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Connective tissue growth factor is a new ligand of epidermal growth factor receptor
Author(s) -
Sandra RayegoMateos,
Raquel RodriguesDíez,
José Luis MorgadoPascual,
Raúl R. Rodrigues-Díez,
Sebastián Mas,
Carolina Lavoz,
Matilde Alique,
János Pató,
Gÿorgý Kéri,
Alberto Ortíz,
Jesús Egido,
Marta Ruiz–Ortega
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of molecular cell biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.825
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1674-2788
pISSN - 1759-4685
DOI - 10.1093/jmcb/mjt030
Subject(s) - epidermal growth factor receptor , cancer research , epidermal growth factor , erbb3 , growth factor , egfr inhibitors , microbiology and biotechnology , growth factor receptor , mapk/erk pathway , chemistry , biology , receptor , signal transduction , biochemistry
Chronic kidney disease is reaching epidemic proportions worldwide and there is no effective treatment. Connective tissue growth factor (CCN2) has been suggested as a risk biomarker and a potential therapeutic target for renal diseases, but its specific receptor has not been identified. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) participates in kidney damage, but whether CCN2 activates the EGFR pathway is unknown. Here, we show that CCN2 is a novel EGFR ligand. CCN2 binding to EGFR extracellular domain was demonstrated by surface plasmon resonance. CCN2 contains four distinct structural modules. The carboxyl-terminal module (CCN2(IV)) showed a clear interaction with soluble EGFR, suggesting that EGFR-binding site is located in this module. Injection of CCN2(IV) in mice increased EGFR phosphorylation in the kidney, mainly in tubular epithelial cells. EGFR kinase inhibition decreased CCN2(IV)-induced renal changes (ERK activation and inflammation). Studies in cultured tubular epithelial cells showed that CCN2(IV) binds to EGFR leading to ERK activation and proinflammatory factors overexpression. CCN2 interacts with the neurotrophin receptor TrkA, and EGFR/TrkA receptor crosstalk was found in response to CCN2(IV) stimulation. Moreover, endogenous CCN2 blockade inhibited TGF-β-induced EGFR activation. These findings indicate that CCN2 is a novel EGFR ligand that contributes to renal damage through EGFR signalling.

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