Regulation of endocytosis, nuclear translocation, and signaling of fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 by E-cadherin


Autoria(s): Bryant, David M.; Wylie, Fiona G.; Stow, Jennifer L.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptors (FGFRs) signal to modulate diverse cellular functions, including epithelial cell morphogenesis. In epithelial cells, E-cadherin plays a key role in cell-cell adhesion, and its function can be regulated through endocytic trafficking. In this study, we investigated the location, trafficking, and function of FGFR1 and E-cadherin and report a novel mechanism, based on endocytic trafficking, for the coregulation of E-cadherin and signaling from FGFR1. FGF induces the internalization of surface FGFR1 and surface E-cadherin, followed by nuclear translocation of FGFR1. The internalization of both proteins is regulated by common endocytic machinery, resulting in cointernalization of FGFR1 and E-cadherin into early endosomes. By blocking endocytosis, we show that this is a requisite, initial step for the nuclear translocation of FGFR1. Overexpression of E-cadherin blocks both the coendocytosis of E-cadherin and FGFR1, the nuclear translocation of FGFR1 and FGF-induced signaling to the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway. Furthermore, stabilization of surface adhesive E-cadherin, by overexpressing p120(ctn), also blocks internalization and nuclear translocation of FGFR1. These data reveal that conjoint endocytosis and trafficking is a novel mechanism for the coregulation of E-cadherin and FGFR1 during cell signaling and morphogenesis.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:76323

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Society for Cell Biology

Palavras-Chave #Cell Biology #Cell-adhesion #Fgf-receptor #Epithelial-cells #Down-regulation #Breast-cancer #Beta-catenin #P120 Catenin #Pathway #Protein #Inhibition #C1 #270103 Protein Targeting and Signal Transduction #780106 Political science and public policy
Tipo

Journal Article