Ganglioside GT1b inhibits keratinocyte adhesion and migration on a fibronectin matrix.
Highly sialylated gangliosides have been shown to alter cellular adhesion to a fibronectin matrix. The effect of these gangliosides on the adhesion, spreading, and migration of cultured keratinocytes on a fibronectin matrix has not been explored. Ganglioside GT1b significantly prevented attachment of keratinocytes to fibronectin and also detached previously adherent keratinocytes in a concentration-dependent manner without cell toxicity. GT1b did not affect adhesion of keratinocytes to wells coated with laminin, type I or type IV collagen, 804G extracellular matrix, or albumin. GT1b also inhibited keratinocyte migration on fibronectin in a concentration-dependent manner at concentrations as low as 5 nM GT1b, but had no effect on migration of keratinocytes plated on other matrices. GT1b binds to intact fibronectin and to the 120-kD RGDS-containing cell-binding fibronectin fragment, but not to the heparin- or gelatin-binding fragments of fibronectin. Although RGDS competes with GT1b in inhibiting adhesion, GT1b does not diminish binding of keratinocytes to a derivatized RGDS substratum, suggesting that the GT1b effect involves a non-RGDS site in the cell-binding region that modulates RGDS/alpha 5 beta 1 integrin receptor interaction. Through a specific effect on keratinocyte interaction with fibronectin, GT1b may participate in the regulation of cell adhesion and migration on a fibronectin substratum, which are important events during wound healing and the spreading of cutaneous neoplasia.[1]References
- Ganglioside GT1b inhibits keratinocyte adhesion and migration on a fibronectin matrix. Paller, A.S., Arnsmeier, S.L., Chen, J.D., Woodley, D.T. J. Invest. Dermatol. (1995) [Pubmed]
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