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28.3:

Activation of Integrins

JoVE Core
Cell Biology
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JoVE Core Cell Biology
Activation of Integrins

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For a cell to migrate through the ECM, the cell's attachment to the ECM must be made and broken quickly. This is facilitated by membrane-bound integrins rapidly transitioning between an active state, which forms attachments, and an inactive state that does not. In the inactive conformation, the tails of the integrin dimer are compactly locked together, preventing integrin from binding ECM proteins or cytoskeletal filaments. Integrins can be activated from outside the cell in the “outside-in” mechanism or internally in the "inside-out" mechanism. In the "outside-in" mechanism, ECM proteins like fibronectin bind to integrin's extracellular domain. The tails unhook, and integrin switches from an inactive state to an active state, exposing the binding sites for cytosolic adaptor proteins. Conversely, in the "inside-out" mechanism, adaptor proteins like talin bind integrin's cytosolic beta chain, thus breaking the alpha-beta link and forcing apart the integrin legs. The active integrin can now bind ECM proteins.

28.3:

Activation of Integrins

Integrins bind ligands and transmit information from outside the cell to inside or vice-versa through an "outside-in signaling" or "inside-out signaling."

In "outside-in signaling," external factors in the extracellular space bind to exposed ligand binding sites on integrins. This causes the inactive protein to undergo a conformational change to become active. Integrins are often clustered on the cell membrane. Repetitive and regularly spaced ligand binding events provide an effective stimulus. As the cell encounters various extracellular signals, activated integrins affect cellular properties such as cell polarity, cytoskeletal structure, adhesion, migration, invasion, gene expression, cell survival, and proliferation.

"Inside-out signaling" depends on intracellular activators such cytoskeletal adaptor proteins like talin or kindlins. Talins contain binding sites for the β integrin cytosolic domains, a highly conserved C-terminal actin-binding site, and a Vinculin-binding site. Kindlin includes β integrin cytosolic tail binding sites in their F3 domains, membrane-binding domains, and a C-terminus that interacts with integrins, actin adaptor proteins, or integrin-linked kinase (ILK). Kindlin interacts with the β integrin cytoplasmic domain and stabilizes the integrin complex's activated state. “Inside-out signaling” can strengthen integrin-mediated adhesion with extracellular ligands, which transfer the necessary force for cell migration, invasion, ECM assembly, and remodeling.

Adapted from Section 9.1 Signaling molecules and cellular receptors, Openstax Biology for AP

Suggested Reading

  1. Ginsberg, M. H., Partridge, A., & Shattil, S. J. (2005). Integrin regulation. Current opinion in cell biology, 17(5), 509-516.
  2. David G. Menter, Raymond N. DuBois, "Prostaglandins in Cancer Cell Adhesion, Migration, and Invasion," International Journal of Cell Biology, vol. 2012, Article ID 723419, 21 pages, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/723419
  3. Campbell, I. D., & Humphries, M. J. (2011). Integrin structure, activation, and interactions. Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology, 3(3), a004994.