Invadopodia promote proteolysis of a wide variety of extracellular matrix proteins
- 1 February 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Cellular Physiology
- Vol. 158 (2) , 299-308
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jcp.1041580212
Abstract
Chicken embryo fibroblasts (CEF) transformed by Rous sarcoma virus invade the extracellular matrix (ECM) using plasma membrane protrusions, termed invadopodia, that contact and dissolve the matrix. Normal 1 Throughout this manuscript normal cells refers to chicken embryo fibroblasts and transformed cells refers to these cells infected with Rous sarcoma virus. cells neither form invadopodia nor degrade the ECM. Here we show that cells expressing invadopodia degrade and enter into a fibronectin-rich matrix produced by normal fibroblasts. Within 6 h after seeding onto the matrix, the invasive cells create an area devoid of matrix fibrils surrounding the cell body. Proteolysis mediates this matrix clearing because sevenfold more radiolabeled matrix is released into the growth media by the transformed cells relative to the normal cells. In addition to this assembled matrix, transformed cells were grown on thin layers of purified ECM proteins, revealing that invadopodia can degrade fibronectin, collagen type I, collagen type IV, and laminin. A 160 kDa protease that is extracted from transformed cells by Triton X-114 partitions into the detergent phase and is prominent in ventral plasma membranes that contact the ECM suggesting that it is a membrane associated protease.Keywords
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