First Author | Yang Z | Year | 2007 |
Journal | J Cell Biol | Volume | 176 |
Issue | 6 | Pages | 787-93 |
PubMed ID | 17353357 | Mgi Jnum | J:120085 |
Mgi Id | MGI:3703841 | Doi | 10.1083/jcb.200611044 |
Citation | Yang Z, et al. (2007) Absence of integrin-mediated TGFbeta1 activation in vivo recapitulates the phenotype of TGFbeta1-null mice. J Cell Biol 176(6):787-93 |
abstractText | The multifunctional cytokine transforming growth factor (TGF) beta1 is secreted in a latent complex with its processed propeptide (latency-associated peptide [LAP]). TGFbeta1 must be functionally released from this complex before it can engage TGFbeta receptors. One mechanism of latent TGFbeta1 activation involves interaction of the integrins alpha v beta6 and alpha v beta8 with an RGD sequence in LAP; other putative latent TGFbeta1 activators include thrombospondin-1, oxidants, and various proteases. To assess the contribution of RGD-binding integrins to TGFbeta1 activation in vivo, we created a mutation in Tgfb1 encoding a nonfunctional variant of the RGD sequence (RGE). Mice with this mutation (Tgfb1(RGE/RGE)) display the major features of Tgfb1(-/-) mice (vasculogenesis defects, multiorgan inflammation, and lack of Langerhans cells) despite production of normal levels of latent TGFbeta1. These findings indicate that RGD-binding integrins are requisite latent TGFbeta1 activators during development and in the immune system. |