Phosphorylation of the integrin alpha 4 cytoplasmic domain regulates paxillin binding.

Article Details

Citation

Han J, Liu S, Rose DM, Schlaepfer DD, McDonald H, Ginsberg MH

Phosphorylation of the integrin alpha 4 cytoplasmic domain regulates paxillin binding.

J Biol Chem. 2001 Nov 2;276(44):40903-9. Epub 2001 Aug 30.

PubMed ID
11533025 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

alpha4 integrins are essential for embryogenesis, hematopoiesis, inflammation, and immune response possibly because alpha4 integrins have distinct signaling properties from other integrins. Specifically, the alpha4 cytoplasmic domain binds tightly to paxillin, a signaling adaptor protein, leading to increased cell migration and an altered cytoskeletal organization that results in reduced cell spreading. The alpha4 tail contains potential phosphorylation sites clustered in its core paxillin binding region. We now report that the alpha4 tail is phosphorylated in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, Ser(988) is a major phosphorylation site. Using antibodies specific for Ser(988)-phosphorylated alpha4, we found the stoichiometry of alpha4 phosphorylation varied in different cells. However, >60% of alpha4 was phosphorylated in Jurkat T cells. Phosphorylation at Ser(988) blocked paxillin binding to the alpha4 tail. A phosphorylation-mimicking mutant of alpha4 (alpha4S988D) blocked paxillin binding and reversed the inhibitory effect of alpha4 on cell spreading. Consequently, alpha4 phosphorylation is a biochemical mechanism to modulate paxillin binding to alpha4 integrins with consequent regulation of alpha4 integrin-dependent cellular functions.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Integrin alpha-4P13612Details