Oligomerization-dependent regulation of motility and morphogenesis by the collagen XVIII NC1/endostatin domain

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Abstract

Collagen XVIII (c18) is a triple helical endothelial/epithelial basement membrane protein whose non-collagenous (NC)1 region trimerizes a COOH-terminal endostatin (ES) domain conserved in vertebrates, Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila. Here, the c18 NC1 domain functioned as a motility-inducing factor regulating the extracellular matrix (ECM)-dependent morphogenesis of endothelial and other cell types. This motogenic activity required ES domain oligomerization, was dependent on rac, cdc42, and mitogen-activated protein kinase, and exhibited functional distinction from the archetypal motogenic scatter factors hepatocyte growth factor and macrophage stimulatory protein. The motility-inducing and mitogen-activated protein kinase-stimulating activities of c18 NC1 were blocked by its physiologic cleavage product ES monomer, consistent with a proteolysis-dependent negative feedback mechanism. These data indicate that the collagen XVIII NC1 region encodes a motogen strictly requiring ES domain oligomerization and suggest a previously unsuspected mechanism for ECM regulation of motility and morphogenesis.

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Kuo, C. J., LaMontagne, K. R., Garcia-Cardeña, G., Ackley, B. D., Kalman, D., Park, S., … Javaherian, K. (2001). Oligomerization-dependent regulation of motility and morphogenesis by the collagen XVIII NC1/endostatin domain. Journal of Cell Biology, 152(6), 1233–1246. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.152.6.1233

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