Cell adhesion to fibronectin and tenascin: quantitative measurements of initial binding and subsequent strengthening response.
Open Access
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 109 (4) , 1795-1805
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.109.4.1795
Abstract
Cell-substratum adhesion strengths have been quantified using fibroblasts and glioma cells binding to two extracellular matrix proteins, fibronectin and tenascin. A centrifugal force-based adhesion assay was used for the adhesive strength measurements, and the corresponding morphology of the adhesions was visualized by interference reflection microscopy. The initial adhesions as measured at 4.degree.C were on the order of 10-5 dynes/cell and did not involve the cytoskeletion. Adhesions to fibronectin after 15 min at 37.degree.C were more than an order of magnitude stronger; the strengthening response required cytoskeletal involvement. By contrast to the marked strengthening of adhesion of FN, adhesion to TN was unchanged or weakened after 15 min at 37.degree.C. The absolute strength of adhesion achieved varied according to protein and cell type. When a mixed substratum of fibronectin and tenascin was tested, the presence of tenascin was found to reduce the level of the strengthening of cell adhesion normally observed at 37.degree.C on a substratum of fibronectin alone. Parallel analysis of corresponding interference reflection micrographs showed that differences in the area of cell surface within 10-15 nm of the substratum correlated closely with each of the changes in adhesion observed: after incubation for 15 min on fibronectin at 37.degree.C, glioma cells increased their surface area within close contact to the substrate by .apprx.125-fold. Cells on tenascin did not increase their surface area of contact. The increased surface area of contact and the inhibitory activity of cytochalasin b suggest that the adhesive "strengthening" in the 15 min after initial binding brings additional adhesion molecules into the adhesive site and couples the actin cytoskeleton to the adhesion complex.This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
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