Abstract
The mammalian endothelium which lines all blood vessels responds to soluble factors which control vascular development and sprouting. Endothelial cells bind to vascular endothelial growth factor A via two different receptor tyrosine kinases (VEGFR1, VEGFR2) which regulate such cellular responses. The integration of VEGFR signal transduction and membrane trafficking is not well understood. Here, we used a yeast-based membrane protein screen to identify VEGFR-interacting factor(s) which modulate endothelial cell function. By screening a human endothelial cDNA library, we identified a calcium-binding protein, S100A6, which can interact with either VEGFR. We found that S100A6 binds in a calcium-dependent manner to either VEGFR1 or VEGFR2. S100A6 binding was mapped to the VEGFR2 tyrosine kinase domain. Depletion of S100A6 impacts on VEGF-A-regulated signaling through the canonical mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. Furthermore, S100A6 depletion caused contrasting effects on biosynthetic VEGFR delivery to the plasma membrane. Co-distribution of S100A6 and VEGFRs on tubular profiles suggest the presence of transport carriers that facilitate VEGFR trafficking. We propose a mechanism whereby S100A6 acts as a calcium-regulated switch which facilitates biosynthetic VEGFR trafficking from the TGN-to-plasma membrane. VEGFR-S100A6 interactions thus enable integration of signaling and trafficking pathways in controlling the endothelial response to VEGF-A.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
↵# Co-first authors; L.B., G.W.F.
Abbreviations
- VEGF-A
- Vascular endothelial growth factor A
- VEGFR
- Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor
- S100A6
- Calcium-binding S100 protein A6