The integrin αvβ8 mediates epithelial homeostasis through MT1-MMP–dependent activation of TGF-β1

Dezhi Mu(San Francisco General Hospital), Stephanie Cambier(San Francisco General Hospital), Lars Fjellbirkeland(San Francisco General Hospital), Jody L. Baron(University of California, San Francisco), John S. Munger(New York University), Hisaaki Kawakatsu(San Francisco General Hospital), Dean Sheppard(San Francisco General Hospital), V. Courtney Broaddus(San Francisco General Hospital), Stephen L. Nishimura(San Francisco General Hospital)
The Journal of Cell Biology
April 22, 2002
Cited by 717Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Integrins, matrix metalloproteases (MMPs), and the cytokine TGF-beta have each been implicated in homeostatic cell behaviors such as cell growth and matrix remodeling. TGF-beta exists mainly in a latent state, and a major point of homeostatic control is the activation of TGF-beta. Because the latent domain of TGF-beta1 possesses an integrin binding motif (RGD), integrins have the potential to sequester latent TGF-beta (SLC) to the cell surface where TGF-beta activation could be locally controlled. Here, we show that SLC binds to alpha(v)beta8, an integrin expressed by normal epithelial and neuronal cells in vivo. This binding results in the membrane type 1 (MT1)-MMP-dependent release of active TGF-beta, which leads to autocrine and paracrine effects on cell growth and matrix production. These data elucidate a novel mechanism of cellular homeostasis achieved through the coordination of the activities of members of three major gene families involved in cell-matrix interactions.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis