Osteopontin, a glycoprotein with a glycine-arginine-glycine-aspartate-serine (GRGDS) cell-binding domain, has been described in bone and is also known to be expressed in other organs, particularly kidney. The goal of the present work was to define the distribution of osteopontin synthesis and deposition in a wide variety of normal adult human tissues using a multifaceted approach that included immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, and Northern analysis. Immunohistochemical studies have revealed the unexpected finding that osteopontin is deposited as a prominent layer at the luminal surfaces of specific populations of epithelial cells of the gastrointestinal tract, gall bladder, pancreas, urinary and reproductive tracts, lung, breast, salivary glands, and sweat glands. Northern analyses identified gallbladder as a major site of osteopontin gene transcription comparable in magnitude with that of kidney, and immunoblotting identified osteopontin in bile. In situ hybridization localized osteopontin gene transcripts predominantly to the epithelium of a variety of organs as well as to ganglion cells of bowel wall. Osteopontin of epithelial cell origin, like bone-derived osteopontin, promoted GRGDS-dependent cell spreading in attachment assays. We postulate that osteopontin secreted by epithelium binds integrins on luminal surfaces. Collectively, these findings suggest an important role for osteopontin on many luminal epithelial surfaces communicating with the external environment.
Osteopontin (OPN) is a secreted adhesive glycoprotein with a functional glycine-arginine-glycine-aspartate-serine (GRGDS) cell-binding domain. An interesting feature of OPN structure is the presence of a thrombin-cleavage site in close proximity to the GRGDS region. Cleavage of OPN by thrombin is likely to be of physiological importance, because cleavage of blood plasma OPN occurs naturally after activation of the blood coagulation pathway. To investigate functional consequences of OPN cleavage by thrombin, cell attachment and spreading assays were performed with uncleaved and cleaved forms of OPN. For all cell lines examined, thrombin-cleaved OPN promoted markedly greater cell attachment and spreading than uncleaved OPN. Cell attachment and spreading on thrombin-cleaved OPN was inhibited both by the soluble GRGDS peptides and an OPN-specific antibody raised to the GRGDS domain of OPN, thus implicating the GRGDS region in mediating the increased cell attachment and spreading observed on thrombin-cleaved OPN. Because the GRGDS sequence in OPN is only six residues from the thrombin-cleavage site, the data suggest that possibility that thrombin cleavage allows greater accessibility of the GRGDS domain to cell surface receptors. To investigate receptors that recognize uncleaved and thrombin-cleaved OPN, affinity chromatography was performed on placental extracts; the cell surface integrin alpha v beta 3 bound to columns constructed either with native or thrombin-cleaved OPN and was selectively eluted from each with soluble GRGDS peptide and EDTA. Moreover, adhesion assays performed in the presence of alpha v beta 3 blocking monoclonal antibody LM609 identified alpha v beta 3 as a major functional receptor for thrombin-cleaved OPN. Several lines of evidence suggest that cleavage of OPN by thrombin occurs in vivo, such as in tumors and at sites of tissue injury, and adhesion assay data presented here indicate that such cleavage is important in the regulation of OPN function.
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