The synthetic peptide Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Tyr (GRGDY), which contains the RGD sequence of several adhesion molecules, was covalently grafted to the surface of otherwise poorly adhesive glass substrates and was used to determine the minimal number of ligand-receptor interactions required for complete spreading of human foreskin fibroblasts. Well-defined adhesion substrates were prepared with GRGDY between 10-3 fmol/cm2 and 104 fmol/cm2. As the adhesion ligand surface concentration was varied, several distinct morphologies of adherent cells were observed and categorized. The population of fully spread cells at 4 h reached a maximum at 1 fmol/cm2, with no further increases up to 104 fmol/cm2. Although maximal cell spreading was obtained at 1 fmol/cm2, focal contacts and stress fibers failed to form at RGD surface concentrations below 10 fmol/cm2. The minimal peptide spacings obtained in this work correspond to 440 nm for spreading and 140 nm for focal contact formation, and are much larger than those reported in previous studies with adsorbed adhesion proteins, adsorbed RGD-albumin conjugates, or peptide-grafted polyacrylamide gels. Vitronectin receptor antiserum specific for integrin avft blocked cell adhesion and spreading on substrates containing 100 fmol/cm2 of surface-bound GRGDY, while fibronectin receptor antiserum specific for α5β1 did not. Furthermore, αvβ3 was observed to cluster into focal contacts in spread cells, but α5β1 did not. It was thus concluded that a peptide-to-peptide spacing of 440 nm was required for αvβ3-mediated cellular spreading, while 140 nm was required for αvβ3-mediated focal contact formation and normal stress fiber organization in human foreskin fibroblasts; these spacings represent much fewer ligands than were previously thought to be required.
CITATION STYLE
Massia, S. P., & Hubbell, J. A. (1991). An RGD spacing of 440 nm is sufficient for integrin αvβ3-mediated fibroblast spreading and 140 nm for focal contact and stress fiber formation. Journal of Cell Biology, 114(5), 1089–1100. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.114.5.1089
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.