p120-independent Modulation of E-cadherin Adhesion Activity by the Membrane-proximal Region of the Cytoplasmic Domain

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Abstract

Cadherins are transmembrane glycoproteins that function as Ca 2+-dependent cell-cell adhesion molecules and are linked to the actin cytoskeleton via catenins. Previously, we showed that, although E-cadherin lacking its cytoplasmic tail is active in aggregation assays, partially truncated E-cadherin lacking the carboxyl-terminal catenin-binding site is not. Contrary to this observation, a similar N-cadherin construct is found to be functional. Chimeric constructs, in which the membrane-proximal region of the partially truncated E-cadherin was replaced by that of N-cadherin, are active in aggregation assays. N-cadherin constructs in the opposite manner are nonfunctional. Although deletion of the membrane-proximal region, which eliminates the binding site for p120, results in activation of the nonfunctional E-cadherin mutant polypeptides, amino acid substitutions in the membrane-proximal region, which uncouple p120 binding, do not. The p120 uncoupling could not activate a full-length E-cadherin construct, which was β-catenin-uncoupled by amino acid substitutions in the catenin-binding site. These results indicate that the membrane-proximal region determines the activity of these cadherin constructs but that p120 does not seem directly involved in the modulation of E-cadherin activity.

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Ozawa, M. (2003). p120-independent Modulation of E-cadherin Adhesion Activity by the Membrane-proximal Region of the Cytoplasmic Domain. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(46), 46014–46020. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M307778200

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