Research Article
Globular domains 4/5 of the laminin
3 chain mediate deposition of precursor laminin 5
Randy O. Sigle,
Susana G. Gil,
Mallar Bhattacharya,
Maureen C. Ryan,
Tai-Mei Yang,
Tod A. Brown,
Ariel Boutaud,
Yuko Miyashita,
John Olerud,
and
William G. Carter*
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: wcarter{at}fhcrc.org)
In epidermal wounds, precursor laminin 5 (
3
3
2) is deposited in the provisional basement membrane (PBM) before other BM components. Precursor laminin 5 contains G4/5 globular domains at the carboxyl terminus of the
3 chain. Here, the function of G4/5 was evaluated in deposition of laminin 5. Soluble laminin 5, secreted by keratinocytes in culture, is cleaved by an endogenous protease releasing G4/5. Thrombin, a serum protease, cleaves G4/5 indistinguishably from endogenous protease. Soluble human precursor laminin 5, but not cleaved laminin 5, was bound and deposited by mouse keratinocytes null for mouse
3 chain (
3-/- MKs). The deposition rescued adhesion and spreading and survival. In a model for PBM assembly, precursor laminin 5 was deposited along fibronectin fibrils at the junction between co-cultures of keratinocytes and fibroblasts. In both models, the deposition of precursor laminin 5 was inhibited by removal of G4/5 with thrombin. To confirm that G4/5 participates in deposition, the human LAMA3A gene was modified to produce
3 chains either without or with G4/5 that cannot be cleaved. Both precleaved and noncleavable
3 isoforms were expressed in
3-/- MKs, where they deposited sufficiently to rescue adhesion via integrins
3
1 and
6
4. Despite this similarity, noncleavable laminin 5 was at least threefold more efficiently deposited than precleaved isoform. We conclude that the G4/5 domain in the
3 chain facilitates deposition of precursor laminin 5 into the PBM in epidermal wounds.