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1.
We have used fluorescent analogue cytochemistry, image intensification, and digital image processing to examine the redistribution of alpha-actinin and vinculin in living cultured African green monkey kidney (BSC-1) cells treated with the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). Before treatment, microinjected alpha-actinin shows characteristic distribution along stress fibers and at adhesion plaques; vinculin is localized predominantly at adhesion plaques. Soon after the addition of TPA, highly dynamic membrane ruffles begin to form. These incorporate a large amount of alpha-actinin but little vinculin. Alpha-actinin is subsequently depleted, more or less uniformly, from stress fibers. Disrupted stress fibers often fragment into aggregates and move into the perinuclear region. Careful analyses of fluorescence intensity distribution indicate that alpha-actinin is depleted more rapidly from adhesion plaques than from stress fibers. Furthermore, the depletion of alpha-actinin from adhesion plaques is also faster than either the depletion of vinculin or the disappearance of focal contacts. These observations indicate that TPA may initiate disruption of stress fibers by interfering with a link between alpha-actinin and vinculin, causing alpha-actinin to be preferentially depleted from adhesion plaques.  相似文献   

2.
Microinjection of fluorophore-tagged cytoskeletal proteins has been a useful tool in studies of formation of focal adhesions (FA). We used this method to study the maintenance of adherens junctions (AJ) and tight junctions (TJ) of epithelial Madin-Darby bovine kidney cells. We chose alpha-actinin and vinculin as markers, because they are present both at adherens junctions and focal adhesions and their binding partners have been well characterized. Isolated FITC-labelled chicken alpha-actinin and vinculin were injected into confluent cells where they were rapidly incorporated both in FAs and AJs. The FAs remained unchanged, whereas cell-cell contacts began to fade within an hour after injection and the cells were joined to polykaryons having 5 to 13 nuclei. Short fragments of cell membranes containing injected proteins, actin, beta-catenin, cadherin, claudin, occludin and ZO-1 were visible inside the polykaryons indicating that both AJs and TJs were disintegrated as a single complex. Microinjected FITC-labelled vinculin head domain was also incorporated to both AJs and FAs, but instead of fusions it rapidly induced the detachment of the cells from the substratum probably due to high affinity of vinculin head to talin. Vinculin tail domain had no apparent effect on the cell morphology. Since small GTPases are involved in the building up of AJs, we injected active and inactive forms of cdc42 and rac proteins together with vinculin to see their effect. Active forms reduced the formation of polykaryons presumably by strengthening AJs, whereas inactive forms had no apparent effect. We suggest that excess alpha-actinin and vinculin uncouple the cell-cell adhesion junctions from the intracellular cytoskeleton which leads to fragmentation of junctional complexes and subsequent cell fusion. The results show that cell-cell adhesion sites are more dynamic and more sensitive than FAs to an imbalance in the amount of free alpha-actinin and intact vinculin.  相似文献   

3.
Although it is known that the depletion of cellular ATP induces a dramatic, reversible disruption of microfilament structures, the morphological pathway remains obscure. I have studied this process by following directly the dynamic redistribution of fluorescently labeled alpha-actinin and vinculin which had been microinjected into living mouse 3T3 fibroblasts. Before treatment, microinjected alpha-actinin displayed characteristic distribution along stress fibers, whereas vinculin was localized predominantly at adhesion plaques. The first response after adding NaN3 and 2-deoxyglucose was the retraction of lamellipodia, followed, over a period of 2 h, by a dramatic contraction of stress fibers and loosening of focal contacts. Vinculin plaques shrank from an elongated shape to small aggregates. During recovery, which was initiated by removing NaN3 and 2-deoxyglucose from the medium, lamellipodia appeared rapidly and alpha-actinin dispersed from contracted aggregates. Some partially dispersed aggregates later served as initiation sites for the formation of stress fibers. The recovery of vinculin plaques occurred predominantly through direct elongation, and focal contacts developed concomitantly. A small fraction of vinculin aggregates, however, moved into the perinuclear region without developing into adhesion plaques, and some new vinculin plaques formed de novo. Possible mechanisms involved and relationships to disruptions induced by other agents are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The localization of pp60src within adhesion structures of epithelioid rat kidney cells transformed by the Schmidt-Ruppin strain of Rous sarcoma virus was compared to the organization of actin, alpha-actinin, vinculin (a 130,000-dalton protein), tubulin, and the 58,000-dalton intermediate filament protein. The adhesion structures included both adhesion plaques and previously uncharacterized adhesive regions formed at cell-cell junctions. We have termed these latter structures "adhesion junctions." Both adhesion plaques and adhesion junctions were identified by interference-reflection microscopy and compared to the location of pp60src and the various cytoskeletal proteins by double fluorescence. The results demonstrated that the src gene product was found within both adhesion plaques and the adhesion junctions. In addition, actin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin were also localized within the same pp60src-containing adhesion structures. In contrast, tubulin and the 58,000-dalton intermediate filament protein were not associated with either adhesion plaques or adhesion junctions. Both adhesion plaques and adhesion junctions were isolated as substratum-bound structures and characterized by scanning electron microscopy. Immunofluorescence revealed that pp60src, actin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin were organized within specific regions of the adhesion junctions. Heavy accumulations of actin and alpha-actinin were found on both sides of the junctions with a narrow gap of unstained material at the midline, whereas pp60src stain was more intense in this central region. Antibody to vinculin stained double narrow lines defining the periphery of the junctional complexes but was excluded from the intervening region. In addition, the distribution of vinculin relative to pp60src within adhesion plaques suggested an inverse relationship between the presence of these two proteins. Overall, these results establish a close link between the src gene product and components of the cytoskeleton and implicate the adhesion plaques and adhesion junctions in the mechanism of Rous sarcoma virus-induced transformation.  相似文献   

5.
The relationship of nascent myofibrils with the accumulation of adhesion plaque proteins and the formation of focal cell contacts was studied in embryonic chick cardiac myocytes in vitro. The cultures were double-stained with various combinations of the specific antiactin drug phalloidin and antibodies against vinculin, alpha-actinin, connectin (titin), myosin heavy chain, fibronectin, and desmin and examined under fluorescence and interference reflection microscopy. In the areas of myofibril assembly, vinculin and alpha-actinin plaques were formed at the ventral sarcolemmae. These areas overlapped with the sites of cell-to-substrate focal contacts and extracellular fibronectin. Because the myofibrils always ran in a straight line between these sites, polarized lines appeared to be generated within the cells in response to their physical (e.g., stress) and/or biochemical environment (e.g., adhesion plaque proteins). The possible presence of other factors cannot be ruled out for the proper alignment of myofibrils. As soon as myofibrils came to span between these adhesion sites, they exhibited typically mature cross-striated characteristics. Thus, the formation of these inferred lines has some relation to, or is in fact necessary for, the maturation of myofibrils, in addition to the directional arrangement of sarcomeric proteins. Additionally, synthesis and distribution of myosin and connectin were tightly linked during early developmental (premyofibril and myofibril) stages. The spatial deployment of desmin was not coupled with vinculin. Thus, connectin and desmin do not appear to form the initial scaffold of sarcomeres.  相似文献   

6.
I examined the binding kinetics between integrin (alpha(IIb)beta(3)) and purified focal adhesion proteins, including alpha-actinin, filamin, vinculin, talin, and F-actin. Using static light-scatter technique, I observed affinities of the order talin > filamin > F-actin > alpha-actinin > (talin when bound to vinculin) which were lower when integrin was complexed with fibronectin. No binding between integrin and vinculin was detected. The calculated dissociation constants (K(d)) ranged between 0.4 microM and 5 microM. These results in part confirm previously published data using different methods. The modest affinity with which the focal adhesion proteins interact in vitro might be indicative of how cells, e.g., thrombocytes, gain a high degree of versatility and velocity.  相似文献   

7.
Vinculin regulates both cell-cell and cell-matrix junctions and anchors adhesion complexes to the actin cytoskeleton through its interactions with the vinculin binding sites of alpha-actinin or talin. Activation of vinculin requires a severing of the intramolecular interactions between its N- and C-terminal domains, which is necessary for vinculin to bind to F-actin; yet how this occurs in cells is not resolved. We tested the hypothesis that talin and alpha-actinin activate vinculin through their vinculin binding sites. Indeed, we show that these vinculin binding sites have a high affinity for full-length vinculin, are sufficient to sever the head-tail interactions of vinculin, and they induce conformational changes that allow vinculin to bind to F-actin. Finally, microinjection of these vinculin binding sites specifically targets vinculin in cells, disrupting its interactions with talin and alpha-actinin and disassembling focal adhesions. In their native (inactive) states the vinculin binding sites of talin and alpha-actinin are buried within helical bundles present in their central rod domains. Collectively, these results support a model where the engagement of adhesion receptors first activates talin or alpha-actinin, by provoking structural changes that allow their vinculin binding sites to swing out, which are then sufficient to bind to and activate vinculin.  相似文献   

8.
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) attach to the plasma membrane of infected host cells and induce diarrhea in a variety of farm animals as well in humans. These bacteria inject a three-domain protein receptor, Tir (translocated intimin receptor), that is subsequently inserted into the plasma membrane. EPEC induce the host cell to form membrane-covered actin-rich columns called pedestals. Focal adhesion constituents, alpha-actinin, talin, and vinculin, are localized along the length of the pedestals and we have previously reported they bind the two cytoplasmic domains of Tir, (Tir I and Tir III) [Freeman et al., 2000: Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton 47:307-318]. In the present study, various constructs were made expressing different regions of these three focal adhesion proteins to determine which domains of the proteins bound Tir I. Three different assays were used to detect Tir I/host protein domain interactions. In co-precipitation assays, His-Tir I bound to the 27-kDa region of alpha-actinin; to four different domains of talin; and to the N-terminal domain of the vinculin head and the vinculin tail domain. A yeast two-hybrid analysis of Tir I and the various focal adhesion fusion proteins revealed a region near the C-terminus of talin was the only domain to interact with Tir I. Finally, to assess direct binding interactions, biotinylated Tir I was used in overlay assays and confirmed the binding of Tir I with the 27-kDa region of alpha-actinin, the four regions of talin, and the vinculin tail. These binding interactions between hostfocal adhesion proteins and EPEC Tir may facilitate the adhesion of EPEC to the host cell surface.  相似文献   

9.
We have previously demonstrated that alpha-smooth muscle (alpha-SM) actin is predominantly distributed in the central region and beta-non-muscle (beta-NM) actin in the periphery of cultured rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs). To determine whether this reflects a special form of segregation of contractile and cytoskeletal components in SMCs, this study systematically investigated the distribution relationship of structural proteins using high-resolution confocal laser scanning fluorescent microscopy. Not only isoactins but also smooth muscle myosin heavy chain, alpha-actinin, vinculin, and vimentin were heterogeneously distributed in the cultured SMCs. The predominant distribution of beta-NM actin in the cell periphery was associated with densely distributed vinculin plaques and disrupted or striated myosin and alpha-actinin aggregates, which may reflect a process of stress fiber assembly during cell spreading and focal adhesion formation. The high-level labeling of alpha-SM actin in the central portion of stress fibers was related to continuous myosin and punctate alpha-actinin distribution, which may represent the maturation of the fibrillar structures. The findings also suggest that the stress fibers, in which actin and myosin filaments organize into sarcomere-like units with alpha-actinin-rich dense bodies analogous to Z-lines, are the contractile structures of cultured SMCs that link to the network of vimentin-containing intermediate filaments through the dense bodies and dense plaques.  相似文献   

10.
The sites of tightest adhesion that form between cells and substrate surfaces in tissue culture are termed focal contacts. The external faces of focal contacts include specific receptors, belonging to the integrin family of proteins, for fibronectin and vitronectin, two common components of extracellular matrices. On the internal (cytoplasmic) side of focal contacts, several proteins, including talin and vinculin, mediate interactions with the actin filament bundles of the cytoskeleton. The changes that occur in focal contacts as a result of viral transformation are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we examined the effects of shark cartilage extract on the attachment and spreading properties and the focal adhesion structure of cultured bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells. Treatment with cartilage extract resulted in cell detachment from the substratum. Immunofluorescence staining of those treated cells that remained attached showed that, instead of being present in both central and peripheral focal adhesions as in control cells, both integrin alpha(v)beta(3) and vinculin were found only in peripheral focal adhesion and thinner actin filament bundles were seen. In addition to causing cell detachment, cartilage extract partially inhibited the initial adherence of the cells to the substratum in a dose-dependent manner. Integrin alpha(v)beta(3) and vinculin staining of these cells also showed a peripheral focal adhesion distribution pattern. Vitronectin induced cell spreading in the absence of serum, but was blocked by simultaneous incubation with cartilage extract, which was shown to inhibit both integrin alpha(v)beta(3) and vinculin recruitment to focal adhesion and the formation of stress fibers. Dot binding assays showed that these inhibitory effects on cell attachment and spreading were not due to direct binding of cartilage extract components to integrin alpha(v)beta(3) or vitronectin. Shark cartilage chondroitin sulfate had no inhibitory effect on either cell attachment or spreading of endothelial cells. These results show that the inhibitory effects of cartilage extract on cell attachment and spreading are mediated by modification of the organization of focal adhesion proteins.  相似文献   

12.
Immunofluorescent labeling for fibronectin was largely excluded from sites of closest contact between spreading chicken gizzard fibroblasts and the substratum. This was observed by double immunofluorescent labeling of fixed cells for fibronectin and vinculin, a smooth muscle intracellular protein that is specifically associated with focal adhesion plaques, in conjunction with interference-reflection microscopy. When the cells were plated on a fibronectin-coated substratum they adhered to its surface and rapidly spread on it. The immunofluorescent labeling for fibronectin in those cultures (after fixation and triton permeabilization) was usually absent from the newly formed, vinculin-containing focal adhesion plaques. We have found, however, that the accessibility to the cell-substrate gap at the focal adhesion plaques is limited and therefore a more direct approach was adopted. We have found that cells spreading on a substrate coated with rhodamine-labeled fibronectin progressively removed the underlying protein from the substrate. The removal of fibronectin involved at least two distinct mechanisms. Part of the substrate-associated fibronectin was removed from small areas and displaced toward the cell center. The arrowhead-shaped areas from which fibronectin was removed often coincided with vinculin-rich focal contacts. We observed, however, many areas where focal contacts were found over unperturbed fibronectin carpet, as well as fibronectin-free areas with no overlapping focal contacts. The possibilities that fibronectin is actively displaced from areas of cell-substrate contact, that the focal adhesion plaques are transiently associated with these areas and their implications on the dynamics of cell spreading and locomotion are discussed. The second route of fibronectin removal from the substrate was endocytosis. The rhodamine-labeled fibronectin was found in the cells in a partial or transient association with clathrin-containing structures.  相似文献   

13.
After 15 min incubations, binding of 0.8-, 6-, and 16-microns fibronectin-coated latex beads occurred primarily at the margins of chick embryo fibroblasts that previously were attached and spread on fibronectin-coated glass coverslips. Extensive phagocytosis of the smallest beads and some phagocytosis of the larger beads occurred within 2 h. Following binding of the 16-micron beads, there were no changes in overall cell shape or in the distribution of several cytoskeletal proteins. There was, however, a local accumulation of actin and alpha-actinin patches adjacent to the sites where the beads were bound. The formation of alpha-actinin patches could be detected with 6- or 16-microns beads shortly after initial bead binding to the cells, but a similar reorganization of alpha-actinin in response to the binding of 0.8-micron beads was not detected. The patches of alpha-actinin appeared to be associated with membrane ruffles, since such structures were observed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to be sites of cell interaction with 6- but not 0.8-micron beads. Also, two other cytoskeletal proteins normally absent from membrane ruffles, tropomyosin and vinculin, were not detected at the sites of cell-bead interaction. No reorganization of vinculin at the cell-bead interaction sites was observed even when the 16-microns beads remained bound at the cell surfaces for up to 6 h. Nevertheless, prominent vinculin plaques were observed at the marginal attachment sites on the ventral cell surfaces. Consequently, formation of mature focal adhesions may be restricted to linear regions of cell-substratum interaction.  相似文献   

14.
The link between the biochemical and morphological differentiation of granulosa cells was studied by investigating the organization and the expression of cytoskeletal proteins which determine cell shape and contacts. In cells treated with follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), in a serum- and growth factor-free medium, or with other compounds which elevate cellular cAMP levels, the synthesis of the adherens junction proteins, vinculin, alpha-actinin, and actin was reduced significantly when compared to unstimulated cells (7-fold for vinculin, 5-fold for alpha-actinin, and 3-fold for actin). The in vitro translatability of the mRNAs coding for these proteins and the level of actin mRNA determined by RNA blot hybridization were generally reduced in differentiating cells. The synthesis and the organization of vimentin and tubulin was unaffected during this process, whereas the organization of actin and vinculin was dramatically affected, with FSH-treated cells displaying a diffuse pattern of actin and vinculin, with very little vinculin in adhesion plaques. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist and the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate which are known to antagonize the cAMP-mediated biochemical differentiation of granulosa cells by reducing cAMP levels or by activating protein kinase C and phospholipid turnover, blocked to a large extent the FSH-induced effect on the adherens junction proteins. Epidermal growth factor, which blocked the FSH-induced cAMP increase, but not the FSH-induced progesterone production, failed to block the synthesis of vinculin, alpha-actinin, and actin. Cytochalasin B could induce steroidogenesis and similar changes in the synthesis of these cytoskeletal proteins, whereas fibronectin, which causes cell spreading, blocked in part the FSH-induced effect on the expression of cytoskeletal proteins. The modulation of cytoskeletal proteins may therefore be an essential feature of programmed differentiation events leading to the final phenotype of granulosa cells.  相似文献   

15.
Specific interaction of vinculin with alpha-actinin   总被引:33,自引:0,他引:33  
Vinculin and alpha-actinin are cytoskeletal proteins present at focal contacts of the ventral surface of cultured fibroblasts. We labelled alpha-actinin with an acceptor fluorophore and vinculin with a donor. A mixture of vinculin and alpha-actinin showed a 28% quench, due to energy transfer, suggesting an interaction. Quench of vinculin was dependent on the concentration of alpha-actinin; Scatchard analysis gives a dissociation constant in the microM range. Quench was inhibited by excess unlabelled alpha-actinin, and by reaction of the acceptor protein with p-chloromercuribenzoate. We found that vinculin had a slightly greater elution volume in a gel filtration column equilibrated with alpha-actinin, indicating a higher effective Stokes radius due to the interaction of the two proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Vinculin: a cytoskeletal target of the transforming protein of Rous sarcoma virus   总被引:138,自引:0,他引:138  
B M Sefton  T Hunter  E H Ball  S J Singer 《Cell》1981,24(1):165-174
Vinculin, a protein associated with the cytoplasmic face of the focal adhesion plaques which anchor actin-containing microfilaments to the plasma membrane and attach a cell to the substratum, contains 8-fold more phosphotyrosine in cells transformed by Rous sarcoma virus than in uninfected cells. Because the transforming protein of RSV, p60src, is a protein kinase that modifies cellular proteins through the phosphorylation of tyrosine and because phosphotyrosine is a very rare modified amino acid, this result is a very rare modified amino acid, this result suggests that vinculin is a primary substrate of p60src. Only trace amounts of phosphotyrosine were detected in myosin heavy chains, alpha-actinin, filamin, and the intermediate filament protein vimentin. The modification of vinculin by p60src may be responsible in part for the disruption of the microfilament organization and for the changes in cell shape and adhesiveness which accompany transformation by Rous sarcoma virus.  相似文献   

17.
Chromophore-assisted laser inactivation (CALI) is a light-mediated technique used to selectively inactivate proteins within cells. Here, we demonstrate that GFP can be used as a CALI reagent to locally inactivate proteins in living cells. We show that focused laser irradiation of EGFP-alpha-actinin expressed in Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts results in the detachment of stress fibres from focal adhesions (FAs), whereas the integrity of FAs, as determined by interference reflection microscopy (IRM), is preserved. Moreover, consistent with a function for focal adhesion kinase (FAK) in FA signalling and not FA structure, laser irradiation of EGFP-FAK did not cause either visible FA damage or stress fibre detachment, although in vitro CALI of isolated EGFP-FAK decreased its kinase activity, but not its binding to paxillin. These data indicate that CALI of specific FA components may be used to precisely dissect the functional significance of individual proteins required for the maintenance of this cytoskeletal structure. In vitro CALI experiments also demonstrated a reduction of EGFP-alpha-actinin binding to the cytoplasmic domain of the beta(1) integrin subunit, but not to actin. Thus, alpha-actinin is essential for the binding of microfilaments to integrins in the FA. CALI-induced changes in alpha-actinin result in the breakage of that link and the subsequent retraction of the stress fibre.  相似文献   

18.
We have investigated the mechanisms by which fibroblasts release their adhesions to the extracellular matrix substrata using a permeabilized cell system in which the adhesions remain relatively stable. A large number of different molecules were assayed for their effect on focal adhesion stability using immunofluorescence with antibodies against different focal adhesion constituents. ATP uniquely stimulates a rapid breakdown of focal adhesions, and at high ATP concentrations (> 5 mM), many cells are released from the dish. The remaining cells appear contracted with talin, alpha-actinin, and vinculin localized diffusely throughout the cell. Integrin containing tracks of variable intensity outline the regions where cells had resided before they detached from the substratum. At lower ATP concentrations (0.5-5 mM) the cells remain spread; however the focal adhesion components, including integrin, show an array of phenotypes ranging from diffusely localized throughout the cell to a localization in small, thin focal adhesions. Okadaic acid, a serine, threonine phosphatase inhibitor, enhances the contracted phenotype, even at low concentrations (0.5 mM) of ATP. The localization of focal adhesion components is different in okadaic acid-treated cells. In highly contracted cells, integrin is present in tracks where the cells resided before the contraction; however focal adhesions are no longer apparent. Talin, vinculin, and alpha-actinin localize in trabecular networks toward the periphery of the cell. Interestingly, phosphotyrosine staining as well as nascent, intracellular integrin precedes the recruitment of focal adhesion constituents into the trabecular network. The ATP-stimulated focal adhesion breakdown appears to operate through two mechanisms. First, ATP stimulates the tyrosine phosphorylation of several cytoskeletally associated proteins. These tyrosine phosphorylations correlated well with focal adhesion breakdown. Furthermore, addition of a recombinant, constitutively active tyrosine phosphatase inhibits both the tyrosine phosphorylations and the breakdown of the focal adhesions. None of the major tyrosine phosphoproteins are FAK, integrin, tensin, paxillin, or other phosphoproteins implicated in focal adhesion assembly. The second mechanism is cell contraction. High ATP concentrations, or lower ATP concentrations in the presence of okadaic acid induce cell contraction. Inhibiting the contraction by addition of a heptapeptide IRICRKG, which blocks the actin-myosin interaction, also inhibits focal adhesion breakdown. Neither the peptide nor the phosphatase inhibits focal adhesion breakdown under all conditions suggesting that both tension and tyrosine phosphorylations mediate the release of adhesions.  相似文献   

19.
《The Journal of cell biology》1995,129(4):1155-1164
The leukocyte adhesion molecule L-selectin mediates binding to lymph node high endothelial venules (HEV) and contributes to leukocyte rolling on endothelium at sites of inflammation. Previously, it was shown that truncation of the L-selectin cytoplasmic tail by 11 amino acids abolished binding to lymph node HEV and leukocyte rolling in vivo, but the molecular basis for that observation was not determined. This study examined potential interactions between L-selectin and cytoskeletal proteins. We found that the cytoplasmic domain of L- selectin interacts directly with the cytoplasmic actin-binding protein alpha-actinin and forms a complex with vinculin and possibly talin. Solid phase binding assays using the full-length L-selectin cytoplasmic domain bound to microtiter wells demonstrated direct, specific, and saturable binding of purified alpha-actinin to L-selectin (Kd = 550 nM), but no direct binding of purified talin or vinculin. Interestingly, talin potentiated binding of alpha-actinin to the L- selectin cytoplasmic domain peptide despite the fact that direct binding of talin to L-selectin could not be measured. Vinculin binding to the L-selectin cytoplasmic domain peptide was detectable only in the presence of alpha-actinin. L-selectin coprecipitated with a complex of cytoskeletal proteins including alpha-actinin and vinculin from cells transfected with L-selectin, consistent with the possibility that alpha- actinin binds directly to L-selectin and that vinculin associates by binding to alpha-actinin in vivo to link actin filaments to the L- selectin cytoplasmic domain. In contrast, a deletion mutant of L- selectin lacking the COOH-terminal 11 amino acids of the cytoplasmic domain failed to coprecipitate with alpha-actinin or vinculin. Surprisingly, this mutant L-selectin localized normally to the microvillar projections on the cell surface. These data suggest that the COOH-terminal 11 amino acids of the L-selectin cytoplasmic domain are required for mediating interactions with the actin cytoskeleton via a complex of alpha-actinin and vinculin, but that this portion of the cytoplasmic domain is not necessary for proper localization of L- selectin on the cell surface. Correct L-selectin receptor positioning is therefore insufficient for leukocyte adhesion mediated by L- selectin, suggesting that this adhesion may also require direct interactions with the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

20.
Dynamic interactions between the cytoskeleton and integrins control cell adhesion, but regulatory mechanisms remain largely undefined. Here, we tested the extent to which the autoinhibitory head-tail interaction (HTI) in vinculin regulates formation and lifetime of the talin-vinculin complex, a proposed mediator of integrin-cytoskeleton bonds. In an ectopic recruitment assay, mutational reduction of HTI drove assembly of talin-vinculin complexes, whereas ectopic complexes did not form between talin and wild-type vinculin. Moreover, reduction of HTI altered the dynamic assembly of vinculin and talin in focal adhesions. Using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, we show that the focal adhesion residency time of vinculin was enhanced up to 3-fold by HTI mutations. The slow dynamics of vinculin correlated with exposure of its cryptic talin-binding site, and a talin-binding site mutation rescued the dynamics of activated vinculin. Significantly, HTI-deficient vinculin inhibited the focal adhesion dynamics of talin, but not paxillin or alpha-actinin. These data show that talin conformation in cells permits vinculin binding, whereas the autoinhibited conformation of vinculin constitutes the barrier to complex formation. Down-regulation of HTI in vinculin to Kd approximately 10(-7) is sufficient to induce talin binding, and HTI is essential to the dynamics of vinculin and talin at focal adhesions. We therefore conclude that vinculin conformation, as modulated by the strength of HTI, directly regulates the formation and lifetime of talin-vinculin complexes in cells.  相似文献   

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