cell
surface binding proteins or from indirect effects of these repeats on
the cell adhesive properties of tenascin-C. For example, the insertion
of the AD2, AD1, and C repeats might have the effect of increasing the
activity of an adhesive domain or decreasing the activity of an
antiadhesive domain, conceivably by altering the accessibility of such
sites to their cognate cell-surface receptors.
Cells adherent on TSP-1 tend to spread and assemble large arrays of radial fascin microspikes: cells on tenascin-C undergo more irregular cell spreading and localized microspike formation. It is possible that the ligation of cell-surface tenascin-binding proteins does not provide such a strong stimulus for microspike formation; however, it remains to be determined whether the more limited formation of microspikes is cause or consequence of irregular cell spreading. Although tenascin-C and TSP-1 are structurally distinct matrix macromolecules that interact with distinct arrays of cell surface receptors, these results establish a novel biochemical similarity in the processes of cell adhesion to tenascin-C and TSP-1. The identification of a biochemical response that differs from cellular responses to classical adhesive glycoproteins such as fibronectin offers a basis for further studies of the mechanisms by which cells respond to tenascin-C and other adhesion-modulating glycoproteins.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Theres Schultless for the electron microscopy of recombinant tenascins, George Mosialos for the gift of fascin antibody, and Zach Hall for the gift of S27 cells. J.C.A. gratefully acknowledges the support of a Senior Fellowship in Basic Biomedical Science from the Wellcome Trust (grant 038284). We are most grateful to the British/Swiss Joint Research Programme of the British Council and Swiss National Research Foundation for a travel grant that enabled these experiments to be initiated. This work was supported in part by funds provided by the National Science Foundation (BNS-9021124) and the University of California at Davis School of Medicine to R.P.T.
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FOOTNOTES |
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§ Corresponding author: Medical Research Council, Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom.
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REFERENCES |
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