Binding of soluble fibronectin to integrin alpha 5 beta 1 - link to focal adhesion redistribution and contractile shape

Stephan Huveneers, Hoa Truong, Reinhard Fässler, Arnoud Sonnenberg, Erik H. J. Danen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

115 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Focal adhesions are randomly distributed across the ventral surface or along the edge of epithelial cells. In fibroblasts they orient centripetally and concentrate at a few peripheral sites connecting long F-actin stress fibers, causing a typical elongated, contractile morphology. Extensive remodeling of adhesions in fibroblasts also takes part in fibronectin fibrillogenesis, a process that depends on Rho-mediated contractility and results in the formation of a fibronectin matrix. Our current study shows that all these fibroblast characteristics are controlled by the ability of integrin alpha 5 beta 1 to bind soluble fibronectin molecules in their compact inactive conformation. The hypervariable region of the ligand-binding I-like domain of integrin alpha 5 beta 1 supports binding of soluble fibronectin. This supports the distribution of centripetally orientated focal adhesions in distinct peripheral sites, Rho activation and fibronectin fibrillogenesis through a mechanism that does not depend on Syndecan-4. Integrin alpha v beta 3, even when locked in high affinity conformations for the RGD recognition motif shows no appreciable binding of soluble fibronectin and, consequently, fails to support the typical fibroblast focal adhesion distribution, Rho activity and fibronectin fibrillogenesis in the absence of integrin alpha 5 beta 1. The ability of alpha 5 beta 1 integrin to interact with soluble fibronectin may thus drive the cell-matrix adhesion and cytoskeletal organization required for a contractile, fibroblast-like morphology, perhaps explaining why alpha 5 beta 1 integrin, similarly to fibronectin, is essential for development
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2452-2462
JournalJournal of Cell Science
Volume121
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008
Externally publishedYes

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