VEGF-A/NRP1 stimulates GIPC1 and Syx complex formation to promote RhoA activation and proliferation in skin cancer cells

A Yoshida, A Shimizu, H Asano… - Biology …, 2015 - journals.biologists.com
A Yoshida, A Shimizu, H Asano, T Kadonosono, SK Kondoh, E Geretti, A Mammoto…
Biology open, 2015journals.biologists.com
ABSTRACT Neuropilin-1 (NRP1) has been identified as a VEGF-A receptor. DJM-1, a
human skin cancer cell line, expresses endogenous VEGF-A and NRP1. In the present
study, the RNA interference of VEGF-A or NRP1 suppressed DJM-1 cell proliferation.
Furthermore, the overexpression of the NRP1 wild type restored shNRP1-treated DJM-1 cell
proliferation, whereas NRP1 cytoplasmic deletion mutants did not. A co-immunoprecipitation
analysis revealed that VEGF-A induced interactions between NRP1 and GIPC1, a scaffold …
Abstract
Neuropilin-1 (NRP1) has been identified as a VEGF-A receptor. DJM-1, a human skin cancer cell line, expresses endogenous VEGF-A and NRP1. In the present study, the RNA interference of VEGF-A or NRP1 suppressed DJM-1 cell proliferation. Furthermore, the overexpression of the NRP1 wild type restored shNRP1-treated DJM-1 cell proliferation, whereas NRP1 cytoplasmic deletion mutants did not. A co-immunoprecipitation analysis revealed that VEGF-A induced interactions between NRP1 and GIPC1, a scaffold protein, and complex formation between GIPC1 and Syx, a RhoGEF. The knockdown of GIPC1 or Syx reduced active RhoA and DJM-1 cell proliferation without affecting the MAPK or Akt pathway. C3 exoenzyme or Y27632 inhibited the VEGF-A-induced proliferation of DJM-1 cells. Conversely, the overexpression of the constitutively active form of RhoA restored the proliferation of siVEGF-A-treated DJM-1 cells. Furthermore, the inhibition of VEGF-A/NRP1 signaling upregulated p27, a CDK inhibitor. A cell-penetrating oligopeptide that targeted GIPC1/Syx complex formation inhibited the VEGF-A-induced activation of RhoA and suppressed DJM-1 cell proliferation. In conclusion, this new signaling pathway of VEGF-A/NRP1 induced cancer cell proliferation by forming a GIPC1/Syx complex that activated RhoA to degrade the p27 protein.
journals.biologists.com