PLASMA MEMBRANE REGIONS AS CELLS GROW IN MONOLAYERS
Project Number5R01GM029127-08
Contact PI/Project LeaderJACOBSON, BRUCE SHELL
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST
Description
Abstract Text
The long term objective of the proposed research is to understand
the role of the plasma membrane (PM) proteins and the
cytoskeleton in mediating the formation of apical and basolateral
domains of the plasma membrane in cells that exhibit a
transcellular polarity. Examples of such cells are epithelial cells
which are bounded on one side by a fluid phase and on the other by
an extracellular matrix. In vitro adhesion of HeLa cells (a
transformed epithelium easily grown in suspension) to an
extracellular matrix protein, gelatin, will be used as a model to
study the formation of the apical and basolateral PM. In this
system the initial stages in the formation of these PM domains
are cell attachment and spreading. HeLa cells attached to gelatin
coated culture dishes are induced to spread rapidly and form an
apical PM exposed to the culture medium and a basal PM adjacent
to the culture dish. The apical and basal domains can be isolated
and redistribution of proteins between the domains during
spreading can be quantitated. We have identified five gelatin
receptors on the HeLa cell surface. The kinetics of cell
attachment and spreading indicate that spreading is a cooperative
process leading to the hypothesis that the mechanism for
spreading is the segregation of the cell surface extracellular
matrix receptors into the basal PM with subsequent clustering of
the receptors into oligomers inducing them to bind to the
cytoskeleton. The hypothesis will be tested by concentrating on
several specific aims: 1, determine which of the known gelatin
receptors mediate attachment and/or spreading; 2, determine
which receptors redistribute and become segregated among the
apical, basal and internal PM domains during cell adhesion; 3,
determine if gelatin receptor clustering is correlated with cell
spreading; 4, determine if receptor binding to the cytoskeleton is
regulated by receptor clustering and/or covalent modification; 5,
determine which cytoskeletal proteins bind to the gelatin
receptors and; 6, determine if the receptors are transmembrane
proteins present in oligomeric complexes and if they have
common polypeptide fragments. Results from the specific aims
will undoubtedly increase our understanding of the molecular
mechanism of cell adhesion to an extracellular matrix and the
formation of transcellular polarity.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01GM029127-08
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