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1.
Expression of the L1 family cell adhesion molecule neuroglian in Drosophila S2 cells leads to cell aggregation and polarized ankyrin accumulation at sites of cell-cell contact. Thus neuroglian adhesion generates a spatial cue for polarized assembly of ankyrin and the spectrin cytoskeleton. Here we characterized a chimera of the extracellular and transmembrane domains of rat CD2 fused to the cytoplasmic domain of neuroglian. The chimera was used to test the hypothesis that clustering of neuroglian at sites of adhesion generates the signal that activates ankyrin binding. Abundant expression of the chimera at the plasma membrane was not a sufficient cue to drive ankyrin assembly, since ankyrin remained diffusely distributed throughout the cytoplasm of CD2-neuroglian-expressing cells. However, ankyrin became highly enriched at sites of antibody-induced capping of CD2-neuroglian. Spectrin codistributed with ankyrin at capped sites. A green fluorescent protein-tagged ankyrin was used to monitor ankyrin distribution in living cells. Enhanced green fluorescent protein-ankyrin behaved identically to antibody-stained endogenous ankyrin, proving that the polarized accumulation of ankyrin was not an artifact of fixing and staining cells. We propose a model in which clustering of neuroglian induces a conformational change in the cytoplasmic domain that drives polarized assembly of the spectrin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

2.
Expression of the Drosophila cell adhesion molecule neuroglian in S2 cells leads to cell aggregation and the intracellular recruitment of ankyrin to cell contact sites. We localized the region of neuroglian that interacts with ankyrin and investigated the mechanism that limits this interaction to cell contact sites. Yeast two-hybrid analysis and expression of neuroglian deletion constructs in S2 cells identified a conserved 36-amino acid sequence that is required for ankyrin binding. Mutation of a conserved tyrosine residue within this region reduced ankyrin binding and extracellular adhesion. However, residual recruitment of ankyrin by this mutant neuroglian molecule was still limited to cell contacts, indicating that the lack of ankyrin binding at noncontact sites is not caused by tyrosine phosphorylation. A chimeric molecule, in which the extracellular domain of neuroglian was replaced with the corresponding domain from the adhesion molecule fasciclin II, also selectively recruited ankyrin to cell contacts. Thus, outside-in signaling by neuroglian in S2 cells depends on extracellular adhesion, but does not depend on any unique property of its extracellular domain. We propose that the recruitment of ankyrin to cell contact sites depends on a physical rearrangement of neuroglian in response to cell adhesion, and that ankyrin binding plays a reciprocal role in stabilizing the adhesive interaction.  相似文献   

3.
Spectrin isoforms are often segregated within specialized plasma membrane subdomains where they are thought to contribute to the development of cell surface polarity. It was previously shown that ankyrin and β spectrin are recruited to sites of cell–cell contact in Drosophila S2 cells expressing the homophilic adhesion molecule neuroglian. Here, we show that neuroglian has no apparent effect on a second spectrin isoform (αβH), which is constitutively associated with the plasma membrane in S2 cells. Another membrane marker, the Na,K-ATPase, codistributes with ankyrin and αβ spectrin at sites of neuroglian-mediated contact. The distributions of these markers in epithelial cells in vivo are consistent with the order of events observed in S2 cells. Neuroglian, ankyrin, αβ spectrin, and the Na,K-ATPase colocalize at the lateral domain of salivary gland cells. In contrast, αβH spectrin is sorted to the apical domain of salivary gland and somatic follicle cells. Thus, the two spectrin isoforms respond independently to positional cues at the cell surface: in one case an apically sorted receptor and in the other case a locally activated cell–cell adhesion molecule. The results support a model in which the membrane skeleton behaves as a transducer of positional information within cells.  相似文献   

4.
The cytoskeletal proteins spectrin and ankyrin colocalize with sites of E-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion in mammalian cells. Here we examined the effects of Drosophila DE-cadherin expression on spectrin and ankyrin in Drosophila S2 tissue culture cells. DE-cadherin caused a dramatic change in the cytoplasmic concentration and distribution of armadillo, the Drosophila homolog of beta catenin. However, DE-cadherin expression had no detectable effect on the quantity or subcellular distribution of ankyrin or spectrin. In reciprocal experiments, recruitment of ankyrin and alphabeta spectrin to the plasma membrane by another cell adhesion molecule, neuroglian, had no effect on the quantity or distribution of armadillo. The results indicate that DE-cadherin-catenin complexes and neuroglian-spectrin/ankyrin complexes form by nonintersecting pathways. Recruitment of spectrin does not appear to be a conserved feature of DE-cadherin function.  相似文献   

5.
Cell-cell contact is an important determinant in the formation of functionally distinct plasma membrane domains during the development of epithelial cell polarity. In cultures of Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells, cell-cell contact induces the assembly and accumulation of the Na+,K+-ATPase and elements of the membrane-cytoskeleton (ankyrin and fodrin) at the regions of cell-cell contact. Epithelial cell-cell contact appears to be regulated by the cell adhesion molecule uvomorulin (E-cadherin) which also becomes localized at the lateral plasma membrane of polarized cells. We have sought to determine whether the colocalization of these proteins reflects direct molecular interactions which may play roles in coordinating cell-cell contact and the assembly of the basal-lateral domain of the plasma membrane. Recently, we identified a complex of proteins containing the Na+,K+-ATPase, ankyrin, and fodrin in extracts of whole MDCK cells (Nelson, W.J., and R. W. Hammerton. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 108:893-902). We have now examined cell extracts for protein complexes containing the cell adhesion molecule uvomorulin. Proteins were solubilized from whole MDCK cells and fractionated in sucrose gradients. The sedimentation profile of solubilized uvomorulin is well separated from the majority of cell surface proteins, suggesting that uvomorulin occurs in a protein complex. A distinct portion of uvomorulin (30%) cosediments with ankyrin and fodrin (approximately 10.5S). Further fractionation of cosedimenting proteins in nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels reveals a discrete band of proteins that binds antibodies specific for uvomorulin, Na+,K+-ATPase, ankyrin, and fodrin. Significantly, ankyrin and fodrin, but not Na+K+-ATPase, coimmunoprecipitate in a complex with uvomorulin using uvomorulin antibodies. This result indicates that separate complexes exist containing ankyrin and fodrin with either uvomorulin or Na+,K+-ATPase. These results are discussed in the context of the possible roles of uvomorulin-induced cell-cell contact in the assembly of the membrane-cytoskeleton and associated membrane proteins (e.g., Na+,K+-ATPase) at the contact zone and in the development of cell polarity.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The generation of cell surface polarity in transporting epithelial cells occurs in three distinct stages that involve cell-cell recognition and adhesion, cell surface remodelling to form biochemically and functionally distinct cell surface domains, and development of vectorial function. A widely used model system to study mechanisms involved in these stages is the Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cell line. Under appropriate growth conditions, MDCK cells develop in similar stages into polarized, multicellular epithelial structures. Analysis of membrane-cytoskeletal proteins ankyrin and fodrin during development of MDCK cell surface polarity shows that they gradually assemble into an insoluble protein complex on the basal-lateral membrane domain upon cell-cell adhesion, concomitantly with the redistribution of Na+,K(+)-ATPase, a marker protein of the basal-lateral membrane. Biochemical analysis shows that ankyrin, fodrin occur in a complex with Na+,K(+)-ATPase and the cell adhesion molecule uvomorulin in MDCK cells. A model is presented in which assembly of membrane-cytoskeletal complexes at sites of uvomorulin-induced cell-cell contact causes a remodelling of the cell surface distribution of specific membrane proteins which, in turn, contributes to the generation of epithelial cell surface polarity.  相似文献   

8.
Sodium channel beta subunits modulate channel kinetic properties and cell surface expression levels and function as cell adhesion molecules. beta 1 and beta 2 participate in homophilic cell adhesion resulting in ankyrin recruitment to cell contact sites. We hypothesized that a tyrosine residue in the cytoplasmic domain of beta 1 may be important for ankyrin recruitment and tested our hypothesis using beta 1 mutants replacing Tyr(181) with alanine (beta 1Y181A), phenylalanine (beta 1Y181F), or glutamate (beta 1Y181E), or a truncated construct deleting all residues beyond Tyr(181) (beta 1L182(STOP)). Ankyrin recruitment was observed in beta 1L182(STOP), showing that residues Ile(166)-Tyr(181) contain the major ankyrin recruiting activity of beta 1. Ankyrin recruitment was abolished in beta 1Y181E, suggesting that tyrosine phosphorylation of beta 1 may inhibit beta 1-ankyrin interactions. Ankyrin(G) and beta 1 associate in rat brain membranes and in transfected cells expressing beta 1 and ankyrin(G) in the absence of sodium channel alpha subunits. beta 1 subunits are recognized by anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies following treatment of these cell lines with fibroblast growth factor. beta 1 and ankryin(G) association is not detectable in cells following treatment with fibroblast growth factor. Ankyrin(G) and beta 1Y181E do not associate even in the absence of fibroblast growth factor treatment. beta 1 subunit-mediated cell adhesion and ankyrin recruitment may contribute to sodium channel placement at nodes of Ranvier. The phosphorylation state of beta 1Y181 may be a critical regulatory step in these developmental processes.  相似文献   

9.
In epithelial cells, the various components of the membrane skeleton are segregated within specialized subregions of the plasma membrane, thus contributing to the development and stabilization of cell surface polarity. It has previously been shown that, in various Drosophila epithelia, the membrane skeleton components ankyrin and alphabeta-spectrin reside at the lateral surface, whereas alphabeta(H)-spectrin is restricted to the apical domain. By use of confocal immunofluorescence microscopy, the present study characterizes the membrane skeleton of epithelial cells in the posterior midgut, leading to a number of unexpected results. First, ankyrin and alphabeta-spectrin are not detected on the entire lateral surface but appear to be restricted to the apicolateral area, codistributing with fasciclin III at smooth septate junctions. The presumptive ankyrin-binding proteins neuroglian and Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, however, do not colocalize with ankyrin. Second, alphabeta(H)-spectrin is enriched at the apical domain but is also present in lower amounts on the entire lateral surface, colocalizing apicolaterally with ankyrin/alphabeta-spectrin. Finally, despite the absence of zonulae adherentes, F-actin, beta(H)-spectrin, and nonmuscle myosin-II are enriched in the midlateral region. Thus, the model established for the organization of the membrane skeleton in Drosophila epithelia does not hold for the posterior midgut, and there is quite some variability between the different epithelia with respect to the organization of the membrane skeleton.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of pH, temperature, block of energy production, calcium/calmodulin, protein phosphorylation, and cytoskeleton-disrupting agents (cytochalasin D, nocodazole) on the integrity of the membrane skeleton were studied in polarized MDCK cells. The intracellular distributions of α-fodrin, actin, and ankyrin were monitored by immunofluorescence microscopy. The membrane skeleton, once assembled, seemed to be quite stable; the only factors releasing α-fodrin from the lateral walls were the acidification of the cytoplasm and the depletion of extracellular calcium ions. Upon cellular acidification, some actin was also released from its normal location along the lateral walls and was seen in colocalization with α-fodrin in the cytoplasm, whereas ankyrin remained associated with the lateral walls. No accumulation of plasma membrane lipids was observed in the cytoplasm of acidified cells, as visualized by TMA-DPH. These results suggest that the linkages between the fodrin-actin complex and its membrane association sites are broken upon acidification. The pH-induced change in α-fodrin localization was reversible upon restoring the normal pH. Reassembly of the membrane skeleton, however, required temperatures above +20°C, normal energy production, proper cell-cell contacts, and polymerized actin. Release of α-fodrin from the lateral walls to the cytoplasm was also observed upon depletion of extracellular calcium ions. This change was accompanied by the disruption of cell-cell contacts, supporting the role of proper cell-cell contacts in the maintenance of the membrane skeleton polarity. These results suggest that local alterations of the cytoplasmic pH and calcium ion concentration may be important in regulating the integrity of the membrane skeleton. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Ankyrin is a well characterized membrane skeletal protein which has been implicated in the anchorage of specific integral membrane proteins to the spectrin-based membrane skeleton in a number of systems. In this study, the organization of ankyrin was examined in lymphocytes in relation to T cell function. Light and electron microscope immunolocalization studies revealed extensive heterogeneity in the subcellular distribution of ankyrin in murine tissue-derived lymphocytes. While ankyrin can be localized at the lymphocyte plasma membrane, it can also be accumulated at some distance from the cell periphery, in small patches or in a single discrete, nonmembrane-bound structure. Double immunofluorescence studies demonstrated that ankyrin colocalizes with spectrin and with the signal transducing molecule protein kinase C beta (PKC beta) in tissue-derived lymphocytes, suggesting a functional association between these molecules in the lymphocyte cytoplasm. In addition, T lymphocyte activation-related signals and phorbol ester treatment, both of which lead to PKC activation, cause a rapid translocation of ankyrin, together with spectrin and PKC beta, to a single Triton X-100-insoluble aggregate in the cytoplasm. This finding suggests a mechanism for the reported appearance of PKC in the particulate fraction of cells after activation: activated lymphocyte PKC beta may interact with insoluble cytoskeletal elements like ankyrin and spectrin. Further evidence for a link between the subcellular organization of these proteins and PKC activity is provided by the observation that inhibitors of PKC activity cause their concomitant redistribution to the cell periphery. The dynamic nature of lymphocyte ankyrin and its ability to accumulate at sites distant from the plasma membrane are properties which may be unique to the lymphocyte form of the molecule. Its colocalization with PKC beta in the lymphocyte cytoplasm, together with its redistribution in response to physiological signals, suggests that structural protein(s) may play a role in signal transduction pathways in this cell type. Our data support the conclusion that ankyrin is not solely involved in anchorage of proteins at the plasma membrane in lymphoid cells.  相似文献   

12.
Mobility and cytoskeletal interactions of cell adhesion receptors.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Clustering of cell adhesion receptors and their interactions with the cytoskeleton are key events in the formation and function of cell adhesion structures. On the free cell surface, cadherin molecules interact with the cytoskeleton/membrane skeleton by being bound or corralled, and such interactions are greatly enhanced by the formation of cadherin oligomers. Corralled cadherin molecules undergo hop diffusion from one compartment to an adjacent one (membrane skeleton fence model), which prompts the initial formation of small adhesion clusters at cell-cell contact sites, but larger-scale assemblies of cadherin and actin filaments might require a further co-ordinated recruitment of these molecules.  相似文献   

13.
The L1-family of cell adhesion molecules is involved in many important aspects of nervous system development. Mutations in the human L1-CAM gene cause a complicated array of neurological phenotypes; however, the molecular basis of these effects cannot be explained by a simple loss of adhesive function. Human L1-CAM and its Drosophila homolog neuroglian are rather divergent in sequence, with the highest degree of amino acid sequence conservation between segments of their cytoplasmic domains. In an attempt to elucidate the fundamental functions shared between these distantly related members of the L1-family, we demonstrate here that the extracellular domains of mammalian L1-CAMs and Drosophila neuroglian are both able to induce the aggregation of transfected Drosophila S2 cells in vitro. To a limited degree they even interact with each other in cell adhesion and neurite outgrowth assays. The cytoplasmic domains of human L1-CAM and neuroglian are both able to interact with the Drosophila homolog of the cytoskeletal linker protein ankyrin. Moreover the recruitment of ankyrin to cell-cell contacts is completely dependent on L1-mediated cell adhesion. These findings support a model of L1 function in which the phenotypes of human L1-CAM mutations result from a disruption of the link between the extracellular environment and the neuronal cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
Cell migration is an important process in such phenomena as growth, development, and wound healing. The control of cell migration is orchestrated in part by cell surface adhesion molecules. These molecules fall into two major categories: those that bind to extracellular matrix and those that bind to adjacent cells. Here, we report on the role of a cell-cell adhesion molecule, platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1, (PECAM-1), a member of the lg superfamily, in the modulation of cell migration and cell-cell adhesion. PECAM-1 is a 120-130 kDa integral membrane protein that resides on endothelial cells and localizes at sites of cell-cell contact. Since endothelial cells express PECAM-1 constitutively, we studied the effects of PECAM-1 on cell-cell adhesion and migration in a null-cell population. Specifically, we transfected NIH/3T3 cells with the full length PECAM-1 molecule (two independent clones). Transfected cells containing only the neomycin resistance gene, cells expressing a construct coding for the extracellular domain of the molecule, and cells expressing the neu oncogene were used as controls. The PECAM-1 transfectants appeared smaller and more polygonal and tended to grow in clusters. Indirect immunofluorescence of PECAM-1 transfectants showed peripheral staining at sites of cell-cell contact, while the extracellular domain transfectants and the control cells did not. In two quantitative migration assays, the full-length PECAM-1 transfectants migrated more slowly than control cells. Thus, PECAM-1 transfected into a null cell appears to localize to sites of cell-cell contact, promote cell-cell adhesion, and diminish the rate of migration. These findings suggest a role for this cell-cell adhesion molecule in the process of endothelial cell migration.  相似文献   

15.
A primary function of cadherins is to regulate cell adhesion. Here, we demonstrate a broader function of cadherins in the differentiation of specialized epithelial cell phenotypes. In situ, the rat retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) forms cell-cell contacts within its monolayer, and at the apical membrane with the neural retina; Na+, K(+)-ATPase and the membrane cytoskeleton are restricted to the apical membrane. In vitro, RPE cells (RPE-J cell line) express an endogenous cadherin, form adherens junctions and a tight monolayer, but Na+,K(+)-ATPase is localized to both apical and basal-lateral membranes. Expression of E- cadherin in RPE-J cells results in restriction and accumulation of both Na+,K(+)-ATPase and the membrane cytoskeleton at the lateral membrane; these changes correlate with the synthesis of a different ankyrin isoform. In contrast to both RPE in situ and RPE-J cells that do not form desmosomes, E-cadherin expression in RPE-J cells induces accumulation of desmoglein mRNA, and assembly of desmosome-keratin complexes at cell-cell contacts. These results demonstrate that cadherins directly affect epithelial cell phenotype by remodeling the distributions of constitutively expressed proteins and by induced accumulation of specific proteins, which together lead to the generation of structurally and functionally distinct epithelial cell types.  相似文献   

16.
A monoclonal antibody (JG22 MAb) that was previously raised to a chick embryo myogenic cell preparation had been shown to produce rounding and other morphological changes in myogenic cells in culture, and, in some cases, their detachment from the substratum. In other studies it was shown that the epitope recognized by JG22 was associated with a set of 140 kD cell surface glycoproteins. It is shown that this antigen occurs in a wide variety of cell types; in cultured fibroblasts, it is distributed equally between the dorsal and ventral cell surfaces shortly after plating, but appears to become concentrated on the ventral surface as cell spreading proceeds; by immunoelectron microscopic labeling experiments, it is absent from the focal adhesion contact sites formed by fibroblasts with their substrata and with one another, but is present in clusters at the edge of focal adhesions, and within the close contact sites and extracellular matrix contact sites; in smooth muscle cells, it is absent from the membrane-associated dense plaques, but is located in clusters at adjacent membrane sites; in intestinal epithelium, it is present in clusters at the basolateral membranes, but not at the microvilli or within junctional complexes of the brush border of the cell layers. These and other results are consistent with the suggestion that the antigen recognized by JG22 MAb is important cell adhesion molecules, and performs a characteristic function in a variety of cell-cell contacts and cell adhesions.  相似文献   

17.
We raised antibodies to brain fodrin and erythrocyte ankyrin and examined the distribution of the antigens in cultured bovine chromaffin cells by immunocytochemical techniques. Immunofluorescence microscopy of whole cells showed intense labeling for both proteins, but fine localization could not be determined. In contrast, in cell specimens mechanically unroofed before fixation, the distribution of the two proteins revealed an apparent difference in the ventral plasma membrane: immunofluorescence for fodrin was dense and mostly even, whereas that for ankyrin appeared as scattered dots. Immunogold electron microscopy of the unroofed cells showed that labeling for fodrin was localized in a network of thin filaments, the diameter of which was 2-3 nm at the thinnest portion. Ankyrin labeling was mostly associated with filaments 5-10 nm in diameter. Notably, labeling for both fodrin and ankyrin was found over the coated membrane. The present results indicate that fodrin and ankyrin in the chromaffin cell do not constitute a submembranous network as spectrin and ankyrin do in the erythrocyte; whereas fodrin is closely associated with the plasma membrane, ankyrin is mostly linked to the cytoskeleton. The existence of both proteins in the coated region implies that they are functionally related to exocytosis and/or to ensuing membrane retrieval in the chromaffin cell.  相似文献   

18.
The role of platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1) in endothelial cell-cell interactions and its contribution to cadherin-mediated cell adhesion are poorly understood. Such studies have been difficult because all known endothelial cells express PECAM-1. We have used Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells as a model system in which to evaluate the role of PECAM-1 isoforms that differ in their cytoplasmic domains in cell-cell interactions. MDCK cells lack endogenous PECAM-1 but form cell-cell junctions similar to those of endothelial cells, in which PECAM-1 is concentrated. MDCK cells were transfected with two isoforms of murine PECAM-1, Delta15 and Delta14&15, the predominant isoforms expressed in vivo. Expression of the Delta15 isoform resulted in apparent dedifferentiation of MDCK cells concomitant with the loss of adherens junctions, down-regulation of E-cadherin, alpha- and beta-catenin expression, and sustained activation of extracellular regulated kinases. The Delta15 isoform was not concentrated at cell-cell contacts. In contrast, the Delta14&15 isoform localized to sites of cell-cell contact and had no effect on MDCK cell morphology, cadherin/catenin expression, or extracellular regulated kinase activity. Thus, the presence of exon 14 in the cytoplasmic domain of PECAM-1 has dramatic effects on the ability of cells to maintain adherens junctions and an epithelial phenotype. Therefore, changes in the expression of exon 14 containing PECAM-1 isoforms, which we have observed during development, may have profound functional consequences.  相似文献   

19.
Ankyrin and spectrin were first discovered as binding partners in the membrane skeleton of human erythrocytes. Mutations in genes encoding these proteins cause hereditary spherocytosis. Recent advances reveal that ankyrin and spectrin are required for organization of a surprisingly diverse set of proteins, including ion channels and cell adhesion molecules that are localized in specialized membrane domains in many cell types. New insights into the cell biology of ankyrin and spectrin reveal that these proteins actively participate in assembly of specialized membrane domains in addition to their conventional maintenance role as scaffolding proteins. Recently described inherited human diseases due to defects in spectrin or ankyrin include spinocerebellar ataxia type 5 and a cardiac arrhythmia, termed sick sinus syndrome with bradycardia or ankyrin-B syndrome. Together, these studies identify an emerging paradigm for pathogenesis of human disease where failure in cellular localization of membrane-spanning proteins results in loss of physiological function.  相似文献   

20.
V. Bennett  J. Steiner  J. Davis 《Protoplasma》1988,145(2-3):89-94
Summary The purpose of this review is to summarize recent progress in understanding interactions of spectrin with membranes from brain and other tissues. Spectrin has at least two choices in linkages with the membrane, one through ankyrin, which in turn is associated with integral membrane proteins, and another linkage directly with integral membrane sites identified recently in brain membranes. Some of the integral membrane protein sites in brain bind preferentially with one spectrin isoform, while some can interact with both erythroid and the general isoform of spectrin. Ankyrin also has different isoforms, and these exhibit specificity in binding to spectrin isoforms and associate with distinct integral membrane proteins. The membrane binding sites for ankyrin include several integral membrane proteins, which are differentially expressed in different cells: the anion exchanger of intercalated cells of mammalian kidney, the sodium/potassium ATPase of kidney, and the voltage-dependent sodium channel of neurons. Ankyrin is present in many other cell types and it is likely that additional ankyrin-binding proteins will be identified. Each of the proteins that now are candidates for ankyrin binding proteins are ion channels or transporters and are localized in specialized cellular domains. The polarized localization of the ankyrin-associated membrane proteins is an essential aspect of their function at a physiological level. Spectrin and ankyrin thus exhibit an unsuspected diversity in protein linkages and have the potential for cell domain-specific interactions with a variety of membrane proteins.  相似文献   

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