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1.
Hu H  Marton TF  Goodman CS 《Neuron》2001,32(1):39-51
Plexins are neuronal receptors for the repulsive axon guidance molecule Semaphorins. Previous studies showed that Plexin B (PlexB) binds directly to the active, GTP-bound form of the Rac GTPase. Here, we define a seven amino acid sequence in PlexB required for Rac(GTP) binding. The interaction of PlexB with Rac(GTP) is necessary for Plexin-mediated axon guidance in vivo. A different region of PlexB binds to RhoA. Dosage-sensitive genetic interactions suggest that PlexB suppresses Rac activity and enhances RhoA activity. Biochemical evidence indicates that PlexB sequesters Rac(GTP) from its downstream effector PAK. These results suggest a model whereby PlexB mediates repulsion by coordinately regulating two small GTPases in opposite directions: PlexB binds to Rac(GTP) and downregulates its output by blocking its access to PAK and, at the same time, binds to and increases the output of RhoA.  相似文献   

2.
Activin B belongs to the TGFβ family of growth factors and is upregulated in clear cell renal cell carcinoma cells by hypoxia inducible factors. Expression of Activin B is required for tumor growth in vivo and tumor cell invasion in vitro. Here we show that activation of RhoA signaling counteracts Activin B mediated disassembly of actin stress fibers, mesenchymal cell morphology and invasiveness, whereas inhibition of RhoA rescues these effects in Activin B knockdown cells. Conversely, Activin B inhibits RhoA signaling suggesting that there is an antagonistic connection between both pathways. In addition we found that Rac1 plays an opposite role to RhoA, i.e. activation of Rac1 initiates loss of actin stress fibers, promotes a mesenchymal cell morphology and induces invasion in Activin B knockown cells, whereas inhibition of Rac1 abolishes these Activin B effects. Collectively, our data provide evidence that reduction of RhoA signaling by Activin B together with persistent Rac1 activity is a prerequisite for inducing an invasive phenotype in clear cell renal cell carcinoma.  相似文献   

3.
Integrins and cadherins are transmembrane adhesion receptors that are necessary for cells to interact with the extracellular matrix or adjacent cells, respectively. Integrins and cadherins initiate signaling pathways that modulate the activity of Rho family GTPases. The Rho proteins Cdc42, Rac1, and RhoA regulate the actin cytoskeleton. Cdc42 and Rac1 are primarily involved in the formation of protrusive structures, while RhoA generates myosin-based contractility. Here we examine the differential regulation of RhoA, Cdc42, and Rac1 by integrin and cadherin signaling. Integrin and cadherin signaling leads to a decrease in RhoA activity and activation of Cdc42 and Rac1. When the normal RhoA suppression is antagonized or RhoA signaling is increased, cells exhibited impaired spreading on the matrix protein fibronectin and decreased cell-cell adhesion. Spreading on fibronectin and the formation of cell-cell adhesions is decreased in cells expressing dominant negative forms of Cdc42 or Rac1. These data demonstrate that integrins and cadherins regulate Rho proteins in a comparable manner and lead us to speculate that these changes in Rho protein activity participate in a feedback mechanism that promotes further cell-matrix or cell-cell interaction, respectively.  相似文献   

4.
Rhofamily GTPase signaling regulates actin cytoskeleton and junctionalcomplex assembly. Our previous work showed that RhoA signaling protectstight junctions from damage during ATP depletion. Here, we examinedwhether RhoA GTPase signaling protects adherens junction assemblyduring ATP depletion. Despite specific RhoA signaling- and ATPdepletion-induced effects on adherens junction assembly, RhoA signalingdid not alter adherens junction disassembly rates during ATP depletion.This shows that RhoA signaling specifically protects tight junctionsfrom damage during ATP depletion. Rac1 GTPase signaling also regulatesadherens junction assembly and therefore may regulate adherens junctionassembly during ATP depletion. Indeed, we found that Rac1 signalingprotects adherens junctions from damage during ATP depletion. Adherensjunctions are regulated by various GTPases, including RhoA and Rac1,but adherens junctions are specifically protected by Rac1 signaling.

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5.
Maintenance of intestinal epithelial barrier functions is crucial to prevent systemic contamination by microbes that penetrate from the gut lumen. GTPases of the Rho-family such as RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc42 are known to be critically involved in the regulation of intestinal epithelial barrier functions. However, it is still unclear whether inactivation or activation of these GTPases exerts barrier protection or not. We tested the effects of Rho GTPase activities on intestinal epithelial barrier functions by using the bacterial toxins cytotoxic necrotizing factor 1 (CNF-1), toxin B, C3 transferase (C3 TF), and lethal toxin (LT) in an in vitro model of the intestinal epithelial barrier. Incubation of cell monolayers with CNF-1 for 3 h induced exclusive activation of RhoA whereas Rac1 and Cdc42 activities were unchanged. As revealed by FITC-dextran flux and measurements of transepithelial electrical resistance (TER) intestinal epithelial permeability was significantly increased under these conditions. Inhibition of Rho kinase via Y27632 blocked barrier destabilization of CNF-1 after 3 h. In contrast, after 24 h of incubation with CNF-1 only Rac1 and Cdc42 but not RhoA were activated which resulted in intestinal epithelial barrier stabilization. Toxin B to inactivate RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc42 as well as Rac1 inhibitor LT increased intestinal epithelial permeability. Similar effects were observed after inhibition of RhoA/Rho kinase signaling by C3 TF or Y27632. Taken together, these data demonstrate that both activation and inactivation of RhoA signaling increased paracellular permeability whereas activation of Rac1 and Cdc42 correlated with stabilized barrier functions.  相似文献   

6.
7.
In PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells, nerve growth factor (NGF)-induced neuronal differentiation is blocked by constitutively active dominant mutants of RhoA but augmented by negative ones, suggesting a not yet elucidated inhibitory signaling link between NGF receptors and RhoA. Here we show that NGF treatment rapidly translocates RhoA from the plasma membrane to the cytosol and simultaneously decreases RhoA affinity to its target Rho-associated kinase (ROK), a key mediator of neurite outgrowth. This effect was transient, because after 2 days of NGF treatment, RhoA relocated from the cytosol to the plasma membrane, and its GTP loading returned to a level found in undifferentiated cells. Inhibition of RhoA is mediated by activation of the TrkA receptor, because NGF failed to induce RhoA translocation and inhibition of ROK binding in nnr5 cells that lack TrkA, whereas the inhibition was reconstituted in receptor add-back B5 cells. In MM17-26 cells, which due to expression of dominant negative Ras do not differentiate, NGF-stimulated transient RhoA inhibition was unaffected. The inhibitory pathway from TrkA to RhoA involves phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K), because the inhibitors LY294002 or wortmannin prevented NGF-induced RhoA translocation and increased RhoA association with ROK. Furthermore, inhibition of PI3K significantly reduced NGF- mediated Rac1 activation, whereas dominant negative Rac1 abolished the inhibitory signaling to RhoA. Taken together, these data indicate that NGF-mediated activation of TrkA receptor stimulates PI3K, which in turn increases Rac1 activity to induce transient RhoA inactivation during the initial phase of neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

8.
The Rho family small GTPases play a crucial role in mediating cellular responses to stretch. However, it remains unclear how force is transduced to Rho signaling pathways. We investigated the effect of stretch on the activation and caveolar localization of RhoA and Rac1 in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. In unstretched cardiomyocytes, RhoA and Rac1 were detected in both caveolar and non-caveolar fractions as assessed using detergent-free floatation analysis. Stretching myocytes for 4 min activated RhoA and Rac1. By 15 min of stretch, RhoA and Rac1 had dissociated from caveolae, and there was decreased coprecipitation of RhoA and Rac1 with caveolin-3. To determine whether compartmentation of RhoA and Rac1 within caveolae was necessary for stretch signaling, we disrupted caveolae with methyl beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD). Treatment with 5 mm MbetaCD for 1 h dissociated both RhoA and Rac1 from caveolae. Under this condition, stretch failed to activate RhoA or Rac1. Stretch-induced actin cytoskeletal organization was concomitantly impaired. Interestingly the ability of stretch to activate extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) was unaffected by MbetaCD treatment, but ERK translocation to the nucleus was impaired. Stretch-induced hypertrophy was also inhibited. Actin cytoskeletal disruption with cytochalasin-D also prevented stretch from increasing nuclear ERK, whereas actin polymerization with jasplakinolide restored nuclear translocation of activated ERK in the presence of MbetaCD. We suggest that activation of RhoA or Rac1, localized in a caveolar compartment, is essential for sensing externally applied force and transducing this signal to the actin cytoskeleton and ERK translocation.  相似文献   

9.
The Rac GTPase regulates Rho signaling in a broad range of physiological settings and in oncogenic transformation [1-3]. Here, we report a novel mechanism by which crosstalk between Rac and Rho GTPases is achieved. Activated Rac1 binds directly to p190B Rho GTPase-activating protein (RhoGAP), a major modulator of Rho signaling. p190B colocalizes with constitutively active Rac1 in membrane ruffles. Moreover, activated Rac1 is sufficient to recruit p190B into a detergent-insoluble membrane fraction, a process that is accompanied by a decrease in GTP-bound RhoA from membranes. p190B is recruited to the plasma membrane in response to integrin engagement [4]. We demonstrate that collagen type I, a potent inducer of Rac1-dependent cell motility in HeLa cells, counteracts cytoskeletal collapse resulting from overexpression of wild-type p190B, but not that resulting from overexpression of a p190B mutant specifically lacking the Rac1-binding sequence. Furthermore, this p190B mutant exhibits dramatically enhanced RhoGAP activity, consistent with a model whereby binding of Rac1 relieves autoinhibition of p190B RhoGAP function. Collectively, these observations establish that activated Rac1, through direct interaction with p190B, modulates subcellular RhoGAP localization and activity, thereby providing a novel mechanism for Rac control of Rho signaling in a broad range of physiological processes.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Protein prenylation is a post-translational modification whereby non-sterol isoprenoid lipid chains are added, thereby modifying the molecular partners with which proteins interact. The autoinflammatory disease mevalonate kinase deficiency (MKD) is characterized by a severe reduction in protein prenylation. A major class of proteins that are affected are small GTPases, including Rac1 and RhoA. It is not clear how protein prenylation of small GTPases relates to GTP hydrolysis activity and downstream signaling. Here, we investigated the contribution of RhoA prenylation to the biochemical pathways that underlie MKD-associated IL-1β hypersecretion using human cell cultures, Rac1 and RhoA protein variants, and pharmacological inhibitors. We found that when unprenylated, the GTP-bound levels of RhoA decrease, causing a reduction in GTPase activity and increased protein kinase B (PKB) phosphorylation. Cells expressing unprenylated RhoA produce increased levels of interleukin 1β mRNA. Of other phenotypic cellular changes seen in MKD, increased mitochondrial potential and mitochondrial elongation, only mitochondrial elongation was observed. Finally, we show that pharmacological inactivation of RhoA boosts Rac1 activity, a small GTPase whose activity was earlier implied in MKD pathogenesis. Together, our data show that RhoA plays a pivotal role in MKD pathogenesis through Rac1/PKB signaling toward interleukin 1β production and elucidate the effects of protein prenylation in monocytes.  相似文献   

12.
Integrin-mediated adhesion is a critical regulator of cell migration. Here we demonstrate that integrin-mediated adhesion to high fibronectin concentrations induces a stop signal for cell migration by inhibiting cell polarization and protrusion. On fibronectin, the stop signal is generated through alpha 5 beta 1 integrin-mediated signaling to the Rho family of GTPases. Specifically, Cdc42 and Rac1 activation exhibits a biphasic dependence on fibronectin concentration that parallels optimum cell polarization and protrusion. In contrast, RhoA activity increases with increasing substratum concentration. We find that cross talk between Cdc42 and Rac1 is required for substratum-stimulated protrusion, whereas RhoA activity is inhibitory. We also show that Cdc42 activity is inhibited by Rac1 activation, suggesting that Rac1 activity may down-regulate Cdc42 activity and promote the formation of stabilized rather than transient protrusion. Furthermore, expression of RhoA down-regulates Cdc42 and Rac1 activity, providing a mechanism whereby RhoA may inhibit cell polarization and protrusion. These findings implicate adhesion-dependent signaling as a mechanism to stop cell migration by regulating cell polarity and protrusion via the Rho family of GTPases.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Rho family small GTPases (Rac, RhoA, and Cdc42) function at the core of cytokinesis, the physical division of one cell into two. In this issue, Bastos et al. (2012. J. Cell Biol. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201204107) identify a new role for Rac inhibition: to release cell adhesion at the division plane and allow efficient constriction of the contractile ring. They show that the GTPase-activating protein, CYK4, suppresses equatorial cell substrate adhesion by inhibiting Rac and therefore its effectors ARFGEF7 and PAK1/2.  相似文献   

15.
Rho-like GTPases orchestrate distinct cytoskeletal changes in response to receptor stimulation. Invasion of T-lymphoma cells into a fibroblast monolayer is induced by Tiam1, an activator of the Rho-like GTPase Rac, and by constitutively active V12Rac1. Here we show that activated V12Cdc42 can also induce invasion of T-lymphoma cells. Activated RhoA potentiates invasion, but fails by itself to mimic Rac and Cdc42. However, invasion is inhibited by the Rho-inactivating C3 transferase. Thus, RhoA is required but not sufficient for invasion. Invasion of T-lymphoma cells is critically dependent on the presence of serum. Serum can be replaced by the serum-borne lipids lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) (10(-7)-10(-6) M), which act on distinct G protein-linked receptors to activate RhoA and phospholipase C (PLC)-Ca2+ signaling. LPA- and S1P-induced invasion is preceded by Rho-dependent F-actin redistribution and pseudopodia formation. However, expression of both V14RhoA and V12Rac1 does not bypass the LPA/S1P requirement for invasion, indicating involvement of an additional signaling pathway independent of RhoA. The PLC inhibitor U-73122, but not the inactive analog U-73343, abolishes invasion. Our results indicate that T-lymphoma invasion is driven by Tiam1/Rac or Cdc42 activation, and is dependent on LPA/S1P receptor-mediated RhoA and PLC signaling pathways which lead to pseudopod formation and enhanced infiltration.  相似文献   

16.
Although substantial evidence supports a critical role for the activation of Raf-1 and mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) in oncogenic Ras-mediated transformation, recent evidence suggests that Ras may activate a second signaling pathway which involves the Ras-related proteins Rac1 and RhoA. Consequently, we used three complementary approaches to determine the contribution of Rac1 and RhoA function to oncogenic Ras-mediated transformation. First, whereas constitutively activated mutants of Rac1 and RhoA showed very weak transforming activity when transfected alone, their coexpression with a weakly transforming Raf-1 mutant caused a greater than 35-fold enhancement of transforming activity. Second, we observed that coexpression of dominant negative mutants of Rac1 and RhoA reduced oncogenic Ras transforming activity. Third, activated Rac1 and RhoA further enhanced oncogenic Ras-triggered morphologic transformation, as well as growth in soft agar and cell motility. Finally, we also observed that kinase-deficient MAPKs inhibited Ras transformation. Taken together, these data support the possibility that oncogenic Ras activation of Rac1 and RhoA, coupled with activation of the Raf/MAPK pathway, is required to trigger the full morphogenic and mitogenic consequences of oncogenic Ras transformation.  相似文献   

17.
Type III group B streptococcus (GBS) has been shown to invade human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMEC), which constitute the blood-brain barrier, but the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. In the present study, we showed that the geranylgeranyl transferase I inhibitor, GGTI-298, not the farnesyltransferase inhibitor, FTI-277 inhibited type III GBS invasion of HBMEC. The substrates for GGTI-298 include Rho family GTPases, and we showed that RhoA and Rac1 are involved in type III GBS invasion of HBMEC. This was shown by the demonstration that infection with type III GBS strain K79 increased the levels of activated RhoA and Rac1 and GBS invasion was inhibited in HBMEC expressing dominant-negative RhoA and Rac1. Of interest, the level of activated Rac1 in response to type III GBS was decreased in HBMEC expressing dominant-negative RhoA, while the level of activated RhoA was not affected by dominant-negative Rac1. These findings indicate for the first time that activation of geranylgeranylated proteins including RhoA and Rac1 is involved in type III GBS invasion of HBMEC and RhoA is upstream of Rac1 in GBS invasion of HBMEC.  相似文献   

18.
Hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced changes in endothelial permeability are accompanied by endothelial actin cytoskeletal and adherens junction remodeling, but the mechanisms involved are uncertain. We therefore measured the activities of the Rho GTPases Rac1, RhoA, and Cdc42 during hypoxia/reoxygenation and correlated them with changes in endothelial permeability, remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton and adherens junctions, and production of ROS. Dominant negative forms of Rho GTPases were introduced into cells by adenoviral gene transfer and transfection, and inhibitors of NADPH oxidase, PI3 kinase, and Rho kinase were used to characterize the signaling pathways involved. In some experiments constitutively activated forms of RhoA and Rac1 were also used. We show for the first time that hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced changes in endothelial permeability result from coordinated actions of the Rho GTPases Rac1 and RhoA. Rac1 and RhoA rapidly respond to changes in oxygen tension, and their activity depends on NADPH oxidase- and PI3 kinase-dependent production of ROS. Rac1 acts upstream of RhoA, and its transient inhibition by acute hypoxia leads to activation of RhoA followed by stress fiber formation, dispersion of adherens junctions, and increased endothelial permeability. Reoxygenation strongly activates Rac1 and restores cortical localization of F-actin and VE-cadherin. This effect is a result of Rac1-mediated inhibition of RhoA and can be prevented by activators of RhoA, L63RhoA, and lysophosphatidic acid. Cdc42 activation follows the RhoA pattern of activation but has no effect on actin remodeling, junctional integrity, or endothelial permeability. Our results show that Rho GTPases act as mediators coupling cellular redox state to endothelial function.  相似文献   

19.
Plexins represent a novel family of transmembrane receptors that transduce attractive and repulsive signals mediated by the axon-guiding molecules semaphorins. Emerging evidence implicates Rho GTPases in these biological events. However, Plexins lack any known catalytic activity in their conserved cytoplasmic tails, and how they transduce signals from semaphorins to Rho is still unknown. Here we show that Plexin B2 associates directly with two members of a recently identified family of Dbl homology/pleckstrin homology containing guanine nucleotide exchange factors for Rho, PDZ-RhoGEF, and Leukemia-associated Rho GEF (LARG). This physical interaction is mediated by their PDZ domains and a PDZ-binding motif found only in Plexins of the B family. In addition, we show that ligand-induced dimerization of Plexin B is sufficient to stimulate endogenous RhoA potently and to induce the reorganization of the cytoskeleton. Moreover, overexpression of the PDZ domain of PDZ-RhoGEF but not its regulator of G protein signaling domain prevents cell rounding and neurite retraction of differentiated PC12 cells induced by activation of endogenous Plexin B1 by semaphorin 4D. The association of Plexins with LARG and PDZ-RhoGEF thus provides a direct molecular mechanism by which semaphorins acting on Plexin B can control Rho, thereby regulating the actin-cytoskeleton during axonal guidance and cell migration.  相似文献   

20.
RhoA and Rac1 have been implicated in the mechanism of CCK-induced amylase secretion from pancreatic acini. In all cell types studied to date, inactive Rho GTPases are present in the cytosol bound to the guanine nucleotide dissociation inhibitor RhoGDI. Here, we identified the switch mechanism regulating RhoGDI1-Rho GTPase dissociation and RhoA translocation upon CCK stimulation in pancreatic acini. We found that both Gα13 and PKC, independently, regulate CCK-induced RhoA translocation and that the PKC isoform involved is PKCα. Both RhoGDI1 and RhoGDI3, but not RhoGDI2, are expressed in pancreatic acini. Cytosolic RhoA and Rac1 are associated with RhoGDI1, and CCK-stimulated PKCα activation releases the complex. Overexpression of RhoGDI1, by binding RhoA, inhibits its activation, and thereby, CCK-induced apical amylase secretion. RhoA translocation is also inhibited by RhoGDI1. Inactive Rac1 influences CCK-induced RhoA activation by preventing RhoGDI1 from binding RhoA. By mutational analysis we found that CCK-induced PKCα phosphorylation on RhoGDI1 at Ser96 releases RhoA and Rac1 from RhoGDI1 to facilitate Rho GTPases signaling.  相似文献   

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