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Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association

The osteoclast is distinguished from other macrophage polykaryons by its polarization, a feature induced by substrate recognition. The most striking component of the polarized osteoclast is its ruffled membrane, probably reflecting insertion of intracellular vesicles into the bone apposed plasmalemm...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Abu-Amer, Yousef, Ross, F. Patrick, Schlesinger, Paul, Tondravi, M. Mehrdad, Teitelbaum, Steven L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9105052
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author Abu-Amer, Yousef
Ross, F. Patrick
Schlesinger, Paul
Tondravi, M. Mehrdad
Teitelbaum, Steven L.
author_facet Abu-Amer, Yousef
Ross, F. Patrick
Schlesinger, Paul
Tondravi, M. Mehrdad
Teitelbaum, Steven L.
author_sort Abu-Amer, Yousef
collection PubMed
description The osteoclast is distinguished from other macrophage polykaryons by its polarization, a feature induced by substrate recognition. The most striking component of the polarized osteoclast is its ruffled membrane, probably reflecting insertion of intracellular vesicles into the bone apposed plasmalemma. The failure of osteoclasts in c-src−/− osteopetrotic mice to form ruffled membranes indicates pp60(c-src) (c-src) is essential to osteoclast polarization. Interestingly, c-src itself is a vesicular protein that targets the ruffled membrane. This being the case, we hypothesized that matrix recognition by osteoclasts, and their precursors, induces c-src to associate with microtubules that traffic proteins to the cell surface. We find abundant c-src associates with tubulin immunoprecipitated from avian marrow macrophages (osteoclast precursors) maintained in the adherent, but not nonadherent, state. Since the two proteins colocalize only within adherent avian osteoclast-like cells examined by double antibody immunoconfocal microscopy, c-src/tubulin association reflects an authentic intracellular event. C-src/tubulin association is evident within 90 min of cell-substrate recognition, and the event does not reflect increased expression of either protein. In vitro kinase assay demonstrates tubulin-associated c-src is enzymatically active, phosphorylating itself as well as exogenous substrate. The increase in microtubule-associated kinase activity attending adhesion mirrors tubulin-bound c-src and does not reflect enhanced specific activity. The fact that microtubule-dissociating drugs, as well as cold, prevent adherence-induced c-src/tubulin association indicates the protooncogene complexes primarily, if not exclusively, with polymerized tubulin. Association of the two proteins does not depend upon protein tyrosine phosphorylation and is substrate specific, as it is induced by vitronectin and fibronectin but not type 1 collagen. Finally, consistent with cotransport of c-src and the osteoclast vacuolar proton pump to the polarized plasmalemma, the H(+)-ATPase decorates microtubules in a manner similar to the protooncogene, specifically coimmunoprecipitates with c-src from the osteoclast light Golgi membrane fraction, and is present, with c-src, in preparations enriched with acidifying vesicles reconstituted from the osteoclast ruffled membrane.
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spelling pubmed-21398502008-05-01 Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association Abu-Amer, Yousef Ross, F. Patrick Schlesinger, Paul Tondravi, M. Mehrdad Teitelbaum, Steven L. J Cell Biol Article The osteoclast is distinguished from other macrophage polykaryons by its polarization, a feature induced by substrate recognition. The most striking component of the polarized osteoclast is its ruffled membrane, probably reflecting insertion of intracellular vesicles into the bone apposed plasmalemma. The failure of osteoclasts in c-src−/− osteopetrotic mice to form ruffled membranes indicates pp60(c-src) (c-src) is essential to osteoclast polarization. Interestingly, c-src itself is a vesicular protein that targets the ruffled membrane. This being the case, we hypothesized that matrix recognition by osteoclasts, and their precursors, induces c-src to associate with microtubules that traffic proteins to the cell surface. We find abundant c-src associates with tubulin immunoprecipitated from avian marrow macrophages (osteoclast precursors) maintained in the adherent, but not nonadherent, state. Since the two proteins colocalize only within adherent avian osteoclast-like cells examined by double antibody immunoconfocal microscopy, c-src/tubulin association reflects an authentic intracellular event. C-src/tubulin association is evident within 90 min of cell-substrate recognition, and the event does not reflect increased expression of either protein. In vitro kinase assay demonstrates tubulin-associated c-src is enzymatically active, phosphorylating itself as well as exogenous substrate. The increase in microtubule-associated kinase activity attending adhesion mirrors tubulin-bound c-src and does not reflect enhanced specific activity. The fact that microtubule-dissociating drugs, as well as cold, prevent adherence-induced c-src/tubulin association indicates the protooncogene complexes primarily, if not exclusively, with polymerized tubulin. Association of the two proteins does not depend upon protein tyrosine phosphorylation and is substrate specific, as it is induced by vitronectin and fibronectin but not type 1 collagen. Finally, consistent with cotransport of c-src and the osteoclast vacuolar proton pump to the polarized plasmalemma, the H(+)-ATPase decorates microtubules in a manner similar to the protooncogene, specifically coimmunoprecipitates with c-src from the osteoclast light Golgi membrane fraction, and is present, with c-src, in preparations enriched with acidifying vesicles reconstituted from the osteoclast ruffled membrane. The Rockefeller University Press 1997-04-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2139850/ /pubmed/9105052 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Abu-Amer, Yousef
Ross, F. Patrick
Schlesinger, Paul
Tondravi, M. Mehrdad
Teitelbaum, Steven L.
Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association
title Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association
title_full Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association
title_fullStr Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association
title_full_unstemmed Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association
title_short Substrate Recognition by Osteoclast Precursors Induces C-src/Microtubule Association
title_sort substrate recognition by osteoclast precursors induces c-src/microtubule association
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2139850/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9105052
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