Beta 1-integrin-c-Met cooperation reveals an inside-in survival signalling on autophagy-related endomembranes
Abstract
Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) and integrins cooperate to stimulate cell migration and tumour metastasis. Here we report that an integrin influences signalling of an RTK, c-Met, from inside the cell, to promote anchorage-independent cell survival. Thus, c-Met and β1-integrin co-internalize and become progressively recruited on LC3B-positive `autophagy-related endomembranes' (ARE). In cells growing in suspension, β1-integrin promotes sustained c-Met-dependent ERK1/2 phosphorylation on ARE. This signalling is dependent on ATG5 and Beclin1 but not on ATG13, suggesting ARE belong to a non-canonical autophagy pathway. This β1-integrin-dependent c-Met-sustained signalling on ARE supports anchorage-independent cell survival and growth, tumorigenesis, invasion and lung colonization in vivo. RTK-integrin cooperation has been assumed to occur at the plasma membrane requiring integrin `inside-out' or `outside-in' signalling. Our results report a novel mode of integrin-RTK cooperation, which we term `inside-in signalling'. Targeting integrin signalling in addition to adhesion may have relevance for cancer therapy.
- Publication:
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Nature Communications
- Pub Date:
- June 2016
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2016NatCo...711942B