Abstract
Eph receptor (Eph) and ephrin signaling can play central roles in prostate cancer and other cancer types. Exposed to ephrin-A1 PC3 prostate cancer cells alter adhesion to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. However, whether PC3 cells increase or reduce adhesion and by which mechanisms they change adhesion to the ECM remains to be characterized. Here, we assay how ephrin-A1 stimulates PC3 cells to adhere to ECM proteins using single-cell force spectroscopy. We find that PC3 cells binding to immobilized ephrin-A1 but not to solubilized ephrin-A1 specifically strengthen adhesion to collagen I. This Eph-ephrin-A1 signaling, which we suppose is based on mechanotransduction, stimulates β1-subunit containing integrin adhesion via the protein kinase Akt and the guanine nucleotide-exchange factor cytohesin. Inhibiting the small GTPases, Rap1 or Rac1, generally lowered adhesion of PC3 prostate cancer cells. Our finding suggests a mechanism by which PC3 prostate cancer cells exposed to ephrins crosstalk to β1-integrins and preferably metastasize in bone, a collagen I rich tissue.
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Introduction
Eph receptors (Ephs) and ephrins constitute an important class of cell signaling proteins that are involved in regulating a variety of biological processes including cell adhesion, migration, differentiation and segmentation, the formation of tissue boundaries, the guidance of neuronal axons and embryonic development1. Eph-ephrin binding induced signals also play important roles in long-term potentiation2,3, angiogenesis4 and cancer5. The critical roles of Ephs and ephrins in nerve regeneration and in tumor progression have led to strategies to therapeutically target them6. Ephs, which are the largest known subfamily of receptor protein-tyrosine kinases in vertebrates, are divided into A and B subclasses based on sequence homologies and ephrin binding preferences. The nine members of the Eph class A (EphA) and five members of the Eph receptor class B (EphB) bind preferentially but not exclusively to different ephrins7. Similarly to Ephs, ephrins are membrane proteins that are divided into A and B subclasses. Ephrin-A ligands are GPI-anchored and comprise six members while ephrin-B ligands are type I transmembrane proteins comprising three members8. Although affinities differ between subclasses of ephrin-As and EphAs, most ephrin-As activate most EphAs9,10.
Ephs on one cell bind ephrins on neighboring cells and induce bi-directional signals11. Such Eph-ephrin binding induced signaling, which may require a high local density of ephrins12, can regulate the adhesion of cells to the extracellular matrix (ECM) by modulating integrin activity13. Integrins, the main cell adhesion receptors for ECM proteins, are heterodimers composed of one integrin α- and one integrin β-subunit, both of which are type I transmembrane proteins. There are 18 integrin α- and 8 integrin β-subunits in mammalian cells, which are known to form 24 different integrins14. Different integrins have distinct, but often redundant, functions and frequently bind promiscuously to ECM proteins. Integrins are divided into four groups, of which three are based on binding specificities to ECM proteins (e.g. collagen, laminin and fibronectin). The fourth group of integrins is involved in leukocyte adhesion. Integrin-mediated cell adhesion is highly regulated and the receptors can switch between different affinity states for ligands15. Integrin activation, the shifting from lower- to higher-affinity states, is regulated by two key adaptor proteins, kindlin and talin, which bind to the cytoplasmic tail of integrin β-subunits16,17. Kindlin and talin together with other adaptor proteins, such as α-actinin, paxilin and vinculin, link integrins bound to the ECM to the actin cytoskeleton18,19. Cytoskeletal interactions also control the diffusion and clustering of integrins and the formation of long-lived focal adhesions20, whereas cell surface expression of integrins is regulated via endocytosis. Integrin mediated adhesion is regulated by various signaling molecules including FAK, SRC, ILK and small GTPases18,21,22,23. Moreover, integrins are also known to regulate each other in a process referred to as integrin crosstalk24,25,26.
Atomic force microscopy (AFM)-based single-cell force spectroscopy (SCFS) enables the forces with which cells adhere to their environment to be quantified27,28,29. To measure cell adhesion force, single cells are bound to an AFM cantilever and used to measure the adhesion strength of the bound cell to tissue, another cell, or substrate (e.g. ECM protein, ligands; Supplementary Fig. 1). The system is sensitive enough to characterize both the contribution of individual cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) to the adhesion formation and adhesion strengthening of the entire cell. In conventional SCFS, the cell is non-specifically attached to the AFM cantilever to avoid activating cell surface receptors via ligand binding27,28. However, functionalization of the AFM cantilever with ligands allows specific surface receptors of a cell to bind and to be functionally activated30. With functionalized AFM cantilevers it becomes possible to quantify differences in the adhesion force of stimulated and non-stimulated cells31. This approach is used to quantify the extent to which the binding of particular cell surface receptors to the ligand-functionalized cantilever regulates the cell's adhesion to another substrate. Such crosstalk was demonstrated between collagen-binding α1β1-integrins and fibronectin-binding α5β1-integrins in HeLa cells using SCFS31.
It was reported that in response to soluble ephrin-A1 PC3 cells, a prostate cancer cell line, lower adhesion to fibronectin and round up32. In vivo, however, ephrin-A1 is anchored to the outer membrane of the cell where it can function as substrate for cancer cells. Therefore, we investigated the role of surface-attached and solubilized ephrin-A1 in determining cancer cell adhesion. Using SCFS, we find that PC3 cells exposed to soluble ephrin-A1 did not change their adhesion to ECM proteins. However, the binding of PC3 cells to surface bound ephrin-A1 markedly increased their adhesion strength to collagen I but not to fibronectin. We further observe that this PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I was mediated by β1-subunit integrins and increased in strength with time. Our finding that ephrin-A1 attached to a surface stimulates PC3 cells to crosstalk (signaling pathways) with integrins containing β1-subunits hints at a possible mechanism by which PC3 prostate cancer cells preferably metastasize in bone, whose major ECM protein is collagen I.
Results
PC3 cells adhere to ephrin-A1-coated surfaces
We wanted to characterize whether PC3 cells specifically adhere to ephrin-A1-coated surfaces. To quantify this adhesion we used AFM-based SCFS (Supplementary Fig. 1) and attached single suspended PC3 cells to the ends of concanavalin A (ConA) coated tip-less AFM cantilevers (primary substrate). The cantilever-bound cell was then pressed onto a fragment crystallizable (fc)-domain of immunoglobulin G (IgG), ephrin-A1-fc and BSA coated surface (secondary substrate) at a force of 2 nN and left to bind for a pre-determined contact time. Ephrin-A1-fc is the extracellular domain of ephrin-A1 fused to the fc domain of human IgG. The fc domain improved the immobilization of ephrin-A1 to the surface. At the end of the contact time, the cantilever was retracted to detach the cell from the secondary substrate. While retracting, the force acting on the cantilever was recorded. The maximum downward deflection of the cantilever recorded during the retraction of the cell measures the maximum adhesion strength and is referred to as the adhesion force. The adhesion forces of PC3 cells in contact with ephrin-A1-fc were considerably greater than of PC3 cells in contact with fc or BSA (Fig. 1). Moreover, the adhesion force of PC3 cells to ephrin-A1-fc increased by almost a factor of two when increasing the contact time from 5 to 60 s. These results showed that specific bonds between ephrin-A1 and presumably Ephs on the surface of PC3 cells are of sufficient strength to adhere cells to ephrin-A1 functionalized surfaces.
Setting up the SCFS assay to characterize the crosstalk of ephrins to cell adhesion receptors
Having shown that PC3 cells bind to ephrin-A1 we asked whether the binding affects the adhesion of PC3 cells to ECM proteins. Thereto, we applied the previously developed stimulated SCFS assay (Supplementary Fig. 1), which is used to compare the adhesion of non-stimulated and stimulated cells to different substrates31. Particularly, we wanted to quantify the adhesion of PC3 cells attached to the cantilever by ConA and ephrin-A1-fc (primary substrates) to collagen I and fibronectin (secondary substrates). In order to increase the number of secondary substrates examined by SCFS, we used polydimethylsiloxan (PDMS) masks that allowed up to four different secondary substrate functionalizations in one Petri dish (Supplementary Fig. 1)33. Thus, a single PC3 cell, attached to a primary substrate coated cantilever, can be probed against several secondary substrates. For each secondary substrate, three SCFS measurements having contact times of 5, 15 and 60 s were always performed in this order with each cell. Because adhesion forces vary more between cells than between adhesion cycles of one cell34, we performed the same measurements with each primary substrate using at least three cells on a given day. The same measurements were performed on at least three separate days. Using this setup, the adhesion of PC3 cells in different experimental conditions was systematically examined.
Ephrin-A1 binding stimulates PC3 cells to strengthen adhesion to collagen I
Given the importance of ephrins and Ephs to cell adhesion35, we used the SCFS adhesion assay to study the effect of ephrin-A1 binding on the affinity of PC3 cells for collagen I and fibronectin (Fig. 2). For these adhesion experiments, suspended PC3 cells were added to Petri dishes functionalized with the secondary substrates; collagen I, the main component of the organic part of bone36 and fibronectin, the most common ECM component. Single PC3 cells were attached to cantilevers functionalized with either ConA or ephrin-A1-fc (primary substrates). After attachment, cells were left for at least 10 minutes to allow them to establish strong adhesion to the cantilever. Then SCFS adhesion assay cycles were performed as described above for all combinations of primary and secondary substrates and the adhesion forces determined. PC3 cells bound to ephrin-A1-fc adhered considerably stronger (factor ≈2 at 60 s contact time) to collagen I than PC3 cells bound to ConA, while the adhesion of cells to fibronectin did not depend on the primary substrate (Fig. 2). This ephrin-A1-fc dependent strengthening of the cell adhesion became dominant with increasing contact time to collagen I. At contact times longer than 60 s the PC3 cell often adhered stronger to collagen I than to the ephrin-A1-fc coated cantilever causing the cell to detach from the cantilever (Supplementary Fig. 2). To avoid detaching the cell from the cantilever we limited the contact time to 60 s or less.
We bound cells to cantilevers using ConA because this appears not to induce outside-in signaling in the attached cell37. Nevertheless, we asked whether the adhesion of PC3 cells could be affected by their attachment via ConA to the AFM cantilever. To test if ConA binding specifically affects the adhesions of PC3 cells we compared ConA with Cell-Tak bound cells and found no difference in the cells adhesion to collagen I (Supplementary Fig. 3). Therefore, we consider ConA bound cells to be non-stimulated and that any difference observed when binding cells to cantilevers using other substrates are the result of substrate dependent signaling.
In principle it is possible that the fc fragment of the ephrin-A1-fc construct contributes to the adhesion strengthening of PC3 cell to collagen I. To exclude this we conducted control SCFS experiments using the fc fragment of IgG as the primary substrate coating the AFM cantilever (Supplementary Fig. 3). The results showed that the fc fragment does not influence PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I.
Next, we asked whether PC3 cells increase adhesion force by increasing the contact area to the secondary substrate. To determine if the adhesion strengthening observed for ephrin-A1-fc bound PC3 cells was the result of increased contact area to collagen I, we imaged this contact area using confocal microscopy. Therefore, PC3 cells were incubated in Neuro-DiO, a green fluorescence membrane marker and attached to an ephrin-A1-fc functionalized cantilever. Then, SCFS was performed while recording confocal images of the PC3 cell in contact with the collagen I coated surface (Supplementary Fig. 4). The cell-substrate contact area, as revealed from the fluorescence images, did not change during the contact phase of the adhesion measurement (Supplementary Fig. 4a,b). The same is true for PC3 cells, which have not been stimulated by ephrin-A1 (Supplementary Fig. 4c,d).
Taken together these experiments showed that PC3 cells sensing surface bound ephrin-A1 specifically strengthened adhesion to collagen I. That the strengthened adhesion was not the result of an increase in the substrate contact area leads to the conclusion that PC3 cells strengthen adhesion by regulating collagen I adhesion receptors at the secondary substrate contact. This implies that ephrin-A1 binding to PC3 cells initiates crosstalk to distinct CAMs.
Only ephrin-A1 bound to a surface stimulates PC3 cells to strengthen adhesion to collagen I
We observed that surface (cantilever) bound ephrin-A1-fc stimulated PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I whereas the adhesion to fibronectin remained unaffected. In apparent contrast to the latter finding, previous studies report that addition of ephrin-A1-fc to the cell media inhibits the adhesion of PC3 cells to fibronectin32. Also reported is that forms of ephrin-A1, soluble, clustered or surface bound, induce different cellular responses38. We conducted additional SCFS experiments to investigate whether the form of ephrin-A1-fc affects its ability to alter the adhesion of PC3 cells to collagen I or fibronectin. Thereto, PC3 cells were incubated with soluble ephrin-A1-fc (1 μg/mL) before their adhesion was measured. Alternatively, PC3 cells were incubated with ephrin-A1-fc that had been clustered by pre-incubation with anti-fc antibody (1:1) for 30 minutes on ice. In our assay, incubating PC3 cells with soluble and clustered ephrin-A1-fc did neither enhance cell adhesion to collagen I nor to fibronectin (Fig. 3). The slight decrease in PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I in the presence of solubilized ephrin-A1 is not statistically significant. Importantly, these experiments demonstrate that ephrin-A1 must be immobilized to stimulate the adhesion of PC3 cells to collagen I.
Ephrin-A1 induced cell adhesion strengthening is specific to PC3 prostate cancer cells
Next, we asked whether the observed ephrin-A1 induced crosstalk to collagen I binding CAMs is common to mammalian cells or a distinct feature of PC3 cells. Therefore, we performed SCFS using mouse embryonic kidney fibroblasts and HeLa cells (Fig. 4). Both fibroblasts and HeLa cells adhered sufficiently well to primary substrates, ConA and ephrin-A1-fc, to perform SCFS. The adhesion forces to the different secondary substrates varied with cell line, with fibroblasts and HeLa cells binding fibronectin stronger than PC3 cells (Fig. 2 and 4). The adhesion of fibroblasts and HeLa cells to fibronectin increased with contact time. While mouse fibroblasts nearly failed to adhere to collagen I, HeLa cells adhered strongly. However, neither mouse fibroblasts nor HeLa cells showed statistically significant ephirn-A1 dependent adhesion changes. Next, we asked if ephrin-A1 induction was specific for prostate derived cells. Thereto, the ephrin-A1 induction was examined in three prostate cancer cell lines (LNCaP clone GFC derived form lymph node39, DU 145 from brain leson40 and MDA PCa 2b from bone metastasis41) and one prostate derived cell line (WPE1-NB2642) using our SCFS assay (Supplementary Fig. 5). Binding to immobilized ephrin-A1 failed to strengthen the adhesion to collagen I in all of these cell lines. Furthermore, none of the cell lines changed their adhesion to fibronectin (Supplementary Fig. 5). Taken together, these results indicate that ephrin-A1 dependent adhesion strengthening to collagen I is distinct to PC3 cells.
Binding of ephrin-A1 to PC3 cells does not affect adhesion to other ECM proteins
Next, we examined if ephrin-A1 binding influenced the adhesion of PC3 cells to ECM proteins other than collagen I. Thereto, fibronectin, vitronectin and laminin 332 were used as secondary substrates in the cell adhesion assay. Using SCFS, the strength with which single PC3 cells adhered to these ECM proteins and collagen I was quantified (Fig. 5). The cells adhered to each ECM protein with different strengths. However, the adhesion force to fibronectin, vitronectin and laminin 332 did not depend on whether the ephrin-A1-fc or ConA were used as primary substrates. This suggests that the ephrin-A1-induced enhancement of PC3 cell adhesion involves collagen I specific adhesion receptors.
Adhesion of PC3 cells to collagen I is strengthened by integrins containing β1-subunits
α1β1-, α2β1-, α10β1- and α11β1-integrins bind collagen I43. To determine if these integrins mediate adhesion of PC3 cells to collagen I and are responsible for the ephrin-A1-induced strengthening of cell adhesion we used integrin-blocking antibodies. Suspended PC3 cells were incubated in media containing antibodies against integrin β1-subunits44, integrin α3-subunits or αvβ5-integrin, before their adhesion to collagen I was assayed (Fig. 6). Again, ConA and ephrin-A1-fc were used as primary substrates. As expected, the integrin β1-subunit antibody blocked the ephrin-A1-induced strengthening of cell adhesion to collagen I while the other antibodies did not. This blocking was efficient as the adhesion of PC3 cells to collagen I failed to substantially increase with contact time. Surprisingly, we found an increase in collagen I binding of ephrin-A1-bound PC3 cells treated with αvβ5-integrin antibodies. This increase was not observed in ConA bound cells. In summary, the suppression of PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I by integrin β1-subunit antibodies indicated that ephrin-A1-binding to PC3 cells stimulated adhesion mediated by integrins containing β1-subunits.
Targeting signaling proteins involved in the ephrin-A1 induced crosstalk
To examine the mechanism by which ephrin-A1 binding enhances the adhesion of PC3 cells to collagen I, we inhibited proteins that are possibly involved in the signal transduction of this crosstalk6,35. We inhibited PI3K, which in some signaling cascades is down stream of EphA2 and an effector of integrins7,45,46, with wortmannin and LY29400247,48, Rac1 with NSC23766 and EHT 186449,50, Rap1 with GGTI2147 and GGTI28651, Akt with Akt inhibitor VIII and IV52,53, cytohesins with SecinH354, myosin II with blebbistatin55, RhoA with CT0456 and ROCK with Y2763257. All inhibitors were used at sub-lethal concentrations (Supplementary Fig. 6). CT04 was added to spread PC3 cells 4 hours prior to performing adhesion assays, while all other inhibitors were added to suspended PC3 cells 30 minutes prior to performing adhesion assays. The inhibitors of Rac1, Rap1, cytohesin and Akt all reduced the ephrin-A1-induced strengthening of PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I, while inhibitors of PI3K, myosin II, RhoA and ROCK did not (Fig. 7 and Supplementary Fig. 7). However, the inhibitors of Rac1 and Rap1 also lowered the baseline adhesion of both ephrin-A1 and ConA bound cells to collagen I. This indicates that these Rac1 and Rap1 are likely not specific for the ephrin-A1 stimulated signaling pathway but necessary for PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I. While the inhibitor results provide only limited insights into the ephrin-A1 induced signaling pathway, the finding that inhibiting either ROCK or RhoA has no effect suggests that the ROCK/RhoA pathway is not involved in establishing and strengthening PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I.
Discussion
We applied SCFS to address how ephrin-A1 changes the adhesion of PC3 cells to ECM proteins. Thereto, single cells were bound to an ephrin-A1-coated AFM cantilever and their adhesion to different ECM proteins was probed. We found that PC3 cells bound to immobilized ephrin-A1 adhered stronger to collagen I than control cells, whereas adhesion to fibronectin was not altered. The finding that PC3 cell adhesion to fibronectin remained unaffected in the presence of either surface bound or soluble ephrin-A1, is in apparent contrast to a previous study reporting that addition of ephrin-A1-fc to the media inhibits PC3 cell adhesion to fibronectin32. Because the latter study did not directly measure cell adhesion, but inferred changes in cell adhesion from ephrin-A1 induced changes of PC3 cell morphology, we assume that the morphological changes are based on effects other than changes in adhesion.
Ephrin-A1 induces PC3 cells to increase their β1-subunits integrin dependent adhesion to collagen I
Ephrin-A1 induced adhesion strengthening of PC3 cells to collagen I was abolished by integrin β1-subunit blocking antibodies. Therefrom, we conclude that in response to ephrin-A1, PC3 cells increased their adhesion to collagen I via β1-subunit containing integrins. The role of the integrin β1-subunit was predicted because collagen I is bound by α1β1-, α2β1-, α10β1- and α11β1-integrins43. The antibody mediated blocking of the β1-subunit may have induced compensation via activation of other integrins, which may have altered the adhesion of the cells to other integrin substrates58,59. However, because of our emphasis on collagen I adhesion this subject was not addressed.
Ephrin-A1 stimulated PC3 cells increase the avidity of β1-subunits integrins
After 60 s of contact to collagen I about one third of the ephrin-A1 stimulated PC3 cells established high adhesion forces while the rest showed adhesion forces comparable to non-stimulated control cells (Fig. 2, 5, 6 and 7). Such large variations in early cell adhesion have been attributed to cells switching to an enhanced adhesion state60,61. Immuno-fluorescence microscopy of β1-integrins suggests that ephrin-A1 binding increased the cell surface expression of β1-integrins (Supplementary Fig. 8). These results indicate that Eph signaling, initiated by ephrin-A1 binding, induces PC3 prostate cancer cells to transition to an enhanced adhesion state by increasing the avidity of β1-integrins.
Stimulation of PC3 cell adhesion depends on the mechanical state of ephrin-A1
Other studies of PC3 cells show ephrin-A1 stimulation having a different effect on cell adhesion. The addition of soluble ephrin-A1 induces cell rounding, inhibits cell migration, promotes the formation of retraction fibers and suppresses integrin function32,62. This argues that stimulation by solubilized ephrin-A1 negatively regulates cell adhesion to the ECM. However, these studies lacked quantitative adhesion measurements and, hence, different cellular processes, such as cell contraction may cause the observed cell rounding and reduction of cell adhesion. Importantly, our SCFS experiments show that the adhesion of PC3 cells is stimulated differently depending on the ephrin-A1 form. Only surface bound ephrin-A1 stimulated PC3 cells to strengthen their adhesion to collagen I. Such a scenario mimics in vivo where ephrin-A1 is bound to cell surfaces. In contrast, soluble and antibody clustered ephrin-A1 did not enhance PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I. This is interesting as Eph signaling is known to depend on the form of ephrin-A112,63. Furthermore, that only surface bound ephrin-A1 stimulates PC3 cell adhesion (Fig. 3), suggests that Eph-ephrin-A1 signaling depends on mechanotransduction.
Our SCFS setup did not allow quantitative adhesion measurements at contact times longer than 60 s, because after such contact times, the cells adhered too strongly to collagen I and detached from the cantilever. Therefore, we could only ascertain the initial adhesion of PC3 cells to ECM proteins and not examine the overall effect of Eph-ephrin signaling on mature adhesion. Although immobilized ephrin-A1 considerably stimulated PC3 cells to strengthen adhesion within the first 60 s of contact to collagen I, the long-term influence of ephrin-A1 stimulation on adhesion is likely more complex.
Signaling molecules participating in the crosstalk between Eph and integrin
PC3 cells express mainly EphA2, for which ephrin-A1 is a ligand32. Thus, we assume that the enhanced PC3 cell adhesion is due to signaling by EphA2. To elucidate the signaling cascade(s) involved in ephrin–A1 induced adhesion strengthening we perturbed different signaling molecules. Although we were unable to dissect the signaling pathway, our results reveal several of its aspects. Since the inhibition of ROCK and RhoA had no effect on signal transduction, they are likely not involved in the early effects of ephrin-A1 induced cell adhesion strengthening. As myosin II can be regulated by a ROCK dependent pathway64, the inability of the myosin II inhibitor blebbistatin to affect the PC3 cell adhesion strengthening (Fig. 7) further substantiates the independence on RhoA. In apparent contrast, earlier studies indicate that RhoA is required for the ephrin-A1 dependent regulation of long-term cell adhesion65. However, as our experiments are limited to early (≤60 s) PC3 cell adhesion events, we cannot rule out that Rho-family GTPases, which are central to integrin mediated adhesion signaling and crosstalk22, play a dominant role at longer adhesion times. Our experimental finding accord with the observation that during initial cell adhesion phases RhoA-GTP levels are reduced by the activation of Rac1, whereas during later adhesion phases the activity of Rac1 decreases and that of RhoA increases22. Accordingly, we observe that upon Rac1 inhibition, PC3 cell adhesion strengthening is abolished. This observation suggests that Rac1 is important for ephrin-A1 to switch PC3 cells to the strengthened adhesion state. However, since ConA bound non-stimulated PC3 cells were also less adhesive when Rac1 was inhibited (Fig. 7), Rac1 may be a general regulator of early cell adhesion and, therefore, not specific to ephrin-A1 induced adhesion.
In contrast to the Rac1 inhibitor, the cytohesin inhibitor SecinH3 did not weaken non-stimulated cell adhesion but abolished the ephrin-A1 induced strengthening of cell adhesion (Fig. 7). In HeLa cells, cytohesin 2 promotes recycling of β1-subunit containing integrins to the plasma membrane and cytohesin 3 down regulates cell adhesion66. Because cytohesin 1 and 4 are mainly expressed in immune cells67 and cytohesin 3 inhibits cell adhesion our results suggest that in prostate cancer cells cytohesin 2 activity is up-regulated upon ephrin-A1 stimulation. Our data also suggests that Rap1 is a part of the signaling induced by ephrin-A1 stimulation. Rap1, is a regulator of RIAM, which activate integrins by localizing talin to the plasma membrane68,69. However, as Rap1 inhibition reduces adhesion of non-stimulated and ephrin-A1 stimulated PC3 cells it may be a more general regulator of PC3 cell adhesion. Interestingly, we found that the early ephrin-A1 induced adhesion of PC3 cells was lowered by Akt inhibition, which contradicts a study showing that Akt2 and 3 activity reduce PC3 cell adhesion to collagen I70. Because Akt inhibition did not reduce the adhesion of non-stimulated PC3 cells we propose that Akt is only involved in enhancing ephrin-A1 stimulated adhesion to collagen I. These findings elucidate some possible molecules involved in the signaling pathway by which ephrin-A1 stimulates β1-integrin mediated adhesion to collagen I. We hope that more extensive cell biological studies will unravel in more details of how this ephrin-A1 dependent crosstalk regulates cell adhesion.
Medical relevance of ephrin induced stimulation of prostate cancer cell adhesion
The finding that the prostate cancer cell line, PC3, responds to ephrin-A1 binding by strengthening adhesion to collagen I is of possible medical relevance. Prostate cancers metastasis to a very high percentage in bone71, the main protein component of which is collagen I. EphA2, which is over-expressed in PC3 cells32, regulates prostate cancer invasion and metastasis72. EphA2 is involved in cell invasion and metastasis of several cell lines and different cancer types in vivo73,74,75. In addition, Taddei et al show that EphA2 mutant cells do not present ephrin-A1 induced cell rounding, retraction fiber formation and in vivo metastasis76. Our results indicate, that EphA2 may not only have an important role in the delamination of cancer cells from the primary tumor but also in the process of metastasis formation. An implication of ephrin-A1 in prostate cancer progression is not evident, but ephrins such as ephrin-B2 are expressed in osteocytes and osteoblasts77. In osteoclast precursors and osteoblasts, the bidirectional signaling of EphA2 and ephrin-A2 regulates the initial phase of bone remodeling78. In this context, the enhanced early adhesion to collagen I upon EphA2 activation is possibly involved in the adhesion of prostate cancer cells to bone matrix.
Methods
Cell culture
The human prostatic carcinoma cell line, PC3, was maintained in 25 mM HEPES RPMI 1640 medium (Sigma-Aldrich) supplemented with 10% (v/v) fetal bovine serum (FBS, Sigma-Aldrich), 1 mM sodium pyruvate, 100 units/mL penicillin and 100 μg/mL streptomycin (Gibco-Life Technologies). HeLa-Kyoto cells were maintained in DMEM (Gibco-Life Technologies) supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 units/mL penicillin and 100 μg/mL streptomycin. Mouse embryonic kidney fibroblasts were maintained in DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS, 100 units/mL penicillin and 100 μg/mL streptomycin.
SCFS setup
For SCFS both a NanoWizard II AFM equipped with the CellHesion module and a CellHesion 200 (both JPK Instruments) mounted on inverted microscopes (Observer. Z, Zeiss) were used. During SCFS cells were maintained at 37°C using a Petri dish heater (JPK Instruments) or temperature controlled (Life Imaging Services) incubator box. 200 μm long tip-less V-shaped silicon nitride cantilevers having nominal spring constants of 0.06 N/m (NP-0, Bruker) were used. Cantilever spring constants were determined using the equipartition theorem79.
Surface coating of AFM cantilever and Petri dishes
Cantilevers were prepared as described previously80. In short, cantilevers were plasma-cleaned prior to an overnight incubation (at 4°C) in ConA (2 mg/mL, Sigma), fc-fragment (50 μg/mL) or ephrin-A1-fc (50 μg/mL) in PBS, or Cell-Tak (63 μg/mL, BD Biosciences). The cantilever bound substrate is referred to as primary substrate. Secondary substrates were prepared as follows: glass bottom Petri dishes (35 mm FluoroDish, World Precision Instruments) were coated with a polydimethylsiloxan (PDMS, Sylgard 184, Dow Corning) mask to allow four different substrates coatings33. Then, 16 μL collagen I (160 μg/mL, Inamed Biomaterials), bovine fibronectin (50 μg/mL, Merck), laminin 332 (laminin 5, 50 μg/mL, Abcam) or vitronectin (from human plasma, 50 μg/mL, Merck Millipore) in PBS was added to PDMS surfaces (area 9 mm2) for an overnight incubation at 4°C.
Adhesion force measurements by SCFS
For adhesion force measurements, cells were grown to ≈80% confluency, washed with PBS, trypsinized with 0.25% trypsin-EDTA (Gibco-Life Technologies) for 3 minutes, pelleted and suspended into CO2-independent serum-free RPMI 1640 (measurement medium). Cell suspensions were pipetted onto secondary substrate-coated supports and cells were allowed to settle. To attach single cells, the apex of a calibrated, primary substrate-functionalized cantilever was lowered with a velocity of 10 μm/s onto a cell until a contact force of 5 nN was detected. After 5 s of contact, the cantilever was raised from the Petri dish by 50 μm, where the cantilever-bound cell was incubated for >10 minutes80. For each adhesion measurement the cantilever-bound cell was lowered onto the secondary substrate (Supplementary Fig. 1a, I) until reaching a contact force of 2 nN, the cantilever height was maintained for a predetermined contact time of 5, 15 or 60 s (Supplementary Fig. 1a, II) and retracted from the secondary substrate by >90 μm (Supplementary Fig. 1a, III and IV). Cantilever approach and retract velocity was 5 μm/s. Each data set was generated using at least nine cells; thereto at least three cells for each condition assayed per day on at least three separate days. Only one adhesion measurement was performed for each cell for a given contact time secondary substrate combination. The order of contact times for each cell and secondary substrate combination was always: 5, 15 and 60 s. Cell recovery times between adhesion measurement cycles were never shorter than the contact time, even excluding the time necessary to raise and lower the cell. Detachment forces were extracted from force-distance curves (Supplementary Fig. 1b) recorded during each cell adhesion measurement using the JPK data processing software. For adhesion receptor crosstalk measurements cells were bound to cantilevers coated with different primary substrates (see cantilever preparation). Thereby, effects of the primary substrate on the adhesion properties of cells to a secondary substrate were addressed (Supplementary Fig. 1c).
Antibody blocking and inhibitor assays
The antibodies, anti-human IgG (Fc) (BioConcept AG, Switzerland), AIIB2 (integrin β1-subunit blocking antibody), P5H9 (αvβ5-integrin blocking antibody) and P1B5 (integrin α3-subunit blocking antibody; all 10 μg/mL supernatants; DSHB, Iowa) were incubated with cells on ice for 30 minutes prior to SCFS. To inhibit cell signaling, wortmannin (100 nM; Sigma-Aldrich)47, LY294002 (50 μM; Cell Signaling Technology)48, NSC23766 (50 μM; Merck Millipore)49, EHT 1864 (100 μM; R&D Systems)50, GGTI 2147 or GGTI286 (10 μM; Merck Millipore)51, Akt inhibitor IV (1 μM; Merck Millipore)52, Akt inhibitor VIII (20 μM; Merck Millipore)53, SecinH3 (20 μM; Merck Millipore)54, blebbistatin (10 μM; Merck Millipore)55 or Y-27632 (10 μM; Merck Millipore)57 were added to the measurement media at the concentrations given. Cells were then incubated for 30 minutes at 37°C prior to SCFS. All inhibitors were dissolved in DMSO and stored at −20°C.
Inhibitor concentration assays
PC3 cells were grown in 96-well microtiter glass bottom plates (P96G-1.5-5-F, Mattek Corporation) in 10% FCS RPMI 1640 for 2 days before the media was exchanged with serum-free RPMI 1640. After 12 h inhibitors (see above) were added at different concentrations and DIC microscopy images of cells were recorded using an inverted microscope (Eclipse Ti, Nikon) Throughout, cells were maintained at 37°C and 5% CO2.
Adhesion contact area
PC3 cells were detached with 0.25% trypsin-EDTA at 37°C for 3 minutes, spun down at 160 g for 3 minutes, suspended in 1 mL FCS-free RPMI 1640 containing 5 μl Neuro-DiO (CellBrite Green, Biotium) and incubated in 37°C for 20 minutes. The cells were washed twice in 1 mL of FCS-free RPMI 1640 media, by pelleting cells at 160 g for 5 minutes. SCFS was performed with Neuro-DiO labeled cells, while fluorescence images of the cell-collagen I contact area were recorded using confocal microscopy (LSM700, LCI 63×/1.3 objective, Zeiss).
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using the Prism4 software (GraphPad Software). All quantitative data (Fig. 1–6 and Supplementary Fig. 2, 3, 5 and 7) is shown with bars marking mean ± standard deviation. Significance was calculated using the Mann–Whitney U-test with P ≤ 0.05 being significant and P ≤ 0.01 very significant.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Nico Strohmeyer for critical discussion and assistance and Mitasha Bharadwaj, Cedric Cattin and Subramaniam Ramanathan for critically reading the manuscript. We thank Hongxiang Wang as PhD supervisor of M.Y. at the Harbin Institute of Technology. Juha Himanen and Petri Susi generously provided ephrins. PC3 cells were a gift of the Oncology Group of the Institute for Surgical Research and Hospital Management at University Hospital Basel. Mouse embryonic kidney fibroblasts and integrin β1-subunit antibodies were kindly provided by Reinhard Fässler. This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (Grant 31003A_138063) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 51175124 supporting M.Y.).
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M.Y. conducted the experiments and analyzed the data together with J.H. J.W. supervised M.Y. J.H. and D.J.M. designed the experiments. M.Y., J.H., D.J.M. wrote the paper.
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Yu, M., Wang, J., Muller, D. et al. In PC3 prostate cancer cells ephrin receptors crosstalk to β1-integrins to strengthen adhesion to collagen type I. Sci Rep 5, 8206 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep08206
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep08206
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