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Staffan Strömblad

staffan.stromblad@ki.se

Journal articles

2008
 
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PMID 
John G Lock, Bernhard Wehrle-Haller, Staffan Strömblad (2008)  Cell-matrix adhesion complexes: master control machinery of cell migration.   Semin Cancer Biol 18: 1. 65-76 Feb  
Abstract: Cell-matrix adhesion complexes (CMACs) are foci of cellular attachment to the extracellular matrix (ECM). This attachment, mediated by integrins and adaptor proteins, provides both physical and regulatory links between the ECM and the cellular microfilament system. Through continual regulation and rearrangement of both ECM adhesion and actin structures, CMACs constitute core machineries of cell migration. To fulfill this role, CMACs are exceptionally flexible and dynamic complexes, and their components undergo rapid and regulated turn-over to maintain delicately balanced streams of mechanical and chemical information. Besides the critical role of CMACs in cell migration, signaling through these complexes provides influence over virtually every major cellular function, including for example cell survival, cell differentiation and cell proliferation. This review depicts the roles of CMACs in cell migration and discusses how CMACs integrate with other sub-cellular systems involved in cell motility. Importantly, we also present a rationalized view of CMACs as information handling machines, and suggest strategies that may facilitate better understanding of the complex cell migration phenomenon as a whole, through quantitative and integrative (systems biology) approaches.
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PMID 
Minna Thullberg, Staffan Strömblad (2008)  Anchorage-independent cytokinesis as part of oncogenic transformation?   Cell Cycle 7: 8. 984-988 Apr  
Abstract: Cell anchorage to the extracellular matrix (ECM) controls the cell proliferation in all multicellular organisms and the abrogation of this control is an indicator of cellular transformation. In fact, two distinct periods of the cell cycle are subject to anchorage-dependent regulation. Firstly, anchorage exerts an extensive control of the G(1)-phase, a control that we found to be more rigorous than for example the control by growth factors. Secondly, anchorage regulates the progression through cytokinesis. In order to achieve anchorage-independent growth a cell must circumvent these controls. To this end, we recently found that oncogenic H-RasV12 can provide sufficient signals to overcome the anchorage-dependence for cytokinesis. Together with earlier findings on G(1)-phase control, this demonstrates that oncogenic signaling contributes to de-regulation of anchorage-dependence during both the G(1)-phase and the cytokinesis. This also suggests that de-regulated cytokinesis may be part of oncogenic transformation.
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2007
 
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PMID 
Ekaterina A Souslova, Vsevolod V Belousov, John G Lock, Staffan Strömblad, Sergey Kasparov, Alexey P Bolshakov, Vsevolod G Pinelis, Yulii A Labas, Sergey Lukyanov, Lorenz M Mayr, Dmitriy M Chudakov (2007)  Single fluorescent protein-based Ca2+ sensors with increased dynamic range.   BMC Biotechnol 7: 06  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Genetically encoded sensors developed on the basis of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-like proteins are becoming more and more popular instruments for monitoring cellular analytes and enzyme activities in living cells and transgenic organisms. In particular, a number of Ca2+ sensors have been developed, either based on FRET (Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer) changes between two GFP-mutants or on the change in fluorescence intensity of a single circularly permuted fluorescent protein (cpFP). RESULTS: Here we report significant progress on the development of the latter type of Ca2+ sensors. Derived from the knowledge of previously reported cpFP-based sensors, we generated a set of cpFP-based indicators with different spectral properties and fluorescent responses to changes in Ca2+ concentration. Two variants, named Case12 and Case16, were characterized by particular high brightness and superior dynamic range, up to 12-fold and 16.5-fold increase in green fluorescence between Ca2+-free and Ca2+-saturated forms. We demonstrated the high potential of these sensors on various examples, including monitoring of Ca2+ response to a prolonged glutamate treatment in cortical neurons. CONCLUSION: We believe that expanded dynamic range, high brightness and relatively high pH-stability should make Case12 and Case16 popular research tools both in scientific studies and high throughput screening assays.
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M Thullberg, A Gad, A Beeser, J Chernoff, S Strömblad (2007)  The kinase-inhibitory domain of p21-activated kinase 1 (PAK1) inhibits cell cycle progression independent of PAK1 kinase activity.   Oncogene 26: 12. 1820-1828 Mar  
Abstract: p21-activated kinase 1 (PAK1) is a mediator of downstream signaling from the small GTPases Rac and Cdc42. In its inactive state, PAK1 forms a homodimer where two kinases inhibit each other in trans. The kinase inhibitory domain (KID) of one molecule of PAK1 binds to the kinase domain of its counterpart and keeps it inactive. Therefore, the isolated KID of PAK1 has been widely used to specifically inhibit and study PAK function. Here, we show that the isolated KID induced a cell cycle arrest with accumulation of cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle with an inhibition of cyclin D1 and D2 expression. This cell cycle arrest required the intact KID and was also induced by a mutated KID unable to block PAK1 kinase activity. Furthermore, the KID-induced cell cycle arrest could not be rescued by the expression of a constitutively active PAK1-T423E mutant, concluding that this arrest occurs independently of PAK1 kinase activity. Our results suggest that PAK1 through its KID inhibits cyclin D expression and thereby enforces a cell cycle arrest. Our results also call for serious precaution in the use of KID to study PAK function.
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Minna Thullberg, Annica Gad, Sylvie Le Guyader, Staffan Strömblad (2007)  Oncogenic H-Ras V12 promotes anchorage-independent cytokinesis in human fibroblasts.   Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104: 51. 20338-20343 Dec  
Abstract: Cell anchorage is required for cell proliferation of untransformed cells, whereas anchorage-independent growth can be induced by oncogenes and is a hallmark of transformation. Whereas anchorage-dependent control of the progression of the G(1) phase of the cell cycle has been extensively studied, it is less clear whether and how anchorage may control other cell cycle phases and whether oncogenes may affect such controls. Here, we found that lack of cell anchorage did not influence progression through the cell cycle S phase, G(2) phase, or most of mitosis of primary human fibroblasts. However, unanchored fibroblasts could not complete cytokinesis. The cleavage furrow and central spindle were still formed in the absence of anchorage, but cells were unable to complete ingression, causing binucleation. Importantly, V12 H-Ras-transformed fibroblasts and two cancer cell lines progressed through the entire cell cycle without anchorage, including through cytokinesis. This indicates that oncogenic signaling may contribute to anchorage-independent growth and tumorigenesis by promoting the final cleavage furrow ingression during cytokinesis.
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2004
 
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Annica Gad, Minna Thullberg, Jan-Hermen Dannenberg, Hein te Riele, Staffan Strömblad (2004)  Retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product (pRb) and p107 functionally separate the requirements for serum and anchorage in the cell cycle G1-phase.   J Biol Chem 279: 14. 13640-13644 Apr  
Abstract: Growth factors and cell anchorage are both required for cell cycle G(1)-phase progression, but it is unclear whether their function is mediated through the same set of cell cycle components and whether they are both required during the same periods of time. We separately analyzed the requirements of serum and anchorage during G(1)-phase progression and found that human dermal fibroblasts as well as wild type, pRb(-/-), and p107(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblasts needed serum (growth factors) until mid-G(1)-phase but required cell anchorage until late G(1)-phase to be competent for S-phase entry. Importantly, however, pRb/p107 double-null mouse embryonic fibroblasts lacked serum requirement in mid-G(1)-phase but still required cell anchorage until late G(1)-phase to enter S-phase. Our results indicate that pRb and p107 do not constitute the last control point for extracellular factors during G(1)-phase progression, and they functionally separate the requirements for serum and cell anchorage in terms of involved cell cycle components.
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Hongquan Zhang, Jonathan S Berg, Zhilun Li, Yunling Wang, Pernilla Lång, Aurea D Sousa, Aparna Bhaskar, Richard E Cheney, Staffan Strömblad (2004)  Myosin-X provides a motor-based link between integrins and the cytoskeleton.   Nat Cell Biol 6: 6. 523-531 Jun  
Abstract: Unconventional myosins are actin-based motors with a growing number of attributed functions. Interestingly, it has been proposed that integrins are transported by unidentified myosins to facilitate cellular remodelling. Here we present an interaction between the unconventional myosin-X (Myo10) FERM (band 4.1/ezrin/radixin/moesin) domain and an NPXY motif within beta-integrin cytoplasmic domains. Importantly, knock-down of Myo10 by short interfering RNA impaired integrin function in cell adhesion, whereas overexpression of Myo10 stimulated the formation and elongation of filopodia in an integrin-dependent manner and relocalized integrins together with Myo10 to the tips of filopodia. This integrin relocalization and filopodia elongation did not occur with Myo10 mutants deficient in integrin binding or with a beta(1)-integrin point mutant deficient in Myo10 binding. Taken together, these results indicate that Myo10-mediated relocalization of integrins might serve to form adhesive structures and thereby promote filopodial extension.
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Taavi Päll, Annica Gad, Lagle Kasak, Monika Drews, Staffan Strömblad, Priit Kogerman (2004)  Recombinant CD44-HABD is a novel and potent direct angiogenesis inhibitor enforcing endothelial cell-specific growth inhibition independently of hyaluronic acid binding.   Oncogene 23: 47. 7874-7881 Oct  
Abstract: CD44 is the main cellular receptor for hyaluronic acid (HA). We previously found that overexpression of CD44 inhibited tumor growth of mouse fibrosarcoma cells in mice. Here, we show that soluble recombinant CD44 HA-binding domain (CD44-HABD) acts directly onto endothelial cells by inhibiting endothelial cell proliferation in a cell-specific manner. Consequently, soluble recombinant CD44-HABD also blocked angiogenesis in vivo in chick and mouse, and thereby inhibited tumor growth of various origins at very low doses (0.25 mg/kg x day). The antiangiogenic effect of CD44 is independent of its HA-binding capacity, since mutants deficient in HA binding still maintain their antiangiogenic and antiproliferative properties. Recombinant CD44-HABD represents a novel class of angiogenesis inhibitors based on a cell-surface receptor.
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Wenjie Bao, Staffan Strömblad (2004)  Integrin alphav-mediated inactivation of p53 controls a MEK1-dependent melanoma cell survival pathway in three-dimensional collagen.   J Cell Biol 167: 4. 745-756 Nov  
Abstract: Integrin alphav is required for melanoma cell survival and tumor growth in various models. To elucidate integrin alphav-mediated melanoma cell survival mechanisms, we used a three-dimensional (3D) collagen gel model mimicking the pathophysiological microenvironment of malignant melanoma in the dermis. We found that integrin alphav inactivated p53 and that suppression of p53 activity by dominant negative p53 or p53-small interfering RNA obviated the need for integrin alphav for melanoma cell survival in 3D-collagen and for tumor growth in vivo. This indicates that integrin alphav-mediated inactivation of p53 functionally controls melanoma cell survival. Furthermore, we found that melanoma cell integrin alphav was required for MAPK kinase (MEK) 1 and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 activity in 3D-collagen, whereas inhibition of MEK1 activity induced apoptosis. Surprisingly, MEK1 and ERK1/2 activities were restored in integrin alphav-negative melanoma cells by suppression of p53, whereas concomitant block of MEK1 induced apoptosis. This suggests that integrin alphav controls melanoma cell survival in 3D-collagen through a pathway involving p53 regulation of MEK1 signaling.
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2002
 
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PMID 
Staffan Strömblad, Arun Fotedar, Howard Brickner, Chandra Theesfeld, Edith Aguilar de Diaz, Martin Friedlander, David A Cheresh (2002)  Loss of p53 compensates for alpha v-integrin function in retinal neovascularization.   J Biol Chem 277: 16. 13371-13374 Apr  
Abstract: alpha(v)-Integrin antagonists block neovascularization in various species, whereas 20% of alpha(v)-integrin null mice are born with many normal looking blood vessels. Given that blockade of alpha(v)-integrins during angiogenesis induces p53 activity, we utilized p53 null mice to elucidate whether loss of p53 can compensate for alpha(v)-integrin function in neovascularization of the retina. Murine retinal vascularization was inhibited by systemic administration of an alpha(v)-integrin antagonist. In contrast, mice lacking p53 were refractory to this treatment, indicating that neovascularization in normal mice depends on alpha(v)-integrin-mediated suppression of p53. Blockade of alpha(v)-integrins during neovascularization resulted in an induction of p21(CIP1) in wild type and, surprisingly, in p53 null retinas, indicating that alpha(v)-integrin ligation regulates p21(CIP1) levels in a p53-independent manner. In conclusion, we demonstrate for the first time an in vivo intracellular mechanism for compensation of integrin function and that p53 and alpha(v)-integrins act in concert during retinal neovascularization.
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PMID 
Wenjie Bao, Minna Thullberg, Hongquan Zhang, Anatoli Onischenko, Staffan Strömblad (2002)  Cell attachment to the extracellular matrix induces proteasomal degradation of p21(CIP1) via Cdc42/Rac1 signaling.   Mol Cell Biol 22: 13. 4587-4597 Jul  
Abstract: The cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2) inhibitors p21(CIP1) and p27(KIP1) are negatively regulated by anchorage during cell proliferation, but it is unclear how integrin signaling may affect these Cdk2 inhibitors. Here, we demonstrate that integrin ligation led to rapid reduction of p21(CIP1) and p27(KIP1) protein levels in three distinct cell types upon attachment to various extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins, including fibronectin (FN), or to immobilized agonistic anti-integrin monoclonal antibodies. Cell attachment to FN did not rapidly influence p21(CIP1) mRNA levels, while the protein stability of p21(CIP1) was decreased. Importantly, the down-regulation of p21(CIP1) and p27(KIP1) was completely blocked by three distinct proteasome inhibitors, demonstrating that integrin ligation induced proteasomal degradation of these Cdk2 inhibitors. Interestingly, ECM-induced proteasomal proteolysis of a ubiquitination-deficient p21(CIP1) mutant (p21K6R) also occurred, showing that the proteasomal degradation of p21(CIP1) was ubiquitin independent. Concomitant with our finding that the small GTPases Cdc42 and Rac1 were activated by attachment to FN, constitutively active (ca) Cdc42 and ca Rac1 promoted down-regulation of p21(CIP1). However, dominant negative (dn) Cdc42 and dn Rac1 mutants blocked the anchorage-induced degradation of p21(CIP1), suggesting that an integrin-induced Cdc42/Rac1 signaling pathway activates proteasomal degradation of p21(CIP1). Our results indicate that integrin-regulated proteasomal proteolysis might contribute to anchorage-dependent cell cycle control.
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PMID 
Hongquan Zhang, Zhilun Li, Eva-Karin Viklund, Staffan Strömblad (2002)  P21-activated kinase 4 interacts with integrin alpha v beta 5 and regulates alpha v beta 5-mediated cell migration.   J Cell Biol 158: 7. 1287-1297 Sep  
Abstract: p21-activated kinase 1 (PAK1) can affect cell migration (Price et al., 1998; del Pozo et al., 2000) and modulate myosin light chain kinase and LIM kinase, which are components of the cellular motility machinery (Edwards, D.C., L.C. Sanders, G.M. Bokoch, and G.N. Gill. 1999. Nature Cell Biol. 1:253-259; Sanders, L.C., F. Matsumura, G.M. Bokoch, and P. de Lanerolle. 1999. SCIENCE: 283:2083-2085). We here present a novel cell motility pathway by demonstrating that PAK4 directly interacts with an integrin intracellular domain and regulates carcinoma cell motility in an integrin-specific manner. Yeast two-hybrid screening identified PAK4 binding to the cytoplasmic domain of the integrin beta 5 subunit, an association that was also found in mammalian cells between endogenous PAK4 and integrin alpha v beta 5. Furthermore, we mapped the PAK4 binding to the membrane-proximal region of integrin beta 5, and identified an integrin-binding domain at aa 505-530 in the COOH terminus of PAK4. Importantly, engagement of integrin alpha v beta 5 by cell attachment to vitronectin led to a redistribution of PAK4 from the cytosol to dynamic lamellipodial structures where PAK4 colocalized with integrin alpha v beta 5. Functionally, PAK4 induced integrin alpha v beta 5-mediated, but not beta1-mediated, human breast carcinoma cell migration, while no changes in integrin cell surface expression levels were observed. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that PAK4 interacts with integrin alpha v beta 5 and selectively promotes integrin alpha v beta 5-mediated cell migration.
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Bao, Strömblad (2002)  Use of an Immobilized Monoclonal Antibody to Examine Integrin alpha5beta1 Signaling Independent of Cell Spreading.   Biol Proced Online 4: 81-87 Nov  
Abstract: Cell attachment to the extracellular matrix (ECM) engages integrin signaling into the cell, but part of the signaling response also stem from cell spreading (3). To analyze specific integrin signaling-mediated responses independent of cell spreading, we developed a method engaging integrin signaling by use of an immobilized anti-integrin monoclonal antibody (mab) directed against the fibronectin (FN) receptor integrin alpha5beta1. ECV 304 cells were plated onto FN or immobilized mab JBS5 (anti-integrin alpha5beta1) or onto poly-L-lysin (P-L-L), which mediates integrin-independent attachment. Cells attached and spread on FN, while cells on JBS5 or P-L-L attached but did not spread. Importantly, plating onto FN or mab JBS5 gave rise to identical integrin-induced responses, including a down-regulation of the cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk2) inhibitors p21(CIP1) and p27(KIP1), while attachment to P-L-L did not. We conclude that engagement of the FN-receptor integrin alpha5beta1 induces integrin signaling regulating the Cdk2-inhibitors independent of cell spreading and present a method for how integrin signaling can be analyzed separate from the effects of cell spreading.
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2001
 
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PMID 
M Bakhiet, A Tjernlund, A Mousa, A Gad, S Strömblad, W A Kuziel, A Seiger, J Andersson (2001)  RANTES promotes growth and survival of human first-trimester forebrain astrocytes.   Nat Cell Biol 3: 2. 150-157 Feb  
Abstract: We have examined the role of alpha and beta chemokines in the promotion of the ontogenetic development of the brain. RANTES was expressed preferentially in human fetal astrocytes in an age-dependent manner. Astrocytes from 5-week-old brains showed high proliferation and reduced survival, whereas 10-week-old astrocytes exhibited opposite effects. These effects were suppressed by anti-RANTES or anti-RANTES receptor antibodies and were enhanced by recombinant RANTES. RANTES induced tyrosine phosphorylation of several cellular proteins and nuclear translocation of STAT-1 in astrocytes. Interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) was required for RANTES effects because RANTES induced IFN-gamma and only 10-week-old astrocytes expressed the IFN-gamma receptor. Blocking of IFN-gamma with antibody reversed the effects of RANTES, indicating that cytokine/chemokine networks are critically involved in brain development.
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1999
 
PMID 
E Petitclerc, S Strömblad, T L von Schalscha, F Mitjans, J Piulats, A M Montgomery, D A Cheresh, P C Brooks (1999)  Integrin alpha(v)beta3 promotes M21 melanoma growth in human skin by regulating tumor cell survival.   Cancer Res 59: 11. 2724-2730 Jun  
Abstract: Growth and dissemination of malignant melanoma has a profound impact on our population, and little is known concerning the mechanisms controlling this disease in humans. Evidence is provided that integrin alpha(v)beta3 plays a critical role in M21 melanoma tumor survival within human skin by a mechanism independent of its known role in angiogenesis. Antagonists of alpha(v)beta3 blocked melanoma growth by inducing tumor apoptosis. Moreover, M21 melanoma cell interactions with denatured collagen, a known ligand for alpha(v)beta3, caused a 5-fold increase in the relative Bcl-2:Bax ratio, an event thought to promote cell survival. Importantly, denatured collagen colocalized with alpha(v)beta3-expressing melanoma cells in human tumor biopsies, suggesting that alpha(v)beta3 interaction with denatured collagen may play a critical role in melanoma tumor survival in vivo.
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1998
 
PMID 
B P Eliceiri, R Klemke, S Strömblad, D A Cheresh (1998)  Integrin alphavbeta3 requirement for sustained mitogen-activated protein kinase activity during angiogenesis.   J Cell Biol 140: 5. 1255-1263 Mar  
Abstract: Angiogenesis depends on growth factors and vascular cell adhesion events. Integrins and growth factors are capable of activating the ras/MAP kinase pathway in vitro, yet how these signals influence endothelial cells during angiogenesis is unknown. Upon initiation of angiogenesis with basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) on the chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM), endothelial cell mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase (ERK) activity was detected as early as 5 min yet was sustained for at least 20 h. The initial wave of ERK activity (5-120 min) was refractory to integrin antagonists, whereas the sustained activity (4-20 h) depended on integrin alphavbeta3, but not beta1 integrins. Inhibition of MAP kinase kinase (MEK) during this sustained alphavbeta3-dependent ERK signal blocked the formation of new blood vessels while not influencing preexisting blood vessels on the CAM. Inhibition of MEK also blocked growth factor induced migration but not adhesion of endothelial cells in vitro. Therefore, angiogenesis depends on sustained ERK activity regulated by the ligation state of both a growth factor receptor and integrin alphavbeta3.
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1996
 
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S Strömblad, J C Becker, M Yebra, P C Brooks, D A Cheresh (1996)  Suppression of p53 activity and p21WAF1/CIP1 expression by vascular cell integrin alphaVbeta3 during angiogenesis.   J Clin Invest 98: 2. 426-433 Jul  
Abstract: Induction of p53 activity in cells undergoing DNA synthesis represents a molecular conflict that can lead to apoptosis. During angiogenesis, proliferative endothelial cells become apoptotic in response to antagonists of integrin alphavbeta3 and this leads to the regression of angiogenic blood vessels, thereby blocking the growth of various human tumors. Evidence is presented that administration of alphavbeta3 antagonists during angiogenesis in vivo selectively caused activation of endothelial cell p53 and increased expression of the p53-inducible cell cycle inhibitor p21WAF1/CIP1. In vitro studies revealed that the ligation state of human endothelial cell alphavbeta3 directly influenced p53 activity and the bax cell death pathway. Specifically, agonists of endothelial cell alphavbeta3, but not other integrins, suppressed p53 activity, blocked p21WAF1/CIP1 expression, and increased the bcl-2/bax ratio, thereby promoting cell survival. Thus, ligation of vascular cell integrin alphavbeta3 promotes a critical and specific adhesion-dependent cell survival signal during angiogenesis leading to inhibition of p53 activity, decreased expression of p21WAF1/CIP1, and suppression of the bax cell death pathway.
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PMID 
P C Brooks, S Strömblad, L C Sanders, T L von Schalscha, R T Aimes, W G Stetler-Stevenson, J P Quigley, D A Cheresh (1996)  Localization of matrix metalloproteinase MMP-2 to the surface of invasive cells by interaction with integrin alpha v beta 3.   Cell 85: 5. 683-693 May  
Abstract: SUMMARY: Cellular invasion depends on cooperation between adhesive and proteolytic mechanisms. Evidence is provided that the matrix metalloproteinase MMP-2 can be localized in a proteolytically active form on the surface of invasive cells, based on its ability to bind directly integrin alpha v beta 3. MMP-2 and alpha v beta 3 were specifically colocalized on angiogenic blood vessels and melanoma cells in vivo. Expression of alpha v beta 3 on cultured melanoma cells enabled their binding to MMP-2 in a proteolytically active form, facilitating cell-mediated collagen degradation. In vitro, these proteins formed an SDS-stable complex that depended on the noncatalytic C-terminus of MMP-2, since a truncation mutant lost the ability to bind alpha v beta 3. These findings define a single cell-surface receptor that regulates both matrix degradation and motility, thereby facilitating directed cellular invasion.
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M Yebra, G C Parry, S Strömblad, N Mackman, S Rosenberg, B M Mueller, D A Cheresh (1996)  Requirement of receptor-bound urokinase-type plasminogen activator for integrin alphavbeta5-directed cell migration.   J Biol Chem 271: 46. 29393-29399 Nov  
Abstract: The urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) interacts with its cell surface receptor (uPAR), providing an inducible, localized cell surface proteolytic activity, thereby promoting cellular invasion. Evidence is provided for a novel function of cell surface-associated uPA.uPAR. Specifically, induction of cell surface expression of uPA. uPAR by growth factors or phorbol ester was necessary for vitronectin-dependent carcinoma cell migration, an event mediated by integrin alphavbeta5. Cell migration on vitronectin was blocked with either a soluble form of uPAR, an antibody that disrupts uPA binding to uPAR, or a monoclonal antibody to alphavbeta5. Moreover, plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 blocked this migration event but did not affect adhesion, suggesting a direct role for uPA enzyme activity in this process and that migration but not adhesion of these cells is regulated by uPA.uPAR. Growth factor-mediated induction of uPA.uPAR on the carcinoma cell surface promotes a specific motility event mediated by integrin alphavbeta5, since cells transfected with the beta3 integrin subunit expressed alphavbeta3 and migrated on vitronectin independently of growth factors or uPA.uPAR expression. This relationship between alphavbeta5 and the uPA.uPAR system has significant implications for regulation of motility events associated with development, angiogenesis, and tumor metastasis.
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S Strömblad, D A Cheresh (1996)  Cell adhesion and angiogenesis.   Trends Cell Biol 6: 12. 462-468 Dec  
Abstract: Cell-adhesion mechanisms play a fundamental role during angiogenesis. This article summarizes the role of various cell-adhesive events in blood vessel formation, including general aspects of cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions. In particular, the authors discuss the role of integrin alphavbeta3 in vascular cell survival, proliferation and invasion during the complex process of angiogenesis.
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PMID 
S Strömblad, D A Cheresh (1996)  Integrins, angiogenesis and vascular cell survival.   Chem Biol 3: 11. 881-885 Nov  
Abstract: The interactions between integrins and the extracellular matrix have been identified as important regulators of vascular cell survival, proliferation and invasion during the complex process of blood vessel formation by angiogenesis.
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1995
 
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P C Brooks, S Strömblad, R Klemke, D Visscher, F H Sarkar, D A Cheresh (1995)  Antiintegrin alpha v beta 3 blocks human breast cancer growth and angiogenesis in human skin.   J Clin Invest 96: 4. 1815-1822 Oct  
Abstract: Angiogenesis plays a fundamental role in human breast tumor progression. In fact, recent findings indicate that vascular density is a prognostic indicator of breast cancer disease status. Evidence is presented that the integrin alpha v beta 3 is not only a marker of human breast tumor-associated blood vessels, but that it plays a significant role in human angiogenesis and breast tumor growth. To assess the role of alpha v beta 3-dependent angiogenesis in the progression of human breast cancer, we examined a SCID mouse/human chimeric model with transplanted full thickness human skin containing alpha v beta 3-negative human breast tumor cells. This tumor induced a human angiogenic response as measured by vascular cell immunoreactivity with monoclonal antibodies LM609 and P2B1 directed to human alpha v beta 3 and CD31, respectively. Intravenous administration of LM609 either prevented tumor growth or markedly reduced tumor cell proliferation within the microenvironment of the human skin. These LM609-treated tumors not only contained significantly fewer human blood vessels but also appeared considerably less invasive than tumors in control animals. These findings demonstrate that alpha v beta 3 antagonists may provide an effective antiangiogenic approach for the treatment of human breast cancer.
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1994
 
PMID 
S Strömblad, L C Eriksson, G Andersson (1994)  Increased expression of and sensitivity to transforming growth factor-alpha: a promotive role during rat liver carcinogenesis.   Mol Carcinog 10: 2. 97-104 Jun  
Abstract: The influence of the tumor promoter 2-acetylaminofluorene (2-AAF) on cell proliferation and on the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) system was assessed in normal and nodular rat livers. DNA replication in vivo was inhibited below the detection level after 8d of dietary 2-AAF treatment of previously unexposed rats. The 2-AAF-induced growth inhibition was accompanied by downregulation of the number of epidermal growth factor (EGF)-binding sites and decreased levels of EGFR transcripts, whereas no changes in the transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) mRNA levels were observed. The persistent liver nodules generated by intermittent 2-AAF-feeding had a 30- to 35-fold higher replicating cell fraction than normal liver. Treatment with 2-AAF in vivo reduced the replicating cell fraction to one third in nodules after 14 d of 2-AAF treatment. The initial EGFR mRNA levels and number of EGF binding sites in nodules before 2-AAF administration was about 605 that of control livers and was slightly reduced by 2-AAF feeding. The levels of EGFR mRNA after 14 d of 2-AAF feeding were thus similar in the nodules and in the 2-AAF-treated control livers, whereas the fraction of proliferating cells in nodules after the 2-AAF treatment was much larger than in normal liver. The TGF-alpha mRNA level in the nodules was found to be 1.4-fold and in malignant hepatomas 1.7-fold the level in normal liver. Primary hepatocytes isolated from control livers were four to five times more sensitive to replicative stimulation with EGF than with TGF-alpha, whereas nodular cells responded at lower concentrations than control cells and equally well to both EGF and TGF-alpha. We conclude that the decreased amounts of EGFR in the nodular cells with respect to proliferative stimulation could be more than compensated for by elevated synthesis of TGF-alpha combined with an increased TGF-alpha sensitivity. Collectively, these changes implicate TGF-alpha in sustaining cell proliferation during chemically induced rat liver carcinogenesis.
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1993
 
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S Strömblad, G Andersson (1993)  The coupling between transforming growth factor-alpha and the epidermal growth factor receptor during rat liver regeneration.   Exp Cell Res 204: 2. 321-328 Feb  
Abstract: Transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of hepatic expression of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGF-R) and its autocrine ligand, transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha), were analyzed during liver regeneration. The EGF-R mRNA levels were about twofold induced at 3 h after hepatectomy, caused by transcriptional activation. This was immediately followed by a decrease, reaching a low at half the initial level after 18 h, due to a decreased transcriptional rate. TGF-alpha mRNA expression was detected in normal liver using solution hybridization analysis. Concurrent with the decrease in EGF receptors, an increase of the TGF-alpha mRNA level occurred, starting at 6 h after hepatectomy and peaking at twice the initial TGF-alpha mRNA level after 12-24 h. For TGF-alpha, however, no increase in the rate of gene transcription could be detected. TGF-alpha and EGF competed for binding to the same hepatic receptor in normal as well as in regenerating liver. TGF-alpha bound to a similar number of binding sites as EGF in both control and 18-h posthepatectomy livers, but with 4-5 times lower affinity than EGF. At 18 h posthepatectomy, the number of binding sites was reduced to about 55% for both ligands. When the subcellular distribution of endocytosed 125I-labeled TGF-alpha was compared with that of 125I-labeled EGF, no differences were observed, and furthermore, no changes were observed in the subcellular distribution of 125I-labeled TGF-alpha during liver regeneration. The distinct and coordinate regulation of the two interactors, EGF-R and TGF-alpha, suggests that the EGF-receptor system may be functionally involved in the different phases of the prereplicative growth stimulatory process during liver regeneration.
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