pp60c-src is a positive regulator of growth factor-induced cell scattering in a rat bladder carcinoma cell line.
Open Access
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 131 (3) , 761-773
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.131.3.761
Abstract
The NBT-II rat carcinoma cell line exhibits two mutually exclusive responses to FGF-1 and EGF, entering mitosis at cell confluency while undergoing an epithelium-to-mesenchyme transition (EMT) when cultured at subconfluency. EMT is characterized by acquisition of cell motility, modifications of cell morphology, and cell dissociation correlating with the loss of desmosomes from cellular cortex. The pleiotropic effects of EGF and FGF-1 on NBT-II cells suggest that multiple signaling pathways may be activated. We demonstrate here that growth factor activation is linked to at least two intracellular signaling pathways. One pathway leading to EMT involves an early and sustained stimulation of pp60c-src kinase activity, which is not observed during the growth factor-induced entry into the cell cycle. Overexpression of normal c-src causes a subpopulation of cells to undergo spontaneous EMT and sensitizes the rest of the population to the scattering activity of EGF and FGF-1 without affecting their mitogenic responsiveness. Addition of cholera toxin, a cAMP-elevating agent, severely perturbs growth factor induction of EMT without altering pp60c-src activation, therefore demonstrating that cAMP blockade takes place downstream or independently of pp60c-src. On the other hand, overexpression of a mutated, constitutively activated form of pp60c-src does not block cell dispersion while strongly inhibiting growth factor-induced entry into cell division. Moreover, stable transfection of a dominant negative mutant of c-src inhibits the scattering response without affecting mitogenesis induced by the growth factors. Altogether, these results suggest a role for pp60c-src in epithelial cell scattering and indicate that pp60c-src might contribute unequally to the two separate biological activities engendered by a single signal.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- PC12 cells overexpressing the insulin receptor undergo insulin-dependent neuronal differentiationCurrent Biology, 1994
- EGF triggers neuronal differentiation of PC12 cells that overexpress the EGF receptorCurrent Biology, 1994
- Phospholipase Cγ Activation, Phosphotidylinositol Hydrolysis, and Calcium Mobilization are Not Required for FGF Receptor-Mediated ChemotaxisCell Adhesion and Communication, 1994
- Cyclic AMP distinguishes between two functions of acidic FGF in a rat bladder carcinoma cell line.The Journal of cell biology, 1993
- Loss of epithelial differentiation and gain of invasiveness correlates with tyrosine phosphorylation of the E-cadherin/beta-catenin complex in cells transformed with a temperature-sensitive v-SRC gene.The Journal of cell biology, 1993
- Association between the PDGF receptor and members of the src family of tyrosine kinasesCell, 1990
- Rearrangements of desmosomal and cytoskeletal proteins during the transition from epithelial to fibroblastoid organization in cultured rat bladder carcinoma cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- Cell migration is essential for sustained growth of keratinocyte colonies: The roles of transforming growth factor-α and epidermal growth factorCell, 1987
- Tyrosine phosphorylation regulates the biochemical and biological properties of pp60c-srcCell, 1987
- Rapid rounding of human epidermoid carcinoma cells A-431 induced by epidermal growth factorThe Journal of cell biology, 1981