Continued from Part 2

Integrins

  • Principal receptors on animal cells for binding extracellular matrix proteins
  • Composed of two transmembrane subunits that are noncovalently attached – α, β
  • β1 subunit – Form dimers with at least 12 different α subunits
    • α5β1 – Is a fibronectin receptor
    • α6β1 – Is a laminin receptor
  • β2 subunit – Present on WBCs enabling them to attach firmly to endothelial cells at sites of infection and migrate out of bloodstream to the infected site. Mediate cell-cell interaction. Ligand involved is ICAM.
  • β3 subunit – On platelets, mediate attachment to fibrinogen. Glanzmann’s disease – deficiency of this subunit
  • α6β4 subunit – Is an exception that binds to intermediate filaments
  • Cells can control integrin-ligand interactions from within and is called as inside-out signalling. This is seen during activation of platelets and when WBCs migrate to tissues from blood
  • Platelets activated by either damaged vessels or signal molecules activate β3 integrins in their plasma membrane. This induces a conformational change in their extracellular domain that enables it to bind fibrinogen. Fibrinogen then aggregates platelets forming clot to stop bleeding.
  • T cells bind weakly to its specific antigen on APCs (antigen presenting cells). This triggers intracellular signalling pathways that lead to the activation of β­2. The activated T lymphocytes then bind strongly to the APCs, prolonging the time of contact to become fully stimulated.
Capture 7
Structure Of Integrin Of A Cell Surface Receptor

 

Capture 6
Inside Out Signalling Of Integrins

At A Glance

Junction

TAP IAP Cytoskeleton Attachment

Cell-Cell

Adherens junction

Cadherin (E – cadherin) Catenins (α, β, ϒ), Vinculin, α-actinin

Actin

Desmosome

Cadherin (desmoglein, desmocollin) Desmoplakin, plakoglobin (ϒ- catenin) Intermediate filaments

Cell-Matrix

Focal adhesion

Integrin Talin, α-actinin, vinculin, filamin Actin
Hemidesmosome Integrin (BP180, α6β4) Plectin, BP230.

Intermediate filaments

 

Name

Location Junction Associated

Classical Cadherins

E – cadherin

Epithelia Adherens junction
N – cadherin Neurons, muscle cells, lens cells, fibroblasts

Adherens junction and synapses

P – cadherin

Placenta, epidermis, breasts Adherens junction
VE – cadherin Endothelial cells

Adherens junction

Non-classical Cadherins

Desmocollin Skin

Desmosomes

Desmoglein

Skin Desmosomes
T- cadherin Neurons, muscle

Unknown

Fat protein (in Drosophila)

Epithelia, CNS Imaginal discs, tumours
Protocadherin Neurons

Unknown

 

Integrin

Ligand Distribution

α5β1

Fibronectin

Ubiquitous

α6β1

Laminin

Ubiquitous

α7β1

Laminin Muscle

αLβ2

Ig super family receptor

White blood cells

α2β3 Fibrinogen

Platelets

α6β4 Laminin

Epithelial hemidesmosomes

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