1 Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research, Novartis Research Foundation, Maulbeerstrasse 66, CH-4058 Basel, Switzerland
2 Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy, University of California at Davis, Davis, CA 95616, USA
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: Ruth.Chiquet{at}fmi.ch)
Accepted 12 September 2003
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Summary |
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Key words: Tenascin, Hexabrachion, Expression, Development, Adhesion, Extracellular matrix
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Introduction |
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Each of the tenascins found in the mouse have been knocked out by homologous recombination in order to study their functions during development. Mice lacking a functional tenascin-C gene were first reported to develop normally (Saga et al., 1992), but more recent reports demonstrate several neurological phenotypes (reviewed in Mackie and Tucker, 1999
). Tenascin-X knockout mice also develop outwardly normally but eventually display connective tissue disorders resembling Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (Mao et al., 2002
). Similarly, tenascin-R knockout mice are viable and fertile, although the molecular composition of their perineuronal nets is altered (Weber et al., 1999
). The relatively mild developmental phenotypes described in each of these knockout mice might be explained by functional redundancy within the tenascin family but, as yet, there is no evidence that the expression pattern of one tenascin changes in response to the knockout of another. This leaves open the possibility that a fourth, uncharacterized, tenascin could be present in the mouse embryonic ECM.
A candidate for this fourth mammalian tenascin is tenascin-W, which has to date only been described in zebrafish (Weber et al., 1998). Zebrafish tenascin-W was isolated by screening a zebrafish cDNA library constructed 20-28 hours after fertilization for the EGF-like domains conserved in all tenascins. The expression pattern of tenascin-W was then investigated by in situ hybridization in embryos and juvenile zebrafish. At both stages, tenascin-W expression overlapped extensively with the expression of tenascin-C.
In order to learn more about the possible role for tenascin-W in compensating for tenascin-C in the knockout mice, as well as to learn about the properties of tenascin-W protein, we have cloned the complete coding sequence of murine tenascin-W, studied its expression by immunohistochemistry, western blotting and in situ hybridization, and cultured cells on recombinant tenascin-W. Our results show considerable overlap between the expression of tenascin-W and tenascin-C in the mouse, but distinctive effects of these proteins on cells in vitro. We have also identified a possible integrin receptor for tenascin-W that does not act as a receptor for intact tenascin-C.
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Materials and Methods |
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To check for potential splicing variants within the region of the FNIII repeats, we performed PCR reactions with primers 5'-CACAGTTGTGCCCATCCG-3' / 5'-GCCATCAATTTG-3' spanning repeats 2 to 9 using the 19-day whole-embryo library as template. PCR products were analysed after electrophoresis in 1% agarose gels.
The full-length tenascin-W cDNA was transfected into HEK293 EBNA cells (ATCC number CRL-10852) using the transfection reagent fugene-6 (Roche). Transfected cells were selected for with puromycin and the medium containing the secreted tenascin-W protein was collected. The protein was purified by sequential chromatography over a gelatine-agarose column (Sigma) to remove any contaminating fibronectin in the preparation and by adsorption to a Ni-NTA matrix (Qiagen). The tenascin-W was eluted from the nickel column by 250 mM imidazole and dialysed against PBS.
Electron microscopy was performed by the rotary shadowing technique as described previously (Chiquet-Ehrismann et al., 1988). Briefly, 50 µg ml-1 tenascin-W in 0.2 M ammonium hydrogen carbonate was mixed 1:1 (v/v) with glycerol and sprayed onto freshly cleaved mica discs. These were dried in high vacuum, rotary shadowed with platinum at an angle of 5-7°, replicated and photographed.
Heparin binding of tenascin-W was tested by incubation of the purified tenascin-W with heparin-agarose beads (Sigma-Aldrich) in PBS and in PBS diluted 1:2 with water. The beads were washed with the respective incubation buffers and the bound protein eluted by boiling of the beads in sodium-dodecyl-sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) loading buffer. The protein input, the supernatant, the wash and the elution fractions were analysed by SDS-PAGE and stained by GelCode (Pierce). In PBS, all of the tenascin-W was recovered in the supernatant, whereas, in the diluted PBS, 90% of the protein was retained by the heparin-agarose.
In situ hybridization
Timed (12.5 days) CD-1 mouse embryos were dissected from the uterine horns and fixed in ice-cold 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS overnight. The embryos were then rinsed in PBS, dehydrated in methanol and stored in 100% methanol at -80°C until processed for in situ hybridization. Antisense and sense tenascin-W RNA probes (corresponding to the sequences coding and complementary to FNIII repeats 6 and 7) were labelled with digoxigenin-UTP (Boehringer Mannheim) using the instructions provided by the manufacturer. In situ hybridization was carried out using methods modified from the protocol published by Wilkinson and Nieto (Wilkinson and Nieto, 1993) and described by us previously (Tucker et al., 2001a
), except that the proteinase K treatment was extended to 10 minutes. Hybridization was carried out for 2 days at 68°C. Following hybridization, the embryos were washed three times for 30 minutes each in 5x SSC/50% formamide and three times for 30 minutes each in 2x SSC/50% formamide at 65°C. Embryos were then rinsed in 1x TBS with 1% Tween-20, blocked in TBS with 10% goat serum and then incubated overnight in alkaline-phosphatase-conjugated anti-digoxigenin (Boehringer Mannheim) that had been preabsorbed with mouse embryo powder. NBT/BCIP (Boehringer Mannheim) was used for the alkaline phosphatase colour reaction.
Anti-tenascin-W antibody production and immunohistochemistry
The bacterially expressed recombinant fragment of tenascin-W described above was used to raise polyclonal antisera in rabbits using standard immunization procedures. This antiserum reacted specifically with purified full-length tenascin-W as well as with endogenous tenascin-W in tissue extracts of mouse organs. Timed (10.5 days, 11.5 days, 12.5 days, 13.5 days, 14.5 days, 15.5 days and 16.5 days) CD-1 mouse embryos were fixed as described above for in situ hybridization, rinsed, cryoprotected in 25% sucrose in PBS overnight, and embedded for cryosectioning. Sections were cut at 14 µm in a Leitz cryostat, collected on presubbed slides (Fisher) and allowed to air dry for 6 hours. Cross and sagittal sections from each developmental stage were then rinsed in PBS, blocked in PBS with 0.5% bovine serum albumin (BSA) and incubated overnight at room temperature in diluted anti-tenascin-W serum, diluted preimmune serum or blocking solution alone. Following rinses, the sections were then incubated in secondary antibody (Alexa-488- or Alexa-594-tagged goat anti-rabbit IgG, Molecular Probes) for 2 hours. For double-label immunohistochemistry, sections were incubated in both the anti-tenascin-W serum and rat monoclonal anti-tenascin-C MTn-12 (Sigma) and incubated in two appropriate secondary antibodies (Molecular Probes) labelled with different fluorophores. Photographs were taken using Ektachrome (Kodak) slide film, including double exposures of the double-label immunohistochemistry.
For immunofluorescence and F-actin staining of C2C12 cells, cultures were transfected with a full-length 8 cDNA in pcDNAI [kindly provided by L. Schnapp (Schnapp et al., 1995a
)], with this
8 cDNA and a plasmid encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) under the control of a ß-actin promoter (kindly provided by A. Matus, Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland), or with the EGFP plasmid alone using the transfection reagent fugene (Roche Diagnostics). 36 hours after transfection, the cells were harvested and re-plated in serum-free medium on wells coated with tenascin-W (50 µg ml-1) or untreated wells of 3.5 cm dishes containing four separate wells (Greiner). 1 hour after plating, the cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 30 minutes and permeabilized with 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS for 5 minutes. Then, they were either incubated with anti-
8 antiserum at a dilution of 1:200 (Schnapp et al., 1995b
) followed by Alexa-488-conjugated antibodies (Molecular Probes) at a 1:1000 dilution together with TRITC-phalloidin (Sigma-Aldrich) at a 1:500 dilution. Each incubation was for 1 hour and cells were washed in PBS after each incubation. Finally, the specimens were mounted in Mowiol (Calbiochem) and examined and photographed using a Axiophot microscope (Carl Zeiss MicroImaging) connected to a 3CCD camera (Sony).
Western-blot analysis of tenascin-W expression
Approximately equal volumes of dissected tissue samples were solubilized for 5 minutes at 95°C in SDS-PAGE sample buffer, followed by electrophoresis on 6% polyacrylamide gels. Proteins were electro-transferred onto PVDF membranes (Millipore). After the transfer, the membranes were stained with Amidoblack to control for equal protein loading. After blocking for 1 hour at room temperature in TBS containing 0.05% Tween and 3% skimmed milk powder, membranes were incubated overnight with anti-tenascin-W antibody (1:400) and then for 1 hour with anti-rabbit IgG coupled to horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (1/10000). Specific staining was revealed using ECL enhanced chemiluminescence kits (Amersham).
Supernatant was collected from J1 ES cells cultured on primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts as a feeder layer in medium complemented with LIF (Gibco).
Mouse C2C12 cells (CRL-1772; American Type Culture Collection) were routinely cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (Life Technologies) containing 10% foetal calf serum (Amimed). During the treatment with bone morphogenic protein-2 (BMP2; Research Diagnostics) cells were cultured in medium containing 5% newborn calf serum (Amimed) with or without the addition of 200 ng ml-1 of BMP2. Medium was exchanged every second day up to 6 days. Aliquots of 20 µl of the conditioned media were analysed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblots for the presence of tenascin-W. After 6 days of treatment, these cells were used for adhesion assays as described below.
Cell adhesion assays
Cell adhesion assays were performed with either C2C12 cells described above or with human T98G (CRL-1690; American Type Culture Collection) cells. Microtitre plates (60 wells; Nunc) were coated for 1 hour at room temperature with 5 µl per well PBS containing 0.01% Tween and the indicated concentration of ECM protein. All wells were then blocked for 30 minutes with PBS containing 1% BSA. Before plating, cells were detached using trypsin-EDTA. Trypsin was blocked with 100 µg ml-1 soybean trypsin inhibitor in PBS, and cells were resuspended in serum-free medium and counted. 1500 cells per well were plated for 60 minutes. The set of integrin-function-blocking antibodies was obtained from Chemicon International (ECM430). Cells were incubated for 30 minutes in suspension with the indicated antibody at 10 µg ml-1 before plating. To investigate the effect of RGD peptides (GRGDS and SDGRG, both from Sigma) 0.1 M or 0.5 M peptide was added to the cells before plating. Cells were fixed by the addition of 4% formaldehyde in PBS for 30 minutes at room temperature and stained with 0.1% crystal violet in H2O for 30 minutes. Cells were photographed with a Nikon microscope (Nikon Diaphot) equipped with a Nikon camera and counted.
Adhesion assays with 8 or mock-transfected human K562 (kind gift of U. Müller, Friedrich Miescher Institute, Basel, Switzerland) were performed as described (Denda et al., 1998
).
Human SW480 carcinoma cells transfected with 9 integrin as well as the corresponding control cells were a kind gift of D. Sheppard (Yokosaki et al., 1994
).
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Results |
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A striking feature of the tenascin-W sequence is its high degree of homology between FNIII repeats within one molecule. A comparison between all FNIII repeats of mouse tenascin-W reveals that repeats 1, 2 and 9 are clearly different from the central group of FNIII repeats 3-8 (Fig. 1B). Comparing the sequences between mouse and zebrafish tenascin-W, it is possible to assign homologous repeats between species (Fig. 1C). Thus, zebrafish has only two of the central highly conserved repeats and the fifth FNIII corresponds to the ninth of the mouse tenascin-W. This indicates that either the zebrafish tenascin-W sequence reflects a shorter variant produced by alternative splicing or the mouse has acquired more of the repeats during evolution by exon duplications. The human tenascin-W sequence that can be found in the DNA database (accession number AL049689.1) corresponds exactly to the mouse sequence presented here and also contains nine FNIII repeats.
In order to analyse the structure and function of tenascin-W, we expressed FNIII repeats 7-9 in bacteria and raised an antiserum against this recombinant fragment of tenascin-W. Furthermore, we purified full-length tenascin-W from transfected HEK293 cells. The purified full-length tenascin-W was analysed by gel electrophoresis and the specificity of the anti-tenascin-W antiserum was tested on an immunoblot of purified full-length tenascin-W and tenascin-C (Fig. 2A). The anti-tenascin-W antiserum reacted specifically with tenascin-W and showed no cross-reactivity with tenascin-C. The migration of tenascin-W was analysed under reducing and non-reducing conditions, and compared with migration of tenascin-C. Under reducing conditions, tenascin-W and tenascin-C migrated as monomers, whereas, under non-reducing conditions, tenascin-C migrated as a disulfide-linked hexamer. Because non-reduced tenascin-W exhibited a similar molecular weight to tenascin-C, we wanted to know whether tenascin-W can form hexamers as well. To address this point, purified mouse recombinant tenascin-W was visualized by electron microscopy after rotary shadowing. Indeed, tenascin-W molecules formed six-armed structures, called hexabrachions, similar to those previously reported for tenascin-C (Fig. 2B) (Erickson and Inglesias, 1984).
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Because tenascin-W contains four potential heparin-binding sites (BBxB; underlined in Fig. 1) we tested whether tenascin-W can be retained on a heparin-agarose column. This binding was found to be weaker than that of tenascin-C (Fischer et al., 1995), tenascin-X (Matsumoto et al., 1994
) or tenascin-Y (Hagios et al., 1996
) and could only be detected below physiological salt concentration (not shown).
Expression of tenascin-W during embryonic development and in the adult
The expression of tenascin-W was investigated by immunohistochemistry in sections from timed CD-1 mouse embryos in parallel with tenascin-C. Tenascin-W expression first appeared at embryonic day 11.5 (E11.5) in the maxillary process (Fig. 3A). Tenascin-C was expressed in the maxillary process as well, and the two proteins were partially co-localized (Fig. 3B,C). The expression of tenascin-W in the maxillary process was confirmed by in situ analysis at E12.5 showing expression of tenascin-W mRNA only in the maxillary process (`moustache-like' structures; Fig. 3E,F). Tenascin-W was still expressed in this region at E14.5 (Fig. 3D) and at E16.5 in the newly formed mandible (Fig. 4M). After E11.5, tenascin-W expression extended to other regions but with a very specific pattern. At day E14.5, tenascin-W was found in the smooth muscle cells in the stomach (Fig. 4A) and the intestine (Fig. 4E). In the same tissue sections, tenascin-C was expressed in the stomach, mostly localized with tenascin-W (Fig. 4B), but not in the intestine (Fig. 4F). A similar observation was made at E15.5 (Fig. 4C,D,G,H). At the same stage, tenascin-W appeared in the periosteum of the ribs (Fig. 4K), again overlapping the expression of tenascin-C (Fig. 4L). Tenascin-W expression was not seen associated with developing bones before E15.5, as shown, for example, in vertebral arches (Fig. 4I), whereas tenascin-C was already found in this structure at this embryonic stage (Fig. 4J). Later, at E16.5, tenascin-W expression was restricted to specific regions, localizing with tenascin-C: mandible (Fig. 4M), palate (Fig. 4N) and teeth (Fig. 4O). In masseter, however, tenascin-W was expressed but tenascin-C was not (Fig. 4P). During all embryogenesis, tenascin-W was never found to be present in lung, cartilage, liver, brain or peripheral nerves (data not shown), whereas tenascin-C is known to be expressed in all these structures during development.
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In the adult, the pattern of tenascin-W expression was restricted to kidney (Fig. 5B), aortic valve (Fig. 5C), corneal limbus (Fig. 5D) and periosteum around the ribs (Fig. 5E). Tenascin-W overlapped expression of tenascin-C in all these regions. Tenascin-W was absent from cerebellum (Fig. 5A), stomach (Fig. 5F) and intestine (Fig. 5G), where tenascin-C was still expressed.
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Analysis of endogenous tenascin-W in tissues and cell cultures
The expression of tenascin-W was investigated in the embryo and adult mouse by immunoblot analysis (Fig. 6). In extracts of whole embryos from E10.5 and E12.5, a single 180 kDa band was detected with the antitenascin-W antibody on immunoblots (Fig. 6A). In adult mouse, the same 180 kDa tenascin-W was detected in extracts from the periosteum of the ribs and in kidney, as well as in J1 embryonic stem cells in culture (Fig. 6A). To confirm that there are no splice variants of tenascin-W, we performed reverse-transcription polymerase chain reactions (PCR) on mRNA from E16.5 mouse whole embryos (Fig. 6B). Only one band could be amplified by PCR with primers encompassing the second to the ninth FNIII repeats. The size of the amplified band corresponded to the expected size, with six FNIII repeats between repeats 2 and 9.
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C2C12 cells are known to differentiate into osteoblastic cells after treatment with BMP2. The osteoblast markers alkaline phosphatase and osteocalcin were first detected in conditioned medium 3 days after adding BMP2 and a large increase was observed after 6 days in culture (Katagiri et al., 1994). Because the immunostaining of mouse embryos revealed the expression of tenascin-W in the periosteum, we tested whether BMP2 induces tenascin-W in C2C12 cells concomitant with osteogenic differentiation. Indeed, BMP2 treatment of C2C12 cells led to the accumulation of tenascin-W in the conditioned medium after 4 days in culture, with a further increase after 6 days (Fig. 7A).
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Cell adhesion to tenascin-W
BMP2-treated and untreated C2C12 cells were tested for adhesion to tenascin-W in comparison to fibronectin (Fig. 7B,C). Both batches of cells adhered well to tenascin-W, reaching maximal adhesion at 10 µg ml-1 coating concentration. Whereas equal numbers of both batches of cells adhered to fibronectin, adhesion to tenascin-W was increased in the BMP-treated cells. The cellular morphology of the cells differed between the fibronectin and the tenascin-W substrata (Fig. 7D-F). The cells on fibronectin were flat with regular shapes and extensive lamellipodia, whereas the cells on tenascin-W displayed many long, narrow processes and rounded cell bodies. The morphology of the BMP2-treated cells was the same as that of the untreated cells.
To determine the cellular receptor(s) responsible for cell adhesion to tenascin-W, we tested the effect of integrin function-blocking antibodies. Because these antibodies recognize human proteins only, we used the human glioblastoma cell line T98G for these studies. These cells adhere well to tenascin-W and show a similar morphology to the C2C12 cells, with actin-rich processes (see below). Antibodies to 1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6 and
V were unable to inhibit adhesion of T98G cells to tenascin-W (Fig. 8A). Nevertheless, this adhesion depended on ß1 integrin, because 10 µg ml-1 of the anti-ß1-integrin-blocking antibody P4C10 completely inhibited adhesion to tenascin-W. IDG tripeptide motifs have been reported to be the recognition sequence for
9ß1 integrin (Yokosaki et al., 1998
). Because mouse tenascin-W contains three IDG motifs (Fig. 1A), we investigated whether
9 integrin could be a receptor for tenascin-W. We obtained SW480 colon carcinoma cells transfected with a vector containing the cDNA for
9 integrin and mock-transfected cells (Yokosaki et al., 1994
), and plated them on tenascin-W-coated wells. However, the
9- and mock-transfected SW480 cells failed to adhere to tenascin-W, whereas they adhered well to fibronectin and collagen (Fig. 8B).
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Integrin 8 is expressed in developing rib, kidney and in smooth muscle from the gastro-intestinal tract (Schnapp et al., 1995b
; Denda et al., 1998
). Because this expression pattern coincides with the presence of tenascin-W, it seemed that integrin
8 was also a good candidate receptor for tenascin-W. We tested this hypothesis using the leukaemia cell line K562 transfected with
8 integrin (Muller et al., 1995
).
8-Integrin-transfected K562 cells could indeed adhere to tenascin-W but the mock-transfected control cells did not (Fig. 8C). Therefore, we propose that
8ß1 integrin is a receptor for tenascin-W. Because
8ß1 is known to be an RGD-dependent receptor and mouse tenascin-W contains an RGD sequence in its second FNIII repeat, we tested whether cell adhesion to tenascin-W could be inhibited by RGD peptides. Inclusion of the GRGDS peptide inhibited adhesion of T98G cells to fibronectin as well as to tenascin-W, whereas the control SDGRG peptide had no effect (Fig. 8D). The adhesion of C2C12 cells to tenascin-W was also inhibited by RGD peptides (not shown).
We next analysed the morphology and the actin cytoskeleton of C2C12 cells plated on tenascin-W in comparison to cells plated on fibronectin. The shape of the cells on tenascin-W was very different from the cells on fibronectin. This was particularly obvious after F-actin staining with phalloidin (Fig. 9A,B). The cells on fibronectin were well spread and contained stress fibres, whereas the cells on tenascin-W had many actin-rich processes but no stress fibres and the cell bodies remained relatively round. Finally, we tested whether overexpression of 8 integrin in C2C12 cells would further increase cell adhesion of these cells to tenascin-W. We transfected either an
8 expression plasmid, an EGFP plasmid or the two plasmids together into C2C12 cells. 2 days after transfection cells were harvested and re-plated onto tenascin-W-coated wells for 1 hour in serum-free medium. After fixation, the
8-transfected cells were stained with anti-
8 antiserum as well as with phalloidin to reveal the F-actin (Fig. 9C,D). We found that the cells with prominent
8 staining were more spread and had prominent stress fibres. Looking at lower magnification at the EGFP fluorescence of the double-transfected cells revealed that more fluorescent cells had attached to tenascin-W than to plain plastic and many of the cells were spreading and exhibited more extensive processes than the EGFP-only transfected cells (Fig. 9E-J). In order to confirm a potential interaction between
8 integrin and tenascin-W in vivo, we performed staining of both proteins in the periosteum around the vertebra of an E16.5 mouse embryo (Fig. 10A,B) and in adult kidney (Fig. 10C,D) and found the two proteins to be co-localized in these organs.
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Discussion |
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Alternative splicing is known to occur in all tenascins at the level of the FNIII repeats. In tenascin-C, nine different FNIII repeats can be included or excluded by RNA splicing (Chiquet-Ehrismann, 1995). The alternative tenascin-C splicing variants show different expression patterns and can have different functions (Meiners and Geller, 1997
; Fischer et al., 1997
). Alternative splicing also occurs in tenascin-R (Norenberg et al., 1992
) and tenascin-X (Ikuta et al., 1998
). Surprisingly, we could only detect a single protein band in whole embryo extracts, which was the same size as the tenascin-W from adult tissues and the recombinantly expressed protein of our full-length cDNA. Furthermore, PCR reactions from cDNA of whole embryos revealed only a single band spanning FNIII repeats 2-9. This indicates that either there are no splice variants or that alternative FNIII repeats could be inserted in exchange of the ones described by us without changing the total number of repeats present in the full molecule. Alternatively, the sensitivity of our detection methods was not high enough to detect other more minor species of tenascin-W. So far, no evidence for alternative splicing of tenascin-W can be found in any entries of mouse, human or zebra fish expressed sequence tag databases.
The expression of tenascin-W during development and in the adult mouse was investigated. Tenascin-W expression is highly regulated during development and in the adult. This characteristic is shared with the other members of the tenascin family. Indeed, tenascin-R is expressed only in the nervous system, tenascin-X is prominently expressed in muscle and skin, whereas tenascin-C is present in more developing tissues, including the nervous system (Chiquet-Ehrismann, 2002). The pattern of tenascin-W expression during development suggests that it is likely to be involved in specific events during embryogenesis, like palate formation, osteogenesis and smooth muscle development. Tenascin-W was often co-expressed in a subset of tenascin-C positive tissues, with two major exceptions - intestine and masseter - in which tenascin-W was present without tenascin-C. This indicates that tenascin-W can function independently of tenascin-C. Tenascin-W was also found in the adult associated with stem cells of the aortic valve, the limbus around the cornea and the rib's periosteum. The strong expression in kidney suggests a role in renal function. Some of our results confirm observations made in zebrafish, including the absence of tenascin-W in the central nervous system and the presumptive role in the formation of the skeleton (Weber et al., 1998
). Further studies will be needed to confirm a role of tenascin-W in these developmental mechanisms and to investigate the molecular factors regulating the expression of tenascin-W. Using C2C12 cells, we have shown that tenascin-W expression is induced following osteogenic differentiation initiated by BMP2.
Tenascins are considered as proteins that modulate adhesion of cells to the extracellular matrix. For example, tenascin-C binds to the 13th FNIII repeat of fibronectin and can thereby impair adhesion on this substratum of all cell lines tested so far (Huang et al., 2001). Tenascin-Y, the avian homologue of tenascin-X, can inhibit cell attachment and spreading (Tucker et al., 2001b
) and also tenascin-X was described as a poor cell adhesion protein (Elefteriou et al., 1999
). By contrast, tenascin-W promoted cell adhesion of C2C12 cells and did not inhibit adhesion of these cells to fibronectin, laminin or collagen (data not shown). Not only could these cells adhere to tenascin-W but also they partially spread and extended actin-rich processes. The morphology of the cells resembled the ones described on a tenascin-C substratum (Fischer et al., 1997
). Tenascin-W can thus be considered as an adhesive molecule that promotes partial cell spreading, although without extensive stress fibre formation as on fibronectin. No anti-adhesive property could be detected for tenascin-W when it was mixed with fibronectin (not shown) and, in this respect, it differs from tenascin-C.
Given that tenascin-W provides an adhesive substratum, it was important to characterize the receptors responsible for this adhesion. We first used T98G human glioblastoma cells. These cells were able to adhere to tenascin-W. The adhesion was clearly ß1-integrin dependent. Integrins are a large family of heterodimeric cell surface receptors, composed of an and ß subunit. The ß1 subunit can associate with many
subunits:
1-
11 and
V (Hynes, 2002
). None of the function-blocking antibodies directed against the
integrins that we tested (
1-
6 and
V) were able to inhibit adhesion to tenascin-W.
9 integrin was considered because tenascin-W contains three IDG motifs in its sequence, which are known to be recognition motifs for this
subunit (Yokosaki et al., 1998
). Using
9-transfected cells, we could exclude this integrin as a receptor for tenascin-W. Finally,
8 integrin was tested because its expression pattern in the kidney, developing rib and smooth muscle from the gastrointestinal tract was reminiscent of the expression pattern of tenascin-W (Schnapp et al., 1995; Denda et al., 1998
). Indeed,
8ß1 integrin can serve as a receptor for tenascin-W, because
8-transfected K562 leukaemia cells adhered to tenascin-W. Furthermore, overexpression of
8 integrin in C2C12 increased cell adhesion of this cell type to tenascin-W as well. The adhesion to tenascin-W is RGD dependent. This is in line with previous studies using
8 transfected cells, which were shown to adhere to other RGD-containing ligands such as fibronectin and vitronectin (Schnapp et al., 1995a
) and the more recently discovered ligand LAP-TGFß1 (Lu et al., 2002
). The possible in vivo relevance of
8-integrin/tenascin-W interaction was confirmed by the fact that the proteins were localized together in periosteum and kidney. The kidney phenotype of
8 knockout mice emphasized the important role of
8 integrin in kidney development (Muller et al., 1997
). However, most of the known ligands of
8 integrin (fibronectin, vitronectin and osteopontin) are either dispensable for or not involved in
8ß1 signalling during kidney development (Miner, 2001
). Recently, a new
8ß1 integrin ligand called nephronectin was proposed as the relevant ligand mediating
8ß1 function in the kidney (Brandenberger et al., 2001
). Because the evidence is based solely on its expression pattern, we suggest that tenascin-W be considered as an additional functional ligand for
8ß1 during kidney morphogenesis. Future studies will show whether there are other receptors for tenascin-W and whether
8ß1 actually functions as a receptor for tenascin-W in vivo. Finally, it will be of interest to investigate whether tenascin-W can substitute at least in some tissues for tenascin-C in tenascin-C-deficient mice.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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