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M708306200v1
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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print October 29, 2007
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M708306200
Submitted on October 5, 2007
Accepted on October 29, 2007

Identification of the peptide sequences within the EIIIA (ED-A) segment of fibronectin that mediate integrin alpha 9beta 1-dependent cellular activities

Arti V. Shinde, Christopher Bystroff, Chunyu Wang, Mariette G. Vogelezang, Peter A. Vincent, Richard O. Hynes, and Livingston Van De Water

Albany Medical college, Albany, NY 12208

Corresponding Author: vandewl{at}mail.amc.edu

Alternative splicing of the fibronectin (FN) gene transcript provides an efficient mechanism for generating functionally appropriate forms of this adhesive glycoprotein, in situ. Cellular FNs that include the EIIIA and/or EIIIB FN III segments are prominently expressed during embryogenesis, wound healing, tumor progression and inflammation. However, the roles of this domain in altering overall FN protein structure and regulating cellular function remain unclear. We previously reported that two integrins, alpha 9beta 1 and alpha 4beta 1, ligate the EIIIA segment (1) and that the epitopes for function-blocking monoclonal antibodies lie within the C-C’ loop of EIIIA (2). We have now performed site-directed mutagenesis within the EIIIA segment and carried out cell adhesion assays on these mutant EIIIAs. We find that the Asp41 and Gly42 residues within the C-C’ loop of EIIIA are necessary for integrin alpha 9beta 1 binding. Synthetic peptides based on the predicted important amino acid sequence from the C-C’ loop encode sufficient information to completely inhibit alpha 9beta 1-mediated cell adhesion. We also report that EIIIA promotes filopodial formation in alpha 9beta 1-expressing cells accompanied by Cdc42 activation. Our data provide a cellular activity for the EIIIA segment, evidence for conformational lability and peptide sequences for probing EIIIA functions in vitro and in vivo.


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