Fibroblast activation protein-α, a stromal cell surface protease, shapes key features of cancer associated fibroblasts through proteome and degradome alterations

M. M. Koczorowska, S. Tholen, F. Bucher, L. Lutz, J. N. Kizhakkedathu, O. De Wever, U. F. Wellner, M. L. Biniossek, A. Stahl, S. Lassmann, O. Schilling*

*Corresponding author for this work
32 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) constitute an abundant stromal component of most solid tumors. Fibroblast activation protein (FAP) α is a cell surface protease that is expressed by CAFs. We corroborate this expression profile by immunohistochemical analysis of colorectal cancer specimens. To better understand the tumor-contextual role of FAPα, we investigate how FAPα shapes functional and proteomic features of CAFs using loss- and gain-of function cellular model systems. FAPα activity has a strong impact on the secreted CAF proteome ("secretome"), including reduced levels of anti-angiogenic factors, elevated levels of transforming growth factor (TGF) β, and an impact on matrix processing enzymes. Functionally, FAPα mildly induces sprout formation by human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Moreover, loss of FAPα leads to a more epithelial cellular phenotype and this effect was rescued by exogenous application of TGFβ. In collagen contraction assays, FAPα induced a more contractile cellular phenotype. To characterize the proteolytic profile of FAPα, we investigated its specificity with proteome-derived peptide libraries and corroborated its preference for cleavage carboxy-terminal to proline residues. By "terminal amine labeling of substrates" (TAILS) we explored FAPα-dependent cleavage events. Although FAPα acts predominantly as an amino-dipeptidase, putative FAPα cleavage sites in collagens are present throughout the entire protein length. In contrast, putative FAPα cleavage sites in non-collagenous proteins cluster at the amino-terminus. The degradomic study highlights cell-contextual proteolysis by FAPα with distinct positional profiles. Generally, our findings link FAPα to key aspects of CAF biology and attribute an important role in tumor-stroma interaction to FAPα.

Original languageEnglish
JournalMolecular Oncology
Volume10
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)40-58
Number of pages19
ISSN1574-7891
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.01.2016

Funding

O.S. is supported by grants of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, SCHI 871/2 and SCHI 871/5 , SCHI 871/6 , GR 1748/6 , and INST 39/900-1 ), the SFB850 (Project B8), a starting grant of the European Research Council (Programme “Ideas” – Call identifier: ERC-2011-StG 282111 -ProteaSys), the Excellence Initiative of the German Federal and State Governments (EXC 294, BIOSS), and a DKTK project on breast cancer. S.L. is supported by the DFG with SFB850 (projects C5 and Z1), SFB993 project C3 and a DKTK project on colorectal cancer. The authors thank Franz Jehle for excellent technical assistance with mass spectrometry analysis, Asli Aras Taskin for the FAPα specificity analysis, Julia Knopf for cell growth assays, Nicola Bittermann for excellent immunohistochemistry, and Manuel Schlimpert, Charlotte Friedemann, and Lennart Enders for general assistance. Appendix A

Research Areas and Centers

  • Research Area: Luebeck Integrated Oncology Network (LION)

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Fibroblast activation protein-α, a stromal cell surface protease, shapes key features of cancer associated fibroblasts through proteome and degradome alterations'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this