Faculty Opinions recommendation of Cadherin puncta are interdigitated dynamic actin protrusions necessary for stable cadherin adhesion.

Author(s):  
Alexis Gautreau
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Liu ◽  
Neil Billington ◽  
Yi Yang ◽  
Charles Bond ◽  
Amy Hong ◽  
...  

AbstractMyosin-7a, despite being monomeric in isolation, plays roles in organizing actin-based cell protrusions such as filopodia, microvilli and stereocilia, as well as transporting cargoes within them. Here, we identify a binding protein for Drosophila myosin-7a termed M7BP, and describe how M7BP assembles myosin-7a into a motile complex that enables cargo translocation and actin cytoskeletal remodeling. M7BP binds to the autoinhibitory tail of myosin-7a, extending the molecule and activating its ATPase activity. Single-molecule reconstitution show that M7BP enables robust motility by complexing with myosin-7a as 2:2 translocation dimers in an actin-regulated manner. Meanwhile, M7BP tethers actin, enhancing complex’s processivity and driving actin-filament alignment during processive runs. Finally, we show that myosin-7a-M7BP complex assembles actin bundles and filopodia-like protrusions while migrating along them in living cells. Together, these findings provide insights into the mechanisms by which myosin-7a functions in actin protrusions.


Biomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 274 ◽  
pp. 120829
Author(s):  
Vincent Kwok Lim Lam ◽  
Johnny Yu Hin Wong ◽  
Sing Yian Chew ◽  
Barbara Pui Chan

Author(s):  
Laura K. Gunther ◽  
Joseph A Cirilo ◽  
Rohini Desetty ◽  
Christopher M. Yengo

Class III myosins are actin-based motors proposed to transport cargo to the distal tips of stereocilia in the inner ear hairs cells and/or to participate in stereocilia length regulation, which is especially important during development. Mutations in the MYO3A gene are associated with delayed onset deafness. A previous study demonstrated that L697W, a dominant deafness mutation, disrupts MYO3A ATPase and motor properties but does not impair its ability to localize to the tips of actin protrusions. In the current study, we characterized the transient kinetic mechanism of the L697W motor ATPase cycle. Our kinetic analysis demonstrates that the mutation slows the ADP release and ATP hydrolysis steps, which results in a slight reduction in the duty ratio and slows detachment kinetics. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) of filopodia tip localized L697W and WT MYO3A in COS-7 cells revealed that the mutant does not alter turnover or average intensity at the actin protrusion tips. We demonstrate that the mutation slows filopodia extension velocity in COS-7 cells which correlates with its 2-fold slower in vitro actin gliding velocity. Overall, this work allowed us to propose a model for how the motor properties of MYO3A are crucial for facilitating actin protrusion length regulation.


1998 ◽  
Vol 66 (11) ◽  
pp. 5527-5533 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonia Meconi ◽  
Véronique Jacomo ◽  
Patrice Boquet ◽  
Didier Raoult ◽  
Jean-Louis Mege ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Coxiella burnetii, an obligate intracellular bacterium which survives in myeloid cells, causes Q fever in humans. We previously demonstrated that virulent C. burnetiiorganisms are poorly internalized by monocytes compared to avirulent variants. We hypothesized that a differential mobilization of the actin cytoskeleton may account for this distinct phagocytic behavior. Scanning electron microscopy demonstrated that virulent C. burnetii stimulated profound and polymorphic changes in the morphology of THP-1 monocytes, consisting of membrane protrusions and polarized projections. These changes were transient, requiring 5 min to reach their maximum extent and vanishing after 60 min of incubation. In contrast, avirulent variants of C. burnetii did not induce any significant changes in cell morphology. The distribution of filamentous actin (F-actin) was then studied with a specific probe, bodipy phallacidin. Virulent C. burnetii induced a profound and transient reorganization of F-actin, accompanied by an increase in the F-actin content of THP-1 cells. F-actin was colocalized with myosin in cell protrusions, suggesting that actin polymerization and the tension of actin-myosin filaments play a role in C. burnetii-induced morphological changes. In addition, contact between the cell and the bacterium seems to be necessary to induce cytoskeleton reorganization. Bacterial supernatants did not stimulate actin remodeling, and virulent C. burnetii organisms were found in close apposition with F-actin protrusions. The manipulation of the actin cytoskeleton by C. burnetiimay therefore play a critical role in the internalization strategy of this bacterium.


2000 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. 709-719 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.R. Chubb ◽  
A. Wilkins ◽  
G.M. Thomas ◽  
R.H. Insall

Endocytosis and cell migration both require transient localised remodelling of the cell cortex. Several lines of evidence suggest a key regulatory role in these activities for members of the Ras family of small GTPases. We have generated Dictyostelium cells lacking one member of this family, RasS, and the mutant cells are perturbed in endocytosis and cell migration. Mutant amoebae are defective in phagocytosis and fluid-phase endocytosis and are impaired in growth. Conversely, the rasS(-)cells show an enhanced rate of cell migration, moving three times faster than wild-type controls. The mutant cells display an aberrant morphology, are highly polarised, carry many elongated actin protrusions and show a concomitant decrease in formation of pinocytic crowns on the cell surface. These morphological aberrations are paralleled by changes in the actin cytoskeleton, with a significant proportion of the cortical F-actin relocalised to prominent pseudopodia. Rapid migration and endocytosis appear to be mutually incompatible and it is likely that RasS protein is required to maintain the normal balance between these two actin-dependent processes.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingzhi Luo ◽  
Kenneth KY Ho ◽  
Zhaowen Tong ◽  
Linhong Deng ◽  
Allen Liu

Abstract Uncontrolled growth in solid tumor generates compressive stress that drives cancer cells into invasive phenotypes, but little is known about how such stress affects the invasion and matrix degradation of cancer cells and the underlying mechanisms. Here we show that compressive stress enhanced invasion and matrix degradation of breast cancer cells. We further identified Piezo1 as the putative mechanosensitive cellular component that transmits compressive stress to induce calcium influx, which in turn activate Src/ERK signaling. Interestingly, we observed actin protrusions with matrix degradation ability on the apical side of the cells. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Piezo1 channels were partially localized in caveolae, and reduction of caveolin-1 expression or disruption of caveolae with methyl-β-cyclodextrin led to not only reduced Piezo1 expression but also attenuation of the invasive phenotypes promoted by compressive stress. Taken together, our data indicate that mechanical compressive stress activates Piezo1 channels to mediate enhanced cancer cell invasion and matrix degradation that may be a critical mechanotransduction pathway during, and potentially a novel therapeutic target for, breast cancer metastasis.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Xiao He Li ◽  
Vivian W. Tang ◽  
William M. Brieher

AbstractCadherin mediated cell-cell adhesion is actin dependent, but the precise role of actin in maintaining cell-cell adhesion is not fully understood. Actin polymerization-dependent protrusive activity is required to push distally separated cells close enough together to initiate contact. Whether protrusive activity is required to maintain adhesion in confluent sheets of epithelial cells is not known. By electron microscopy as well as live cell imaging, we have identified a population of protruding actin microspikes that operate continuously near apical junctions of polarized MDCK cells. Live imaging shows that microspikes containing E-cadherin extend into gaps between E-cadherin clusters on neighboring cells while reformation of cadherin clusters across the cell-cell boundary triggers microspike withdrawal. We identify Arp2/3, EVL, and CRMP-1 as three actin assembly factors necessary for microspike formation. Depleting these factors from cells using RNAi results in myosin II-dependent unzipping of cadherin adhesive bonds. Therefore, actin polymerization-dependent protrusive activity operates continuously at cadherin cell-cell junctions to keep them shut and to prevent myosin II-dependent contractility from tearing cadherin adhesive contacts apart.


2012 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 320-325 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond C. Merritt ◽  
Uri Manor ◽  
Felipe T. Salles ◽  
M'hamed Grati ◽  
Andrea C. Dose ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 238-238
Author(s):  
Kathleen Szczur ◽  
Yi Zheng ◽  
Marie-Dominique Filippi

Abstract Neutrophil (PMN) migration to sites of infection is the first line of cellular defense. Among others, a key event of cell migration is the maintenance of a polarized morphology characterized by a single protrusive leading edge of F-actin and a contractile uropod devoid of F-actin protrusions. Using mice genetically deficient in the Cdc42 negative regulator Cdc42 GTPase Activating Protein, we previously demonstrated that Cdc42 activity suppresses membrane protrusions at the uropod of the cells to maintain stable polarity during directed migration (Szczur et al, Blood 2006). However, the underlying molecular mechanism of Cdc42-mediated neutrophil polarity remains to be understood. Here, using mice with a conditional Cdc42 (flox) allele, we showed by video microscopy that Cdc42−/− PMNs exhibited multiple membrane extensions in various directions and failed to maintain cell polarity and directionality towards formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanin (fMLP) gradient compared to wild type (WT) cells. Consistent with this observation, Cdc42−/− PMNs exhibited increased lamellipodia protrusions of F-actin all around the cells compared to WT PMNs, in response to fMLP stimulation and fibrinogen ligation, confirming that Cdc42 maintains stable polarity by preventing abnormal membrane protrusions outside the leading edge. To understand how Cdc42 orchestrates neutrophil polarity at a mechanistic level, we explored the possibility of a role for integrins in this process since Cdc42 appears to regulate neutrophil polarity in a manner, at least in part, dependent on integrin ligation (Szczur et al, Blood 2006). Expression of the neutrophil integrin, CD11b/CD18, on resting or fMLP-stimulated PMNs was similar between the genotypes. Stimulation of WT PMNs with fMLP and ligation to fibrinogen induced a polarized distribution of CD11b into clusters mostly concentrated at the uropod of the cells. Remarkably, the numbers of CD11b clusters of Cdc42−/− PMNs were significantly decreased compared to WT cells. Furthermore, inhibition of CD11b clustering in WT PMNs, using anti-CD11b blocking antibody, significantly increased membrane protrusions associated with loss of stable polarity during directed migration, similarly to Cdc42-deficiency. Enforcing CD11b clustering by CD11b cross-linking in Cdc42−/− PMNs partially rescued cell polarity and F-actin distribution concentrated only at the leading edge of the cells to WT levels. These results strongly suggest that CD11b clustering is regulated by Cdc42 activity and contributes to suppress F-actin protrusions at the uropod of neutrophils during migration. The uropod distribution of CD11b suggests that CD11b may recruit contractile proteins, such as the myosin regulator myosin light chain (MLC), to antagonize membrane protrusions. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the distribution of phosphorylated MLC (p-MLC). Upon stimulation, p-MLC strongly translocated to the uropod of WT cells. In contrast, p-MLC remained diffuse and non polarized in the cytoplasm of Cdc42−/− cells. Blocking CD11b function in WT cells abrogated the polarized distribution of p-MLC mimicking Cdc42−/− PMNs. Enforcing CD11b clustering in Cdc42−/− PMNs rescued p-MLC signals concentrated at the uropod of the cells. Altogether, this study suggests that Cdc42 activity maintains neutrophil polarity during directed migration by regulating CD11b clustering/distribution and subsequent outside/in signals to suppress lateral membrane protrusions. This study uncovers a critical role for CD11b in maintaining neutrophil polarity during migration.


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