Cleavage of chromogranin A N-terminal domain by plasmin provides a new mechanism for regulating cell adhesion

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Abstract

It has been proposed that chromogranin A (CgA), a protein secreted by many normal and neoplastic neuroendocrine cells, can play a role as a positive or a negative modulator of cell adhesion. The mechanisms that regulate these extracellular functions of CgA are unknown. We show here that plasmin can regulate the anti/pro-adhesive activity of CgA by proteolytic cleavage of the N-terminal domain. Limited proteolytic processing decreased its anti-adhesive activity and induced pro-adhesive effects in fibronectin or serum-dependent fibroblast adhesion assays. Cleavage of Lys77-Lys78 dibasic site in CgA1-115 was relatively rapid and associated with an increase of pro-adhesive effect. In contrast, antibodies against the region 53-90 enhanced the anti-adhesive activity of CgA and CgA1-115. Structure-activity relationship studies showed that the conserved region 47-64 (RILSILRHQNLLKELQDL) is critical for both pro- and anti-adhesive activity. These findings suggest that CgA might work on one hand as a negative modulator of cell adhesion and on the other hand as a precursor of positive modulators, the latter requiring proteolytic processing for activation. Given the importance of plasminogen activation in tissue invasion and remodeling, the interplay between CgA and plasmin could provide a novel mechanism for regulating fibroblast adhesion and function in neuroendocrine tumors.

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Colombo, B., Longhi, R., Marinzi, C., Magni, F., Cattaneo, A., Yoo, S. H., … Corti, A. (2002). Cleavage of chromogranin A N-terminal domain by plasmin provides a new mechanism for regulating cell adhesion. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 277(48), 45911–45919. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M202637200

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