Cellular adherence elicits ligand-independent activation of the Met cell-surface receptor.

R Wang, R Kobayashi… - Proceedings of the …, 1996 - National Acad Sciences
R Wang, R Kobayashi, JM Bishop
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996National Acad Sciences
Cell adhesion has a fundamental role in the proliferation and motility of normal cells and the
metastasis of tumor cells. To identify signaling pathways activated by the adherence of tumor
cells, we analyzed the tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins in mouse melanoma cells before
and after attachment to substrata. We discovered that cellular adherence activated the
protein-tyrosine kinase of the cell surface receptor Met, whose ligand is hepatocyte growth
factor and scatter factor. The activation was exceedingly prompt, affected the great majority …
Cell adhesion has a fundamental role in the proliferation and motility of normal cells and the metastasis of tumor cells. To identify signaling pathways activated by the adherence of tumor cells, we analyzed the tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins in mouse melanoma cells before and after attachment to substrata. We discovered that cellular adherence activated the protein-tyrosine kinase of the cell surface receptor Met, whose ligand is hepatocyte growth factor and scatter factor. The activation was exceedingly prompt, affected the great majority of Met in the cells, persisted so long as the cells remained adherent, and was rapidly reversed as soon as the cells were detached from substrata. Activation of Met required that cells be adherent but not that they spread on the substratum, and it occurred in the absence of any apparent ligand for the receptor. Ligand-independent activation of Met occurred in several varieties of tumor cells but not in normal endothelial cells that express the receptor. The activation of Met described here may represent a means by which cells respond to mechanical as opposed to biochemical stimuli.
National Acad Sciences