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Cell Reports ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 109326
Author(s):  
Yen Wei Lim ◽  
Fu-Lai Wen ◽  
Prabhat Shankar ◽  
Tatsuo Shibata ◽  
Fumio Motegi
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (7) ◽  
pp. 3692
Author(s):  
Yun-Ho Kim ◽  
Min-Kyung Kang ◽  
Eun-Jung Lee ◽  
Dong Yeon Kim ◽  
Hyeongjoo Oh ◽  
...  

Epidemiological evidence shows that smoking causes a thrombophilic milieu that may play a role in the pathophysiology of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) as well as pulmonary thromboembolism. The increased nicotine level induces a prothrombotic status and abnormal blood coagulation in smokers. Since several anticoagulants increase bleeding risk, alternative therapies need to be identified to protect against thrombosis without affecting hemostasis. Astragalin is a flavonoid present in persimmon leaves and green tea seeds and exhibits diverse activities of antioxidant and anti-inflammation. The current study investigated that astragalin attenuated smoking-induced pulmonary thrombosis and alveolar inflammation. In addition, it was explored that molecular links between thrombosis and inflammation entailed protease-activated receptor (PAR) activation and oxidative stress-responsive mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-signaling. BALB/c mice were orally administrated with 10–20 mg/kg astragalin and exposed to cigarette smoke for 8 weeks. For the in vitro study, 10 U/mL thrombin was added to alveolar epithelial A549 cells in the presence of 1–20 µM astragalin. The cigarette smoking-induced the expression of PAR-1 and PAR-2 in lung tissues, which was attenuated by the administration of ≥10 mg/kg astragalin. The oral supplementation of ≥10 mg/kg astragalin to cigarette smoke-challenged mice attenuated the protein induction of urokinase plasminogen activator, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1and tissue factor, and instead enhanced the induction of tissue plasminogen activator in lung tissues. The astragalin treatment alleviated cigarette smoke-induced lung emphysema and pulmonary thrombosis. Astragalin caused lymphocytosis and neutrophilia in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid due to cigarette smoke but curtailed infiltration of neutrophils and macrophages in airways. Furthermore, this compound retarded thrombin-induced activation of PAR proteins and expression of inflammatory mediators in alveolar cells. Treating astragalin interrupted PAR proteins-activated reactive oxygen species production and MAPK signaling leading to alveolar inflammation. Accordingly, astragalin may interrupt the smoking-induced oxidative stress–MAPK signaling–inflammation axis via disconnection between alveolar PAR activation and pulmonary thromboembolism.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Abrams ◽  
Jeremy Nance

Lumen extension in intracellular tubes can occur when vesicles fuse with an invading apical membrane. Within theCaenorhabditis elegansexcretory cell, which forms an intracellular tube, the exocyst vesicle-tethering complex is enriched at the lumenal membrane and is required for its outgrowth, suggesting that exocyst-targeted vesicles extend the lumen. Here, we identify a pathway that promotes intracellular tube extension by enriching the exocyst at the lumenal membrane. We show that PAR-6 and PKC-3/aPKC concentrate at the lumenal membrane and promote lumen extension. Using acute protein depletion, we find that PAR-6 is required for exocyst membrane recruitment, whereas PAR-3, which can recruit the exocyst in mammals, appears dispensable for exocyst localization and lumen extension. Finally, we show that CDC-42 and RhoGEF EXC-5/FGD regulate lumen extension by recruiting PAR-6 and PKC-3 to the lumenal membrane. Our findings reveal a pathway that connects CDC-42, PAR proteins, and the exocyst to extend intracellular tubes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chet Huan Oon ◽  
Kenneth E. Prehoda

AbstractThe Par complex is polarized to the apical cortex of asymmetrically dividing Drosophila neuroblasts. Previously we showed that Par proteins are polarized by apically directed cortical movements that require F-actin (Oon and Prehoda, 2019). Here we report the discovery of cortical actin pulses that begin before the Par complex is recruited to the cell cortex and ultimately become tightly coupled to Par protein dynamics. Pulses are initially unoriented in interphase but are rapidly directed towards the apical pole in early mitosis, shortly before the Par protein aPKC accumulates on the cortex. The movements of cortical aPKC that lead to its polarization are precisely correlated with cortical actin pulses and F-actin disruption coincides with immediate loss of movement followed by depolarization. We find that myosin II is a component of the cortical pulses, suggesting that actomyosin pulsatile contractions initiate and maintain apical Par polarity during the neuroblast polarity cycle.


eLife ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria G Castiglioni ◽  
Helena R Pires ◽  
Rodrigo Rosas Bertolini ◽  
Amalia Riga ◽  
Jana Kerver ◽  
...  

The cortical polarity regulators PAR-6, PKC-3, and PAR-3 are essential for the polarization of a broad variety of cell types in multicellular animals. In C. elegans, the roles of the PAR proteins in embryonic development have been extensively studied, yet little is known about their functions during larval development. Using inducible protein degradation, we show that PAR-6 and PKC-3, but not PAR-3, are essential for postembryonic development. PAR-6 and PKC-3 are required in the epidermal epithelium for animal growth, molting, and the proper pattern of seam-cell divisions. Finally, we uncovered a novel role for PAR-6 in organizing non-centrosomal microtubule arrays in the epidermis. PAR-6 was required for the localization of the microtubule organizer NOCA-1/Ninein, and defects in a noca-1 mutant are highly similar to those caused by epidermal PAR-6 depletion. As NOCA-1 physically interacts with PAR-6, we propose that PAR-6 promotes non-centrosomal microtubule organization through localization of NOCA-1/Ninein.


Cells ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 2036 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sungrim Seirin-Lee ◽  
Eamonn A. Gaffney ◽  
Adriana T. Dawes

Many cells rearrange proteins and other components into spatially distinct domains in a process called polarization. This asymmetric patterning is required for a number of biological processes including asymmetric division, cell migration, and embryonic development. Proteins involved in polarization are highly conserved and include members of the Par and Rho protein families. Despite the importance of these proteins in polarization, it is not yet known how they interact and regulate each other to produce the protein localization patterns associated with polarization. In this study, we develop and analyse a biologically based mathematical model of polarization that incorporates interactions between Par and Rho proteins that are consistent with experimental observations of CDC-42. Using minimal network and eFAST sensitivity analyses, we demonstrate that CDC-42 is predicted to reinforce maintenance of anterior PAR protein polarity which in turn feedbacks to maintain CDC-42 polarization, as well as supporting posterior PAR protein polarization maintenance. The mechanisms for polarity maintenance identified by these methods are not sufficient for the generation of polarization in the absence of cortical flow. Additional inhibitory interactions mediated by the posterior Par proteins are predicted to play a role in the generation of Par protein polarity. More generally, these results provide new insights into the role of CDC-42 in polarization and the mutual regulation of key polarity determinants, in addition to providing a foundation for further investigations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 375 (1809) ◽  
pp. 20190555 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicia G. Gubieda ◽  
John R. Packer ◽  
Iolo Squires ◽  
Jack Martin ◽  
Josana Rodriguez

Cell polarity is the asymmetric distribution of cellular components along a defined axis. Polarity relies on complex signalling networks between conserved patterning proteins, including the PAR ( par titioning defective) proteins, which become segregated in response to upstream symmetry breaking cues. Although the mechanisms that drive the asymmetric localization of these proteins are dependent upon cell type and context, in many cases the regulation of actomyosin cytoskeleton dynamics is central to the transport, recruitment and/or stabilization of these polarity effectors into defined subcellular domains. The transport or advection of PAR proteins by an actomyosin flow was first observed in the Caenorhabditis elegan s zygote more than a decade ago. Since then a multifaceted approach, using molecular methods, high-throughput screens, and biophysical and computational models, has revealed further aspects of this flow and how polarity regulators respond to and modulate it. Here, we review recent findings on the interplay between actomyosin flow and the PAR patterning networks in the polarization of the C. elegans zygote. We also discuss how these discoveries and developed methods are shaping our understanding of other flow-dependent polarizing systems. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Contemporary morphogenesis’.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yen Wei Lim ◽  
Fu-Lai Wen ◽  
Prabhat Shankar ◽  
Tatsuo Shibata ◽  
Fumio Motegi

ABSTRACTCoordination between cell differentiation and proliferation during development requires the balance between asymmetric and symmetric modes of cell division. However, the cellular intrinsic cue underlying the binary choice between these two division modes remains elusive. Here we show evidence in Caenorhabditis elegans that the invariable lineage of the division modes is programmed by the balance between antagonizing complexes of partitioning-defective (PAR) proteins. By uncoupling unequal inheritance of PAR proteins from that of fate determinants during zygote division, we demonstrated that changes in the balance between PAR-2 and PAR-6 are sufficient to re-program the division modes from symmetric to asymmetric and vice versa in two-cell stage embryos. The division mode adopted occurs independently of asymmetry in cytoplasmic fate determinants, cell-size asymmetry, and cell-cycle asynchrony between the sister cells. We propose that the balance between antagonizing PAR proteins represents an intrinsic self-organizing cue for binary specification of the division modes during development.


eLife ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Salinas-Saavedra ◽  
Mark Q Martindale

In bilaterians and cnidarians, epithelial cell-polarity is regulated by the interactions between Par proteins, Wnt/PCP signaling pathway, and cell-cell adhesion. Par proteins are highly conserved across Metazoa, including ctenophores. But strikingly, ctenophore genomes lack components of the Wnt/PCP pathway and cell-cell adhesion complexes raising the question if ctenophore cells are polarized by mechanisms involving Par proteins. Here, by using immunohistochemistry and live-cell imaging of specific mRNAs, we describe for the first time the subcellular localization of selected Par proteins in blastomeres and epithelial cells during the embryogenesis of the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi. We show that these proteins distribute differently compared to what has been described for other animals, even though they segregate in a host-specific fashion when expressed in cnidarian embryos. This differential localization might be related to the emergence of different junctional complexes during metazoan evolution.


Author(s):  
Victoria G. Castiglioni ◽  
Helena R. Pires ◽  
Rodrigo Rosas Bertolini ◽  
Amalia Riga ◽  
Jana Kerver ◽  
...  

AbstractThe cortical polarity regulators PAR-6, PKC-3 and PAR-3 are essential for the polarization of a broad variety of cell types in multicellular animals, from the first asymmetric division of the C. elegans zygote to apical–basal polarization of epithelial cells. In C. elegans, the roles of the PAR proteins in embryonic development have been extensively studied, yet little is known about their functions during larval development. Using auxin-inducible protein depletion, we here show that PAR-6 and PKC-3, but not PAR-3, are essential for postembryonic development. We also demonstrate that PAR-6 and PKC-3 are required in the epidermal epithelium to support animal growth and molting, and the proper timing and pattern of seam cell divisions. Finally, we uncovered a novel role for PAR-6 in controlling the organization of non-centrosomal microtubule arrays in the epidermis. PAR-6 was required for the localization of the microtubule organizer NOCA-1/Ninein, and microtubule defects in a noca-1 mutant are highly similar to those caused by epidermal PAR-6 depletion. As NOCA-1 physically interacts with PAR-6, we propose that PAR-6 promotes non-centrosomal microtubule organization through localization of NOCA-1/Ninein.SummaryUsing inducible protein degradation, we show that PAR-6 and PKC-3/aPKC are essential for postembryonic development of C. elegans and control the organization of non-centrosomal microtubule bundles in the epidermis, likely through recruitment of NOCA-1/Ninein.


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