the extracellular space

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The Extracellular Space Epithelial tissues closely packed cells lining spaces in the body (e.g. skin, intestine, etc) Connective tissues Largely composed of non-living extracellular material (e.g. cartilage, tendon, dermis)

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The Extracellular Space. Epithelial tissues closely packed cells lining spaces in the body (e.g. skin, intestine, etc) Connective tissues Largely composed of non-living extracellular material (e.g. cartilage, tendon, dermis). The Extracellular Matrix (ECM). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Extracellular Space

The Extracellular Space• Epithelial tissues

– closely packed cells lining spaces in the body (e.g. skin, intestine, etc)• Connective tissues

– Largely composed of non-living extracellular material (e.g. cartilage, tendon, dermis)

Page 2: The Extracellular Space

The Extracellular Matrix (ECM)• An organized network of materials located beyond the plasma membrane

Page 3: The Extracellular Space

Basement membranes• Thick regions of ECM

– Surround muscle/fat– Underlie the basal surface of epithelial tissues

Page 4: The Extracellular Space

Basement membranes• Separate different tissues• Provide mechanical support• Barrier to macromolecule and cellular movement• Substrate for cell migration• Generate signals that maintain cell survival

Page 5: The Extracellular Space

ECM: Collagens• 27 different types

– High tensile strength (resistant to pulling forces)– Alpha-helical trimers bundle together into fibrils– Types I, II, III (fibrillar) form rigid cables

• Adjacent collagens are strengthened by covalent cross-links– Hydroxylysine - lysine

– Type IV (nonfibrillar) can form an interconnected lattice

Page 6: The Extracellular Space

ECM: Collagens• 27 different types

– Type IV (nonfibrillar) can form an interconnected lattice• Composed of helical and non-helical segments (flexibility)• Globular domains at each end (lattice contact points)

– Collagens bind:• Fibronectins• Integrins (cell surface)

Page 7: The Extracellular Space

ECM and disease• Diseases caused by defects in collagen genes

– Osteogenesis imperfecta• Fragile bones

– Ehlers-Danlos syndrome• Hyperflexible joints,

highly extensible skin

Page 8: The Extracellular Space

ECM: Proteoglycans• Protein core + glycosaminoglycan (GAG) polysaccharide complex

– High amount of negative charge binds cations and H2O– Hydrated gel resists compressive forces

• Hyaluronic acid links many proteoglycans to form large molecules• Fill the scaffold created by collagens

Page 9: The Extracellular Space

ECM: Fibronectins• Modular domains for interactions• Bind collagens, proteoglycans, integrins at cell surface

NC cells

Page 10: The Extracellular Space

ECM: Laminins• 3 polypeptides linked by disulfide bonds• Form a second lattice interwoven with

Collagen IV lattice• Bind to proteoglycans, integrins at cell

surface

PGC on laminin

Page 11: The Extracellular Space

ECM Remodeling• Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs)

– Degrade ECM proteins to enable:• Tissue remodeling• Cell migration• Wound healing

Page 12: The Extracellular Space

Steps leading to metastatic spread

MMP activity

Page 13: The Extracellular Space

Cell - ECM Interactions

• Integrins– Only found in animals– Heterodimer of alpha and beta subunits

• 18 alpha and 8 beta subunits known• 12 different alpha/beta combinations known

– Transmembrane proteins• Extracellular domain, transmembrane domain, intracellular domain• Inside-out signaling

– Post-translational alterations to cytoplasmic tail regulate conformation changes in extracellular domain

– Talin separates beta from alpha to open receptor to active state

Plasma membrane

talin

Page 14: The Extracellular Space

Inactive

Page 15: The Extracellular Space

Active

Page 16: The Extracellular Space
Page 17: The Extracellular Space

Cell – ECM: Integrins• Ligand binding

– RGD loop of Fibronectin binds to integrin receptor extracellular domain

– Isolated RGD Loop can be exploited to block platelet aggregation / blood clotting

Page 18: The Extracellular Space

Cell – ECM: Integrins• Adhesion to substrate

– Receptors cluster increasing overall strength

• Signal transmission – Binding of ligand

(collagen) can change cytoplasmic domain

– Cytoplasmic domain can activate kinases such as FAK and Src

– Activated kinases can transmit signals to nucleus and change gene expression

Page 19: The Extracellular Space

Cell – ECM: Integrins• Structures important for adhesion to substrate

– Focal adhesions:• Scattered, discrete, transient, dynamic, rapidly form and break• Clusters of integrins bound to collagen / Fibronectin• Cytoplasmic domains attach to cytoskeleton connecting exterior forces to

internal signals– Actin filaments– Focal adhesion kinase (FAK)

Page 20: The Extracellular Space

Forces exerted by focal adhesions

Page 21: The Extracellular Space

Cell – ECM: Integrins• Structures important for adhesion to substrate

– Hemidesmosome• more permanent anchor to basement membrane• Integrins bound to laminin to dense collection of intermediate filaments

Page 22: The Extracellular Space

ECM and disease

(keratins)

• Disease: epidermolysis bullosa– Epidermis poorly connected to basement membrane / dermis– Fluid accumulates in between = blister

Epidermolysis Bullosa Type Genes Mutated

Simplex Keratin-5; Keratin-14; plectinJunctional laminin-5; collagen XVII; a6b4 integrinDystrophic collagen VII

Page 23: The Extracellular Space

Cell - ECM Interactions

Page 24: The Extracellular Space

Cell - Cell Interactions• Cadherins: Ca2+ dependent

adhesion– Homophilic interactions

allow self-sorting of mixed cell populations

– Disease role: metastasis of cancer• Lose adhesion by

downregulating cadherin expression

• Penetrate / invade barriers by upregulating MMP expression

Page 25: The Extracellular Space

Cell - Cell Interactions• Structures important for

cell-cell adhesion– Adherens junctions

(30nm gap between cells)• Cadherin-cadherin

interactions in belt-like strips holding two cells together

• Cytoplasmic domains link to the cytoskeleton

Page 26: The Extracellular Space

Cell - Cell Interactions• Structures important for cell-cell adhesion

– Desmosomes (1 um diameter disc)• Resist mechanical stress• Cadherin-cadherin interactions linked to cytoskeleton (intermediate

filaments)

Page 27: The Extracellular Space

Cell - Cell Interactions• Tight junctions

– Seal two membranes together– Block paracellular movement – Occludin and claudins (24 genes)– Important for maintaining blood-

brain barrier

Page 28: The Extracellular Space

Cell - Cell Interactions• Gap junctions

– Join cytoplasmic spaces between adjacent cells via a narrow pore• 1.5nm diameter• 1kD cutoff, small molecules freely pass (ATP, cAMP, Ca2+, etc)

– Subunits are connexins– Open / close regulated by phosphorylation– Integrates cells of a tissue into a functional unit

Page 29: The Extracellular Space
Page 30: The Extracellular Space

Cell - Cell Interactions

Page 31: The Extracellular Space

Plant cell-cell interactions• Plasmodesmata

– Join adjacent plant cytoplasmic spaces– Capable of dilation, 1kD cutoff can open to a 50kD cutoff– Exploited by some plant viruses

Page 32: The Extracellular Space

Roles of the plant cell wall• Structural role supporting and protecting plant cells

– Cellulose microfibrils confer tensile strength• Signaling roles

– Cell wall-associated transmembrane protein kinases • Dynamic not static, undergoes significant remodeling