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  4. Contact inhibition of VEGF-induced proliferation requires vascular endothelial cadherin, beta-catenin, and the phosphatase DEP-1/CD148.
 
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Contact inhibition of VEGF-induced proliferation requires vascular endothelial cadherin, beta-catenin, and the phosphatase DEP-1/CD148.

Author(s)
Grazia Lampugnani, Maria
Zanetti, Adriana
Corada, Monica
ASI Sponsor
Subjects

Animals

Antigens

Cadherins

Cadherins: genetics

Cadherins: metabolism...

Cell Division

Cell Division: drug e...

Cell Line

Cells

Class

Contact Inhibition

Cultured

Cytoskeletal Proteins...

Cytoskeletal Proteins...

Dose-Response Relatio...

Drug

Endothelial Growth Fa...

Endothelial Growth Fa...

Endothelium

Humans

Intercellular Signali...

Intercellular Signali...

Lymphokines

Lymphokines: pharmaco...

Mice

Mitogen-Activated Pro...

Mitogen-Activated Pro...

Phosphorylation

Protein Binding

Protein Tyrosine Phos...

Protein Tyrosine Phos...

Receptor-Like Protein...

Trans-Activators

Trans-Activators: met...

Vascular

Vascular Endothelial ...

Vascular Endothelial ...

Vascular Endothelial ...

Vascular Endothelial ...

Vascular: cytology

Vascular: drug effect...

beta Catenin

Date Issued
2003-05-01
Abstract
Confluent endothelial cells respond poorly to the proliferative signals of VEGF. Comparing isogenic endothelial cells differing for vascular endothelial cadherin (VE-cadherin) expression only, we found that the presence of this protein attenuates VEGF-induced VEGF receptor (VEGFR) 2 phosphorylation in tyrosine, p44/p42 MAP kinase phosphorylation, and cell proliferation. VE-cadherin truncated in beta-catenin but not p120 binding domain is unable to associate with VEGFR-2 and to induce its inactivation. beta-Catenin-null endothelial cells are not contact inhibited by VE-cadherin and are still responsive to VEGF, indicating that this protein is required to restrain growth factor signaling. A dominant-negative mutant of high cell density-enhanced PTP 1 (DEP-1)//CD148 as well as reduction of its expression by RNA interference partially restore VEGFR-2 phosphorylation and MAP kinase activation. Overall the data indicate that VE-cadherin-beta-catenin complex participates in contact inhibition of VEGF signaling. Upon stimulation with VEGF, VEGFR-2 associates with the complex and concentrates at cell-cell contacts, where it may be inactivated by junctional phosphatases such as DEP-1. In sparse cells or in VE-cadherin-null cells, this phenomenon cannot occur and the receptor is fully activated by the growth factor.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/1365
ISSN
0021-9525
Journal
The Journal of cell biology
Issue
4
Volume
161
Start Page
793
Start Page
804
DOI
10.1083/jcb.200209019
URL
https://rupress.org/jcb/article/161/4/793/44011/Contact-inhibition-of-VEGF-induced-proliferation
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