Faculty Opinions recommendation of cis-Dimer formation of E-cadherin is independent of cell-cell adhesion assembly in vivo.

Author(s):  
Deborah Leckband
1998 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 3161-3177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter A. Piepenhagen ◽  
W. James Nelson

Organization of proteins into structurally and functionally distinct plasma membrane domains is an essential characteristic of polarized epithelial cells. Based on studies with cultured kidney cells, we have hypothesized that a mechanism for restricting Na/K-ATPase to the basal-lateral membrane involves E-cadherin–mediated cell–cell adhesion and integration of Na/K-ATPase into the Triton X-100–insoluble ankyrin- and spectrin-based membrane cytoskeleton. In this study, we examined the relevance of these in vitro observations to the generation of epithelial cell polarity in vivo during mouse kidney development. Using differential detergent extraction, immunoblotting, and immunofluorescence histochemistry, we demonstrate the following. First, expression of the 220-kDa splice variant of ankyrin-3 correlates with the development of resistance to Triton X-100 extraction for Na/K-ATPase, E-cadherin, and catenins and precedes maximal accumulation of Na/K-ATPase. Second, expression of the 190-kDa slice variant of ankyrin-3 correlates with maximal accumulation of Na/K-ATPase. Third, Na/K-ATPase, ankyrin-3, and fodrin specifically colocalize at the basal-lateral plasma membrane of all epithelial cells in which they are expressed and during all stages of nephrogenesis. Fourth, the relative immunofluorescence staining intensities of Na/K-ATPase, ankyrin-3, and fodrin become more similar during development until they are essentially identical in adult kidney. Thus, renal epithelial cells in vivo regulate the accumulation of E-cadherin–mediated adherens junctions, the membrane cytoskeleton, and Na/K-ATPase through sequential protein expression and assembly on the basal-lateral membrane. These results are consistent with a mechanism in which generation and maintenance of polarized distributions of these proteins in vivo and in vitro involve cell–cell adhesion, assembly of the membrane cytoskeleton complex, and concomitant integration and retention of Na/K-ATPase in this complex.


Development ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 128 (4) ◽  
pp. 459-469
Author(s):  
Y. Luo ◽  
M. Ferreira-Cornwell ◽  
H. Baldwin ◽  
I. Kostetskii ◽  
J. Lenox ◽  
...  

Cell-cell adhesion mediated by some members of the cadherin family is essential for embryonic survival. The N-cadherin-null embryo dies during mid-gestation, with multiple developmental defects. We show that N-cadherin-null embryos expressing cadherins using muscle-specific promoters, alpha- or beta-myosin heavy chain, are partially rescued. Somewhat surprisingly, either N-cadherin or E-cadherin was effective in rescuing the embryos. The rescued embryos exhibited an increased number of somites, branchial arches and the presence of forelimb buds; however, in contrast, brain development was severely impaired. In rescued animals, the aberrant yolk sac morphology seen in N-cadherin-null embryos was corrected, demonstrating that this phenotype was secondary to the cardiac defect. Dye injection studies and analysis of chimeric animals that have both wild-type and N-cadherin-null cells support the conclusion that obstruction of the cardiac outflow tract represents a major defect that is likely to be the primary cause of pericardial swelling seen in null embryos. Although rescued embryos were more developed than null embryos, they were smaller than wild-type embryos, even though the integrity of the cardiovascular system appeared normal. The smaller size of rescued embryos may be due, at least in part, to increased apoptosis observed in tissues not rescued by transgene expression, indicating that N-cadherin-mediated cell adhesion provides an essential survival signal for embryonic cells. Our data provide in vivo evidence that cadherin adhesion is essential for cell survival and for normal heart development. Our data also show that E-cadherin can functionally substitute for N-cadherin during cardiogenesis, suggesting a critical role for cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion, but not cadherin family member-specific signaling, at the looping stage of heart development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e15576-e15576
Author(s):  
Saverio Alberti ◽  
Emanuela Guerra ◽  
Donato F. Altomare ◽  
Raffaella Depalo ◽  
Marco Trerotola

e15576 Background: Metastatic diffusion is the biggest hurdle for colon cancer (CRC) cure and the identification of decisive drivers of CRC metastasis is an urgent need in CRC care. Methods: The expression of target molecules in primary tumors and metastases was systematically assessed by DNA array and IHC analysis. Cell-cell adhesion capacity was quantified in 2D cell cultures and in HCT116 CRC cell spheroids. Pro-metastatic impact of wtTrop-2 and activated, tail-less Trop-2 (Δcyto) was assessed in vivo in orthotopic diffusion models of KM12SM CRC cells. Primary CRC and metastasis transcriptomes were analyzed for differential induction of EMT determinants. Kaplan–Meier plots were used to illustrate survival and metastatic relapse in independent case series of CRC patients. Results: Trop-2 was identified as uniquely upregulated in CRC models by transcriptome analysis. wtTrop-2 and ΔcytoTrop-2 were shown to induce cell migration, wound-healing and resistance to apoptosis induction . wtTrop-2 increased the metastatic capacity of KM12SM cells, raising metastasis diffusion from 45% for control cells to 90% for wtTrop-2 transfectants. The constitutively-active ΔcytoTrop-2 further boosted metastatic spreading, with metastatic livers reaching up to four times their normal size. Constitutive high expression of E-cadherin was revealed in cancer metastases. No evidence was obtained for transcriptional down-regulation of epithelial differentiation biomarkers. No induction of EMT transcription factors was observed in Trop-2-activated cells. Trop-2 tightly bound E-cadherin and caused its release from the cytoskeleton, for loss of cell-cell adhesion and activation of β-catenin. The Trop-2/E-cadherin/β-catenin-driven pro-metastatic program was recapitulated in CRC patients and was shown to impact on CRC metastatic relapse and overall patient survival. Conclusions: We identify Trop-2-driven functional inactivation of E-cadherin as a key driver of metastatic diffusion in CRC. These findings may pave the way for novel multi-marker personalized diagnostics and anti-cancer therapies. [Table: see text]


2005 ◽  
Vol 173 (4S) ◽  
pp. 170-170
Author(s):  
Maxine G. Tran ◽  
Miguel A. Esteban ◽  
Peter D. Hill ◽  
Ashish Chandra ◽  
Tim S. O'Brien ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Sarah Alsharif ◽  
Pooja Sharma ◽  
Karina Bursch ◽  
Rachel Milliken ◽  
Van Lam ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (29) ◽  
pp. E5835-E5844 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlin Collins ◽  
Aleksandra K. Denisin ◽  
Beth L. Pruitt ◽  
W. James Nelson

Mechanical cues are sensed and transduced by cell adhesion complexes to regulate diverse cell behaviors. Extracellular matrix (ECM) rigidity sensing by integrin adhesions has been well studied, but rigidity sensing by cadherins during cell adhesion is largely unexplored. Using mechanically tunable polyacrylamide (PA) gels functionalized with the extracellular domain of E-cadherin (Ecad-Fc), we showed that E-cadherin–dependent epithelial cell adhesion was sensitive to changes in PA gel elastic modulus that produced striking differences in cell morphology, actin organization, and membrane dynamics. Traction force microscopy (TFM) revealed that cells produced the greatest tractions at the cell periphery, where distinct types of actin-based membrane protrusions formed. Cells responded to substrate rigidity by reorganizing the distribution and size of high-traction-stress regions at the cell periphery. Differences in adhesion and protrusion dynamics were mediated by balancing the activities of specific signaling molecules. Cell adhesion to a 30-kPa Ecad-Fc PA gel required Cdc42- and formin-dependent filopodia formation, whereas adhesion to a 60-kPa Ecad-Fc PA gel induced Arp2/3-dependent lamellipodial protrusions. A quantitative 3D cell–cell adhesion assay and live cell imaging of cell–cell contact formation revealed that inhibition of Cdc42, formin, and Arp2/3 activities blocked the initiation, but not the maintenance of established cell–cell adhesions. These results indicate that the same signaling molecules activated by E-cadherin rigidity sensing on PA gels contribute to actin organization and membrane dynamics during cell–cell adhesion. We hypothesize that a transition in the stiffness of E-cadherin homotypic interactions regulates actin and membrane dynamics during initial stages of cell–cell adhesion.


2007 ◽  
Vol 178 (2) ◽  
pp. 323-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lene N. Nejsum ◽  
W. James Nelson

Mechanisms involved in maintaining plasma membrane domains in fully polarized epithelial cells are known, but when and how directed protein sorting and trafficking occur to initiate cell surface polarity are not. We tested whether establishment of the basolateral membrane domain and E-cadherin–mediated epithelial cell–cell adhesion are mechanistically linked. We show that the basolateral membrane aquaporin (AQP)-3, but not the equivalent apical membrane AQP5, is delivered in post-Golgi structures directly to forming cell–cell contacts where it co-accumulates precisely with E-cadherin. Functional disruption of individual components of a putative lateral targeting patch (e.g., microtubules, the exocyst, and soluble N-ethylmaleimide–sensitive factor attachment protein receptors) did not inhibit cell–cell adhesion or colocalization of the other components with E-cadherin, but each blocked AQP3 delivery to forming cell–cell contacts. Thus, components of the lateral targeting patch localize independently of each other to cell–cell contacts but collectively function as a holocomplex to specify basolateral vesicle delivery to nascent cell–cell contacts and immediately initiate cell surface polarity.


2015 ◽  
Vol 210 (7) ◽  
pp. 1065-1074 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie M. Bianchini ◽  
Khameeka N. Kitt ◽  
Martijn Gloerich ◽  
Sabine Pokutta ◽  
William I. Weis ◽  
...  

As part of the E-cadherin–β-catenin–αE-catenin complex (CCC), mammalian αE-catenin binds F-actin weakly in the absence of force, whereas cytosolic αE-catenin forms a homodimer that interacts more strongly with F-actin. It has been concluded that cytosolic αE-catenin homodimer is not important for intercellular adhesion because E-cadherin/αE-catenin chimeras thought to mimic the CCC are sufficient to induce cell–cell adhesion. We show that, unlike αE-catenin in the CCC, these chimeras homodimerize, bind F-actin strongly, and inhibit the Arp2/3 complex, all of which are properties of the αE-catenin homodimer. To more accurately mimic the junctional CCC, we designed a constitutively monomeric chimera, and show that E-cadherin–dependent cell adhesion is weaker in cells expressing this chimera compared with cells in which αE-catenin homodimers are present. Our results demonstrate that E-cadherin/αE-catenin chimeras used previously do not mimic αE-catenin in the native CCC, and imply that both CCC-bound monomer and cytosolic homodimer αE-catenin are required for strong cell–cell adhesion.


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