Substrate-bound
FGF2 promotes endothelial cell adhesion by interacting with avb3 integrin.
Here, endothelial GM7373 cells spread and organize focal adhesion plaques
on immobilized FGF2, fibronectin (FN), and vitronectin (VN).
avb3
integrin, paxillin, focal adhesion kinase, vinculin, and pp60src localize
in cell-substratum contact sites on FGF2, FN, or VN. However, only immobilized
FGF2 induces a long-lasting activation of extracellular signal-regulated
kinases1/2 (ERK1/2) and cell proliferation that was inhibited by the
ERK1/2 inhibitor PD 098059 and the tyrosine kinase (TK) inhibitor tyrphostin
23, pointing to the engagement of FGF receptor (FGFR) at the basal side
of the cell.
To
assess this hypothesis, GM7373 cells were transfected with a dominant
negative TK--DFGFR1 mutant (GM7373-DFGFR1 cells) or with the full-length
receptor (GM7373-FGFR1 cells). Both transfectants adhere and spread
on FGF2 but GM7373-DFGFR1 cells do not proliferate. Also, parental and
GM7373-FGFR1 cells, but not GM7373-DFGFR1 cells, undergo morphological
changes and increased motility on FGF2-coated plastic.
Finally,
FGFR1, but not TK--DFGFR1, localizes in cell adhesion contacts on immobilized
FGF2. In conclusion, substrate-bound FGF2 induces endothelial cell proliferation,
motility, and the recruitment of FGFR1 in cell-substratum contacts.
This may contribute to the cross talk among intracellular signaling
pathways activated by FGFR1 and avb3 integrin in endothelial cells.
Oncogene
(2002), in press