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1.
2.
A critical role for the polarization of membrane recycling in cell motility   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
This paper is concerned with the proposition that the insertion of membrane mass into the leading edge of a motile cell plays a critical role in directed cell migration. We show by immunofluorescence, with cells transfected with a cloned cDNA encoding the G-protein of a temperature-sensitive mutant of vesicular stomatitis virus, that the first cell surface appearance of the G-protein is indeed at the leading edge of the motile cell. Two drugs capable of inhibiting directed cell migration, cytochalasin D and monensin, appear to function independently, the former by affecting the actin cytoskeleton without affecting the polarized insertion of membrane mass into the cell surface and the latter by abrogating membrane mass insertion without affecting the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

3.
Cell migration is crucial for many biological and pathological processes such as chemotaxis of immune cells, fibroblast migration during wound healing, and tumor cell invasion and metastasis. Cells migrate forward by extending membrane protrusions. The formation of these protrusions is driven by assembly of actin filaments at the leading edge. Neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP), a ubiquitous member of the WASP family, induces actin polymerization by activating Arp2/3 complex and is thought to regulate the formation of membrane protrusions. However, it is totally unclear how N-WASP activity is spatially and temporally regulated inside migrating cells. To detect and image sites of N-WASP activity during cell motility and invasion in carcinoma cells, we designed an N-WASP fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) biosensor that distinguishes between the active and inactive conformations and mimics the function of endogenous N-WASP. Our data show that N-WASP is involved in lamellipodia extension, where it is activated at the leading edge, as well as in invadopodia formation of invasive carcinoma cells, where it is activated at the base. This is the first time that the activity of full-length N-WASP has been visualized in vivo, and this has lead to new insights for N-WASP function.  相似文献   

4.
Protrusion, the first step of cell migration, is driven by actin polymerization coupled to adhesion at the cell's leading edge. Polymerization and adhesive forces have been estimated, but the net protrusion force has not been measured accurately. We arrest the leading edge of a moving fish keratocyte with a hydrodynamic load generated by a fluid flow from a micropipette. The flow arrests protrusion locally as the cell approaches the pipette, causing an arc-shaped indentation and upward folding of the leading edge. The effect of the flow is reversible upon pipette removal and dependent on the flow direction, suggesting that it is a direct effect of the external force rather than a regulated cellular response. Modeling of the fluid flow gives a surprisingly low value for the arresting force of just a few piconewtons per micrometer. Enhanced phase contrast, fluorescence, and interference reflection microscopy suggest that the flow does not abolish actin polymerization and does not disrupt the adhesions formed before the arrest but rather interferes with weak nascent adhesions at the very front of the cell. We conclude that a weak external force is sufficient to reorient the growing actin network at the leading edge and to stall the protrusion.  相似文献   

5.
Rapid polymerization of actin filament barbed ends generates protrusive forces at the cell edge, leading to cell migration. Two important regulators of free barbed ends, cofilin and Arp2/3, have been shown to work in synergy (net effect greater than additive). To explore this synergy, we model the dynamics of F-actin at the leading edge, motivated by data from EGF-stimulated mammary carcinoma cells. We study how synergy depends on the localized rates and relative timing of cofilin and Arp2/3 activation at the cell edge. The model incorporates diffusion of cofilin, membrane protrusion, F-actin capping, aging, and severing by cofilin and branch nucleation by Arp2/3 (but not G-actin recycling). In a well-mixed system, cofilin and Arp2/3 can each generate a large pulse of barbed ends on their own, but have little synergy; high synergy occurs only at low activation rates, when few barbed ends are produced. In the full spatially distributed model, both synergy and barbed-end production are significant over a range of activation rates. Furthermore, barbed-end production is greatest when Arp2/3 activation is delayed relative to cofilin. Our model supports a direct role for cofilin-mediated actin polymerization in stimulated cell migration, including chemotaxis and cancer invasion.  相似文献   

6.
Rapid polymerization of actin filament barbed ends generates protrusive forces at the cell edge, leading to cell migration. Two important regulators of free barbed ends, cofilin and Arp2/3, have been shown to work in synergy (net effect greater than additive). To explore this synergy, we model the dynamics of F-actin at the leading edge, motivated by data from EGF-stimulated mammary carcinoma cells. We study how synergy depends on the localized rates and relative timing of cofilin and Arp2/3 activation at the cell edge. The model incorporates diffusion of cofilin, membrane protrusion, F-actin capping, aging, and severing by cofilin and branch nucleation by Arp2/3 (but not G-actin recycling). In a well-mixed system, cofilin and Arp2/3 can each generate a large pulse of barbed ends on their own, but have little synergy; high synergy occurs only at low activation rates, when few barbed ends are produced. In the full spatially distributed model, both synergy and barbed-end production are significant over a range of activation rates. Furthermore, barbed-end production is greatest when Arp2/3 activation is delayed relative to cofilin. Our model supports a direct role for cofilin-mediated actin polymerization in stimulated cell migration, including chemotaxis and cancer invasion.  相似文献   

7.
Cofilin mediates lamellipodium extension and polarized cell migration by stimulating actin filament dynamics at the leading edge of migrating cells. Cofilin is inactivated by phosphorylation at Ser-3 and reactivated by cofilin-phosphatase Slingshot-1L (SSH1L). Little is known of signaling mechanisms of cofilin activation and how this activation is spatially regulated. Here, we show that cofilin-phosphatase activity of SSH1L increases approximately 10-fold by association with actin filaments, which indicates that actin assembly at the leading edge per se triggers local activation of SSH1L and thereby stimulates cofilin-mediated actin turnover in lamellipodia. We also provide evidence that 14-3-3 proteins inhibit SSH1L activity, dependent on the phosphorylation of Ser-937 and Ser-978 of SSH1L. Stimulation of cells with neuregulin-1beta induced Ser-978 dephosphorylation, translocation of SSH1L onto F-actin-rich lamellipodia, and cofilin dephosphorylation. These findings suggest that SSH1L is locally activated by translocation to and association with F-actin in lamellipodia in response to neuregulin-1beta and 14-3-3 proteins negatively regulate SSH1L activity by sequestering it in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
Actin is one of the most abundant, essential and well studied intracellular proteins, yet its regulation in vivo is still not completely understood. One of the mysteries around actin concerns the existence of multiple actin isoforms that are extremely similar to each other except for their N-termini but have been shown in multiple studies to preferentially incorporate into different actin networks and are suggested to have different roles in vivo. The mechanisms of this actin isoform segregation are unknown. My colleagues and I recently showed that beta but not gamma actin in cultured fibroblasts undergoes N-terminal arginylation, which regulates actin polymerization and lamella formation in motile cells. Here, I propose that arginylation could be a general mechanism that regulates actin isoform segregation in vivo and participates in the formation of loose beta-actin network at the leading edge of the cell.  相似文献   

9.
To investigate the mechanisms of protrusion in vertebrate cells, the primary event in cell motility, human fibroblasts were treated with neomycin, an inhibitor of the phosphatidylinositol cycle, to induce protrusion. Changes in cell motility and the cytoskeleton were examined by video, fluorescence, scanning electron, and confocal microscopy and by cytofluorometry. Protrusion in neomycin-treated human fibroblasts is correlated with a transient overall decrease in F-actin followed by an increase in F-actin at the leading edge of the protruding lamella. In growing lamellae, F-actin is organized in a marginal band at the leading edge. Although actin is present in the lamella behind the leading edge, very little of it is F-actin. Scanning electron microscopy of detergent-extracted cells reveals a band of dense filaments at the leading edge, corresponding to the marginal band of F-actin seen in fluorescently labeled cells, and a sparse population of short, fragmented filaments, in the rest of the lamella. Gelsolin is colocalized with F-actin in the marginal band and is also present in the lamella where F-actin is largely absent. The data support the hypothesis that the protrusion is initiated by the breakdown of cortical actin filaments, possibly mediated by gelsolin, whereas expansion of the protrusion requires de novo polymerization of actin filaments at the leading edge.  相似文献   

10.
Leading edge movement and ultrastructure in mouse macrophages   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The first event in the process of translocation of a cell over a substrate is the forward protrusion of a thin layer of cytoplasm, sometimes referred to as the leading edge. To gain more direct information on structural reorganizations associated with protrusion we have documented the ultrastructure of the actin cytoskeleton of mouse macrophages whose history of locomotion prior to fixation for electron microscopy had been recorded by video microscopy. It is shown that rapid protrusion is associated with the formation of a dense, diagonal network of actin filaments, lacking organized bundles. In cell edges that showed minor fluctuations back and forth over a period of 30 sec or more no dense meshworks were found: instead, a loose peripheral bundle of actin filaments was commonly observed. Cell edges that first protruded and then retracted showed a similar ultrastructure to those that exhibited only forward movement, but the width of the leading edge meshwork was, by comparison, reduced. Measurements showed that there was an approximate correlation between the leading edge mesh width and the net forward translocation observed during the terminal 30 sec, up to fixation. The results are discussed in relation to present concepts of the protrusion mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
Epithelial cell migration requires coordination of two actin modules at the leading edge: one in the lamellipodium and one in the lamella. How the two modules connect mechanistically to regulate directed edge motion is not understood. Using live-cell imaging and photoactivation approaches, we demonstrate that the actin network of the lamellipodium evolves spatio-temporally into the lamella. This occurs during the retraction phase of edge motion, when myosin II redistributes to the lamellipodial actin and condenses it into an actin arc parallel to the edge. The new actin arc moves rearward, slowing down at focal adhesions in the lamella. We propose that net edge extension occurs by nascent focal adhesions advancing the site at which new actin arcs slow down and form the base of the next protrusion event. The actin arc thereby serves as a structural element underlying the temporal and spatial connection between the lamellipodium and the lamella during directed cell motion.  相似文献   

12.
Actin polymerization is a prominent feature of migrating cells, where it powers the protrusion of the leading edge. Many studies have characterized the well-ordered and dynamic arrangement of filamentous actin in this submembraneous space. However, less is known about the organization of unpolymerized actin. Previously, we reported on the use of covalently coupled profilin:actin to study actin dynamics and presented evidence that profilin-bound actin is a major source of actin for filament growth. To locate profilin:actin in the cell we have now used this non-dissociable complex for antibody generation, and obtained monospecific anti-actin and anti-profilin antibodies from two separate immunizations. Fluorescence microscopy revealed drastic differences in the staining pattern generated by the anti-actin antibody preparations. With one, distinct puncta appeared at the actin-rich leading edge and sometimes aligned with microtubules in the interior of the lamella, while the other displayed typical actin filament staining. Labelling experiments in vitro demonstrated failure of the first antibody to recognize filamentous actin and none of the two bound microtubules. The two anti-profilin antibodies purified in parallel generated a punctated pattern similar to that seen with the first anti-actin antibody. All antibody preparations labelled the nuclei.  相似文献   

13.
β‐actin plays key roles in cell migration. Our previous work demonstrated that β‐actin in migratory non‐muscle cells is N‐terminally arginylated and that this arginylation is required for normal lamellipodia extension. Here, we examined the function of β‐actin arginylation in cell migration. We found that arginylated β‐actin is concentrated at the leading edge of lamellipodia and that this enrichment is abolished after serum starvation as well as in contact‐inhibited cells in confluent cultures, suggesting that arginylated β‐actin at the cell leading edge is coupled to active migration. Arginylated actin levels exhibit dynamic changes in response to cell stimuli, lowered after serum starvation and dramatically elevating within minutes after cell stimulation by readdition of serum or lysophosphatidic acid. These dynamic changes require active translation and are not seen in confluent contact‐inhibited cell cultures. Microinjection of arginylated actin antibodies into cells severely and specifically inhibits their migration rates. Together, these data strongly suggest that arginylation of β‐actin is a tightly regulated dynamic process that occurs at the leading edge of locomoting cells in response to stimuli and is integral to the signaling network that regulates cell migration.   相似文献   

14.
At the leading edge of a motile cell, actin polymerizes in close apposition to the plasma membrane. Here we ask how the machinery for force generation at a leading edge is established de novo after the global depolymerization of actin. The depolymerization is accomplished by latrunculin A, and the reorganization of actin upon removal of the drug is visualized in Dictyostelium cells by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. The actin filament system is reorganized in three steps. First, F-actin assembles into globular complexes that move along the bottom surface of the cells at velocities up to 10 microm/min. These clusters are transient structures that eventually disassemble, fuse, or divide. In a second step, clusters merge into a contiguous zone at the cell border that spreads and gives rise to actin waves traveling on a planar membrane. Finally, normal cell shape and motility are resumed. These data show that the initiation of actin polymerization is separated in Dictyostelium from front protrusion, and that the coupling of polymerization to protrusion is a later step in the reconstitution of a leading edge.  相似文献   

15.
The Arp2/3 complex nucleates actin filaments to generate networks at the leading edge of motile cells. Nonmuscle myosin II produces contractile forces involved in driving actin network translocation. We inhibited the Arp2/3 complex and/or myosin II with small molecules to investigate their respective functions in neuronal growth cone actin dynamics. Inhibition of the Arp2/3 complex with CK666 reduced barbed end actin assembly site density at the leading edge, disrupted actin veils, and resulted in veil retraction. Strikingly, retrograde actin flow rates increased with Arp2/3 complex inhibition; however, when myosin II activity was blocked, Arp2/3 complex inhibition now resulted in slowing of retrograde actin flow and veils no longer retracted. Retrograde flow rate increases induced by Arp2/3 complex inhibition were independent of Rho kinase activity. These results provide evidence that, although the Arp2/3 complex and myosin II are spatially segregated, actin networks assembled by the Arp2/3 complex can restrict myosin II-dependent contractility with consequent effects on growth cone motility.  相似文献   

16.
Cell migration involves dynamic regulation of the actin cytoskeleton, which exhibits rapid actin polymerization at the leading edge of migrating cells. This process relies on regulated recruitment of actin nucleators and actin-binding proteins to the leading edge to polymerize new actin filaments. Many of these proteins have been identified, including the actin-related protein (Arp) 2/3 complex, which has emerged as the core player in the initiation of actin polymerization. However, the functional coordination of these proteins is unclear. Previously, we have demonstrated that the 14-kDa phosphohistidine phosphatase (PHP14) is involved in cell migration regulation and affects actin cytoskeleton reorganization. Here, we show that PHP14 may regulate actin remodeling directly and play an important role in dynamic regulation of the actin cytoskeleton. We observed a colocalization of PHP14 with Arp3 and F-actin at the leading edge of migrating cells. Moreover, PHP14 was recruited to the actin remodeling sites in parallel with Arp3 during lamellipodia formation. Furthermore, PHP14 knockdown impaired Arp3 localization at the leading edge of lamellipodia, as well as lamellipodia formation. Most importantly, we found that PHP14 was a novel F-actin-binding protein, displaying an Arp2/3-dependent localization to the leading edge. Collectively, our results indicated a crucial role for PHP14 in the dynamic regulation of the actin cytoskeleton and cell migration.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of the suppression of expression of the actin-binding protein caldesmon on the motility of nonmuscle cells has been studied. A more than a fivefold decrease in the content of this protein in cells by RNA interference led to the disturbance of the formation of actin stress fibers and acceleration of cell migration to the zone of injury of the monolayer. A stimulation of stationary cells by serum induced more than 1,5-fold accumulation of stress fibers only in control cells, but not in caldesmon-deficient cells. Similarly, the accumulation of actin filaments was observed in actively migrating cells of only wild type, but not in the cells with low caldesmon content. These changes occurred mainly at the leading edge of the migrating cell where the distinct structure of actin filaments was not seen in the absence of caldesmon. It was assumed that caldesmon inhibits cell migration due to the stabilization of actin in filaments and a decrease in the dynamics of monomeric actin at the leading edge of the migrating cell.  相似文献   

18.
Cell migration involves the cooperative reorganization of the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons, as well as the turnover of cell–substrate adhesions, under the control of Rho family GTPases. RhoA is activated at the leading edge of motile cells by unknown mechanisms to control actin stress fiber assembly, contractility, and focal adhesion dynamics. The microtubule-associated guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF)-H1 activates RhoA when released from microtubules to initiate a RhoA/Rho kinase/myosin light chain signaling pathway that regulates cellular contractility. However, the contributions of activated GEF-H1 to coordination of cytoskeletal dynamics during cell migration are unknown. We show that small interfering RNA-induced GEF-H1 depletion leads to decreased HeLa cell directional migration due to the loss of the Rho exchange activity of GEF-H1. Analysis of RhoA activity by using a live cell biosensor revealed that GEF-H1 controls localized activation of RhoA at the leading edge. The loss of GEF-H1 is associated with altered leading edge actin dynamics, as well as increased focal adhesion lifetimes. Tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase and paxillin at residues critical for the regulation of focal adhesion dynamics was diminished in the absence of GEF-H1/RhoA signaling. This study establishes GEF-H1 as a critical organizer of key structural and signaling components of cell migration through the localized regulation of RhoA activity at the cell leading edge.  相似文献   

19.
Stimulation of metastatic MTLn3 cells with epidermal growth factor (EGF) causes a rapid and transient increase in actin nucleation activity resulting from the appearance of free barbed ends at the extreme leading edge of extending lamellipods. To investigate the role of cofilin in EGF-stimulated actin polymerization and lamellipod extension in MTLn3 cells, we examined in detail the temporal and spatial distribution of cofilin relative to free barbed ends and characterized the actin dynamics by measuring the changes in the number of actin filaments. EGF stimulation triggers a transient increase in cofilin in the leading edge near the membrane, which is precisely cotemporal with the appearance of free barbed ends there. A deoxyribonuclease I binding assay shows that the number of filaments per cell increases by 1.5-fold after EGF stimulation. Detection of pointed ends in situ using deoxyribonuclease I binding demonstrates that this increase in the number of pointed ends is confined to the leading edge compartment, and does not occur within stress fibers or in the general cytoplasm. Using a light microscope severing assay, cofilin's severing activity was observed directly in cell extracts and shown to be activated after stimulation of the cells with EGF. Microinjection of function-blocking antibodies against cofilin inhibits the appearance of free barbed ends at the leading edge and lamellipod protrusion after EGF stimulation. These results support a model in which EGF stimulation recruits cofilin to the leading edge where its severing activity is activated, leading to the generation of short actin filaments with free barbed ends that participate in the nucleation of actin polymerization.  相似文献   

20.
Cell movement begins with a leading edge protrusion, which is stabilized by nascent adhesions and retracted by mature adhesions. The ERK-MAPK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase-mitogen-activated protein kinase) localizes to protrusions and adhesions, but how it regulates motility is not understood. We demonstrate that ERK controls protrusion initiation and protrusion speed. Lamellipodial protrusions are generated via the WRC (WAVE2 regulatory complex), which activates the Arp2/3 actin nucleator for actin assembly. The WRC must be phosphorylated to be activated, but the sites and kinases that regulate its intermolecular changes and membrane recruitment are unknown. We show that ERK colocalizes with the WRC at lamellipodial leading edges and directly phosphorylates two WRC components: WAVE2 and Abi1. The phosphorylations are required for functional WRC interaction with Arp2/3 and actin during cell protrusion. Thus, ERK coordinates adhesion disassembly with WRC activation and actin polymerization to promote productive leading edge advancement during cell migration.  相似文献   

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