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1.
During melanoma cell extravasation through the vascular endothelium, melanoma cells interact with endothelial cells through secretion of cytokines and by adhesion between proteins displayed on opposing cell surfaces. How these tumor cell associated signals together regulate the dynamics of intracellular signaling pathways within endothelial cells leading to endothelial cell-cell junction disruption is not well understood. Here, we used a combination of experimental and computational approaches to examine the individual and combined effects of activation of the vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1, interleukin (IL)-8, and IL-1β signaling pathways on the integrity of vascular junctions. Our simulations predict a multifaceted interplay of signaling resulting from individual activation of VCAM-1, IL-8 and IL-1β pathways that is neither synergistic nor additive compared to all inputs turned on simultaneously. Furthermore, we show that the levels of phosphorylated proteins associated with actinomyosin contractility and junction disassembly peak prior to those related to actin remodeling. The results of this work provide insight into the dynamics of tumor-mediated endothelial junction disassembly and suggest that targeting proteins downstream of several interaction pathways may be the most effective therapeutic approach to reduce melanoma extravasation.  相似文献   

2.
Endothelial adherens junctions are critical for physiological and pathological processes such as differentiation, maintenance of entire monolayer integrity, and the remodeling. The endothelial-specific VE-cadherin/catenin complex provides the backbone of adherens junctions and acts in close interaction with actin filaments and actin/myosin-mediated contractility to fulfill the junction demands. The functional connection between the cadherin/catenin complex and actin filaments might be either directly through α-catenins, or indirectly e.g., via linker proteins such as vinculin, p120ctn, α-actinin, or EPLIN. However, both junction integrity and dynamic remodeling have to be contemporarily coordinated. The actin-related protein complex ARP2/3 and its activating molecules, such as N-WASP and WAVE, have been shown to regulate the lammellipodia-mediated formation of cell junctions in both epithelium and endothelium. Recent reports now demonstrate a novel aspect of the ARP2/3 complex and the nucleating-promoting factors in the maintenance of endothelial barrier function and junction remodeling of established endothelial cell junctions. Those mechanisms open novel possibilities; not only in fulfilling physiological demands but obtained information may be of critical importance in pathologies such as wound healing, angiogenesis, inflammation, and cell diapedesis.  相似文献   

3.
Endothelial adherens junctions are critical for physiological and pathological processes such as differentiation, maintenance of entire monolayer integrity, and the remodeling. The endothelial-specific VE-cadherin/catenin complex provides the backbone of adherens junctions and acts in close interaction with actin filaments and actin/myosin-mediated contractility to fulfill the junction demands. The functional connection between the cadherin/catenin complex and actin filaments might be either directly through α-catenins, or indirectly e.g., via linker proteins such as vinculin, p120ctn, α-actinin, or EPLIN. However, both junction integrity and dynamic remodeling have to be contemporarily coordinated. The actin-related protein complex ARP2/3 and its activating molecules, such as N-WASP and WAVE, have been shown to regulate the lammellipodia-mediated formation of cell junctions in both epithelium and endothelium. Recent reports now demonstrate a novel aspect of the ARP2/3 complex and the nucleating-promoting factors in the maintenance of endothelial barrier function and junction remodeling of established endothelial cell junctions. Those mechanisms open novel possibilities; not only in fulfilling physiological demands but obtained information may be of critical importance in pathologies such as wound healing, angiogenesis, inflammation, and cell diapedesis.  相似文献   

4.
Correct cellular patterning is central to tissue morphogenesis, but the role of epithelial junctions in this process is not well-understood. The Drosophila pupal eye provides a sensitive and accessible model for testing the role of junction-associated proteins in cells that undergo dynamic and coordinated movements during development. Mutations in polychaetoid (pyd), the Drosophila homologue of Zonula Occludens-1, are characterized by two phenotypes visible in the adult fly: increased sensory bristle number and the formation of a rough eye produced by poorly arranged ommatidia. We found that Pyd was localized to the adherens junction in cells of the developing pupal retina. Reducing Pyd function in the pupal eye resulted in mis-patterning of the interommatidial cells and a failure to consistently switch cone cell contacts from an anterior-posterior to an equatorial-polar orientation. Levels of Roughest, DE-Cadherin and several other adherens junction-associated proteins were increased at the membrane when Pyd protein was reduced. Further, both over-expression and mutations in several junction-associated proteins greatly enhanced the patterning defects caused by reduction of Pyd. Our results suggest that Pyd modulates adherens junction strength and Roughest-mediated preferential cell adhesion.  相似文献   

5.
The cell-cell adherens junction is a site for cadherin-mediated cell adhesion where actin filaments are densely associated with the plasma membrane through its well-developed plasmalemmal undercoat. Recent research has focused on the molecular linkage between cadherins and actin filaments in the undercoat of adherens junctions in order to understand the functions of these undercoat-constitutive proteins in the regulation and signal transduction of cadherin-based cell adhesion.  相似文献   

6.
Clostridium sordellii lethal toxin (LT) is a glucosyltransferase which inactivates small GTPases from the Rho and Ras families. In the present work, we studied the effects of two variants, LT82 and LT9048, on the integrity of epithelial cell barrier using polarized MCCD (Mouse Cortical Collecting Duct) and MDCK (Madin-Darby Canine Kidney) cells. Our results demonstrate for the first time that LTs have very limited effects on tight junctions. In contrast, we show that both toxins modified the paracellular permeability within 2-4 h. Concomitantly LT82 and LT9048 induced a disorganization of basolateral actin filaments, without modifying apical actin. Both toxins mainly altered adherens junctions by removing E-cadherin-catenin complexes from the membrane to the cytosol. Similar effects on adherens junctions have been observed with other toxins, which directly or indirectly depolymerize actin. Thereby, Rac, a common substrate of both LTs, might play a central role in LT-dependent adherens junction alteration. Here, we show that adherens junction perturbation induced by LTs results neither from a direct effect of toxins on adherens junction proteins nor from an actin-independent Rac pathway, but rather from a Rac-dependent disorganization of basolateral actin cytoskeleton. This further supports that a dynamic equilibrium of cortical actin filaments is essential for functional E-cadherin organization in epithelia.  相似文献   

7.
Vectorial transport in the thyroid epithelium requires an efficient barrier against passive paracellular flux, a role which is principally performed by the tight junction (zonula occludens). There is increasing evidence that tight junction integrity is determined by integral and peripheral membrane proteins which interact with the cell cytoskeleton. Although the contribution of the actin cytoskeleton to tight junction physiology has been intensively studied, less is known about possible interactions with microtubules. In the present study we used electrophysiological and immunohistochemical approaches to investigate the contribution of microtubules to the paracellular barrier in cultured thyroid cell monolayers which displayed a high transepithelial electrical resistance (6000-9000 ohm · cm2). Colchicine (1 μM) caused a progressive fall in electrical resistance to <10% of baseline after 6 h and depolarization of the transepithelial electrical potential difference consistent with a significant increase in paracellular permeability. The effect of colchicine on TER was not affected by agents which inhibit the major apical conductances of thyroid cells but was reversed upon removal of the drug. Immunofluorescent staining for tubulin combined with confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated that thyroid cells possessed a dense microtubule network extending throughout the cytoplasm which was destroyed by colchicine. Colchicine also produced changes in the localization of the tight junction-associated protein, ZO-1: its normally continuous junctional distribution was disrupted by striking discontinuities and the appearance of many fine strands which extended into the cytoplasm. A similar disruption in E-cadherin staining was also observed, but colchicine did not affect the distribution of vinculin associated with adherens junctions nor the integrity of the perijunctional actin ring. We conclude that microtubules are necessary for the functional and structural integrity of tight junctions in this electrically tight, transporting epithelium.  相似文献   

8.
Adaptors, junction dynamics, and spermatogenesis   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Adaptors are component proteins of junctional complexes in all epithelia, including the seminiferous epithelium of the mammalian testis. They recruit other regulatory and structural proteins to the site of both anchoring junctions (such as cell-cell actin-based adherens junctions [AJs], e.g., ectoplasmic specialization [ES] and tubulobulbar complex, which are both testis-specific cell-cell actin-based AJ types, and cell-cell intermediate filament-based desmosome-like junctions) and tight junctions (TJ). Furthermore, adaptors per se can be substrates and/or activators of kinases or phosphatases. As such, the integrity of cell junctions and the regulation of junction dynamics during spermatogenesis rely on adaptors for their ability to recruit and link different junctional components to the same site and to tether transmembrane proteins at both anchoring and TJ sites to the underlying cytoskeletons, such as the actin filaments, intermediate filaments, and microtubules. These protein-protein interactions are possible because adaptors are composed of conserved protein binding domains, which allow them to link to more than one structural or signaling protein, recruiting multi-protein complexes to the same site. Herein, we provide a timely review of adaptors recently found at the sites of AJ (e.g., ES) and TJ. In addition, several in vivo models that can be used to delineate the function of adaptors in the testis are described, and the role of adaptors in regulating junction dynamics pertinent to spermatogenesis is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
《Biophysical journal》2022,121(4):596-606
Adherens junctions physically link two cells at their contact interface via extracellular binding between cadherin molecules and intracellular interactions between cadherins and the actin cytoskeleton. Cadherin and actomyosin cytoskeletal dynamics are regulated reciprocally by mechanical and chemical signals, which subsequently determine the strength of cell-cell adhesions and the emergent organization and stiffness of the tissues they form. However, an understanding of the integrated system is lacking. We present a new mechanistic computational model of intercellular junction maturation in a cell doublet to investigate the mechanochemical cross talk that regulates adherens junction formation and homeostasis. The model couples a two-dimensional lattice-based simulation of cadherin dynamics with a reaction-diffusion representation of the reorganising actomyosin network through its regulation by Rho signalling at the intracellular junction. We demonstrate that local immobilization of cadherin induces cluster formation in a cis-less-dependent manner. We then recapitulate the process of cell-cell contact formation. Our model suggests that cortical tension applied on the contact rim can explain the ring distribution of cadherin and actin filaments (F-actin) on the cell-cell contact of the cell doublet. Furthermore, we propose and test the hypothesis that cadherin and F-actin interact like a positive feedback loop, which is necessary for formation of the ring structure. Different patterns of cadherin distribution were observed as an emergent property of disturbances of this positive feedback loop. We discuss these findings in light of available experimental observations on underlying mechanisms related to cadherin/F-actin binding and the mechanical environment.  相似文献   

10.
The regulation of adherens junction formation in cells of mesenchymal lineage is of critical importance in tumorigenesis but is poorly characterized. As actin filaments are crucial components of adherens junction assembly, we studied the role of gelsolin, a calcium-dependent, actin severing protein, in the formation of N-cadherin-mediated intercellular adhesions. With a homotypic, donor-acceptor cell model and plates or beads coated with recombinant N-cadherin-Fc chimeric protein, we found that gelsolin spatially co-localizes to, and is transiently associated with, cadherin adhesion complexes. Fibroblasts from gelsolin-null mice exhibited marked reductions in kinetics and strengthening of N-cadherin-dependent junctions when compared with wild-type cells. Experiments with lanthanum chloride (250 microm) showed that adhesion strength was dependent on entry of calcium ions subsequent to N-cadherin ligation. Cadherin-associated gelsolin severing activity was required for localized actin assembly as determined by rhodamine actin monomer incorporation onto actin barbed ends at intercellular adhesion sites. Scanning electron microscopy showed that gelsolin was an important determinant of actin filament architecture of adherens junctions at nascent N-cadherin-mediated contacts. These data indicate that increased actin barbed end generation by the severing activity of gelsolin associated with N-cadherin regulates intercellular adhesion strength.  相似文献   

11.
During epithelial sheet formation, linear actin cables assemble at nascent adherens junctions. This process requires alpha-catenin and actin polymerization, although the underlying mechanism is poorly understood. Here, we show that formin-1 interacts with alpha-catenin, localizes to adherens junctions and nucleates unbranched actin filaments. Furthermore, disruption of the alpha-catenin-formin-1 interaction blocks assembly of radial actin cables and perturbs intercellular adhesion. A fusion protein of the beta-catenin-binding domain of alpha-catenin with the actin polymerization domains of formin-1 rescues formation of adherens junctions and associated actin cables in alpha-catenin-null keratinocytes. These findings provide new insight into how alpha-catenin orchestrates actin dynamics during intercellular junction formation.  相似文献   

12.
Basal-to-apical cadherin flow at cell junctions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Stable cell-cell adhesion is essential for maintaining tissue integrity, but cells are also able to relocate, implying the existence of mechanisms for coordinating cell adhesion and movement. Here, we show that, in some transformed lines, cadherin adhesion molecules exhibit a flow-like movement in a basal-apical direction at the cell junction and that this flow is associated with reorganizing actin filaments. Such flow also occurs in normal epithelial sheets, but solely at the junctions formed by moving cells. We propose that cadherin flow may provide a mechanism for facilitating the sliding of the two contacting cell membranes in morphogenetically active cell sheets.  相似文献   

13.
Plakins are cytoskeletal linker proteins initially thought to interact exclusively with intermediate filaments (IFs), but recently were found to associate additionally with actin and microtubule networks. Here, we report on ACF7, a mammalian orthologue of the Drosophila kakapo plakin genetically involved in epidermal-muscle adhesion and neuromuscular junctions. While ACF7/kakapo is divergent from other plakins in its IF-binding domain, it has at least one actin (K(d) = 0.35 microM) and one microtubule (K(d) approximately 6 microM) binding domain. Similar to its fly counterpart, ACF7 is expressed in the epidermis. In well spread epidermal keratinocytes, ACF7 discontinuously decorates the cytoskeleton at the cell periphery, including microtubules (MTs) and actin filaments (AFs) that are aligned in parallel converging at focal contacts. Upon calcium induction of intercellular adhesion, ACF7 and the cytoskeleton reorganize at cell-cell borders but with different kinetics from adherens junctions and desmosomes. Treatments with cytoskeletal depolymerizing drugs reveal that ACF7's cytoskeletal association is dependent upon the microtubule network, but ACF7 also appears to stabilize actin at sites where microtubules and microfilaments meet. We posit that ACF7 may function in microtubule dynamics to facilitate actin-microtubule interactions at the cell periphery and to couple the microtubule network to cellular junctions. These attributes provide a clear explanation for the kakapo mutant phenotype in flies.  相似文献   

14.
VE-cadherin is the predominant adhesion molecule in vascular endothelial cells being responsible for maintenance of the endothelial barrier function by forming adhesive contacts (adherens junctions) to neighbouring cells. We found by use of single molecule fluorescence microscopy that VE-cadherin is localised in preformed clusters when not inside adherens junctions. These clusters depend on the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton and are localised in cholesterol rich microdomains of mature endothelial cells as found by membrane fractionation. The ability to form and maintain VE-cadherin based junctions was probed using the laser tweezer technique, and we found that cholesterol depletion has dramatical effects on VE-cadherin mediated adhesion. While a 30% reduction of the cholesterol-level results in an increase of adhesion, excessive cholesterol depletion by about 60% leads to an almost complete loss of VE-cadherin function. Nevertheless, the cadherin concentration in the membrane and the single molecule kinetic parameters of the cadherin are not changed. Our results suggest that the actin cytoskeleton, junction-associated proteins and protein–lipid assemblies in cholesterol-rich microdomains mutually stabilise each other to form functional adhesion contacts.  相似文献   

15.
The blood-testis barrier (BTB) separates the seminiferous epithelium into the apical and basal compartments. The BTB has to operate timely and accurately to ensure the correct migration of germ cells, meanwhile maintaining the immunological barrier. Testin was first characterized from primary Sertoli cells, it is a secretory protein and a sensitive biomarker to monitor junctions between Sertoli and germ cells. Till now, the functions of testin on BTB dynamics and the involving mechanisms are unknown. Herein, testin acts as a regulatory protein on BTB integrity. In vitro testin knockdown by RNAi caused significant damage to the Sertoli cell barrier with no apparent changes in the protein levels of several major tight junction (TJ), adhesion junction, and gap junction proteins. Also, testin RNAi caused the diffusion of two TJ structural proteins, occludin and ZO-1, diffusing away from the Sertoli cell surface into the cytoplasm. Association and colocalization between ZO-1 and occludin were decreased after testin RNAi, examined by Co-IP and coimmunofluorescent staining, respectively. Furthermore, testin RNAi induced a dramatic disruption on the arrangement of actin filament bundles and a reduced F-actin/G-actin ratio. The actin regulatory protein ARP3 appeared at the Sertoli cell interface after testin RNAi without its protein level change, whereas overexpressing testin in Sertoli cells showed no effect on TJ barrier integrity. The above findings suggest that besides as a monitor for Sertoli-germ cell junction integrity, testin is also an essential molecule to maintain Sertoli–Sertoli junctions.  相似文献   

16.
Cadherin-mediated cell–cell adhesion is required for epithelial tissue integrity in homeostasis, during development, and in tissue repair. E-cadherin stability depends on F-actin, but the mechanisms regulating actin polymerization at cell–cell junctions remain poorly understood. Here we investigated a role for formin-mediated actin polymerization at cell–cell junctions. We identify mDia1 and Fmnl3 as major factors enhancing actin polymerization and stabilizing E-cadherin at epithelial junctions. Fmnl3 localizes to adherens junctions downstream of Src and Cdc42 and its depletion leads to a reduction in F-actin and E-cadherin at junctions and a weakening of cell–cell adhesion. Of importance, Fmnl3 expression is up-regulated and junctional localization increases during collective cell migration. Depletion of Fmnl3 or mDia1 in migrating monolayers results in dissociation of leader cells and impaired wound repair. In summary, our results show that formin activity at epithelial cell–cell junctions is important for adhesion and the maintenance of epithelial cohesion during dynamic processes, such as wound repair.  相似文献   

17.
Mutations in the genes that encode Connexin 26 (GJB2) and Connexin 30 (GJB6) are the most common known cause of hereditary nonsyndromic sensorineural deafness. Cx26 and Cx30 share a similar protein structure, as well as the same expression distribution pattern in the cochlea. Cx26 has different intracellular trafficking properties compared to those of Cx43 and Cx32, whose trafficking manner is consistent with the classical membrane protein secretory pathway. Until now, however, the trafficking patterns of Cx30 have not been studied. By means of an immunofluorescence staining approach, we found that the targeting of Cx30 to gap junctions in transfected HeLa cells is not affected by brefeldin A, suggesting a Golgi-independent feature, similar to Cx26. Nocodazole had a minimal effect on assembly and distribution of Cx30 gap junctions. Cytochalasin B-induced actin filament depolymerization, however, affected both the pattern and the distribution of Cx30 gap junctions. Co-localization with and/or interaction between Cx30 and microtubules and cortical actin filaments, but not with the tight/adherens junction protein ZO-1, was confirmed by immunofluorescence and/or immunoprecipitation methods. The results suggest that the cytoskeleton, and especially actin filaments, are important components in the processes of assembly, trafficking and stabilization of Cx30 gap junctions.  相似文献   

18.
Vascular endothelium (VE), the monolayer of endothelial cells that lines the vascular tree, undergoes damage at the basis of some vascular diseases. Its integrity is maintained by VE-cadherin, an adhesive receptor localized at cell-cell junctions. Here, we show that VE-cadherin is also located at the tip and along filopodia in sparse or subconfluent endothelial cells. We observed that VE-cadherin navigates along intrafilopodial actin filaments. We found that the actin motor protein myosin-X is colocalized and moves synchronously with filopodial VE-cadherin. Immunoprecipitation and pulldown assays confirmed that myosin-X is directly associated with the VE-cadherin complex. Furthermore, expression of a dominant-negative mutant of myosin-X revealed that myosin-X is required for VE-cadherin export to cell edges and filopodia. These features indicate that myosin-X establishes a link between the actin cytoskeleton and VE-cadherin, thereby allowing VE-cadherin transportation along intrafilopodial actin cables. In conclusion, we propose that VE-cadherin trafficking along filopodia using myosin-X motor protein is a prerequisite for cell-cell junction formation. This mechanism may have functional consequences for endothelium repair in pathological settings.The endothelium is composed of a monolayer of endothelial cells that lines the vascular tree. Hemodynamic forces, immune-mediated mechanisms, or drug ingestion can injure the endothelium (35). These types of damage are frequently accompanied by a loss of endothelium integrity, an increase in vascular permeability, and possibly by a detachment of endothelial cells from vascular walls (14). These alterations can be circumvented by initiating rapid repair mechanisms that reestablish endothelium integrity and consequently reduce the extent of vascular diseases. The molecular mechanisms at the basis of the endothelium repair process remain elusive, but it can be assumed that the reconstitution of endothelium integrity requires cell-cell junction rebuilding.In the endothelium, intercellular adherence is maintained by tight and adherens junctions. Adherens junctions are particularly crucial in controlling the formation and maintenance of interendothelial adhesion and constitute dynamic structures that undergo remodeling in migrating as well as resting cells (31). They are essentially composed of vascular endothelial-cadherin (VE-Cad) (22), an adhesive receptor able to elaborate homophilic/homotypic interactions via its extracellular domain and to recruit, through its cytoplasmic tail, partners such as α-, β-, and γ-catenins and p120 (1). Catenins, in turn, promote the association of the adherens junction with the actin cytoskeleton, another player regulating vascular endothelial barrier function, by molecular mechanisms that are incompletely defined (8). Although there is a general agreement about the critical role played by actin filaments in the maintenance of mature cell-cell junctions (27, 41), their precise role in the elaboration of premature adherens junctions is poorly understood. Some studies indicate that cells form intercellular junctions by a dynamic process driven by actin polymerization (38). It was proposed but, to our knowledge not firmly demonstrated, that cell-cell junction formation is initiated by the production of filopodia emanating from neighboring cells (3, 30, 39, 42). Filopodia lead to the elaboration of puncta, which correspond to microdomains where cadherin molecules concentrate together with their intracellular partners (3). These puncta spatially coincide with cell membrane attachment sites for actin filaments (2). The mechanism by which puncta are elaborated remains to be elucidated.Filopodia are highly dynamic structures filled with bundles of linear actin filaments (15). Their protrusion is driven by actin polymerization taking place at filament barbed ends that are mainly located at filopodium tips (24). The precise mechanisms of the nucleation and elongation of filopodia are controversial. In fact, two mechanisms for their formation have been proposed, each using different sets of actin-regulating proteins. According to the “convergent elongation model,” filopodia are continuously initiated by the elongation of preexisting lamellipodial actin filaments (34). This remodeling of actin filaments should require the branching activity of Arp2/3 (29), the F-actin-bundling activity of fascin along filopodium shafts and the anticapping activity of Ena/VASP at the barbed ends of actin filaments (4). In the opposing model, it was proposed that some members of the formin family such as Dia2 perform all these activities (17). Indeed, in vitro, Dia2 nucleates linear actin filaments, accelerates actin polymerization, and protects barbed ends from capping proteins, thus slowing actin depolymerization (7, 17). Additionally, new players such as myosin-X (MyoX), able to induce filopodium formation, have been recently discovered.Here, using cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), we show that VE-cadherin is not exclusively located at cell-cell junctions but is also present along and at the tip of filopodia in sparse endothelial cells. By video microscopy, we observed that VE-cadherin migrates along filopodia in forward and backward movements. We hypothesized that motor proteins of the myosin family may be involved in the VE-cadherin transportation along filopodia. We considered MyoX as a potential candidate for promoting VE-cadherin trafficking.Myosins participate in a range of diverse cellular processes such as cell migration, membrane trafficking, and formation of cellular protrusions. They share conserved structural features such as a motor domain located at their N termini that can bind to actin filaments and hydrolyze ATP to produce movement and force. At their C termini, members of the unconventional myosin family such as myosin-VII, -X, -XII, and -XV exhibit a myosin tail homology 4 domain (MyTH4) followed by a FERM (band 4.1 protein, ezrin, radixin, and moesin) domain that confers upon them with the ability to perform unique cellular functions (6). A fascinating feature of MyoX is that it uses its motor activity to move along the intrafilopodial actin filaments. This probably allows MyoX to carry cargoes along filopodia. Potential cargoes are the β-chains of integrins, recently reported to directly interact with the FERM domain of MyoX (43), and Mena/VASP, which is synchronously transported with MyoX toward the tip or the base of filopodia (36). In addition to its motor and transport functions, MyoX also promotes the formation of filopodia (5, 9, 37). Hence, MyoX overexpression stimulates filopodium growth (5), whereas its knockdown decreases filopodium formation (9, 28, 37).Herein, we discovered that MyoX is colocalized with VE-cadherin in filopodia and moves synchronously with it. Using immunoprecipitation (IP) experiments and pulldown assays, we demonstrated that MyoX interacts with the VE-Cad-catenin complex. Our data thus support a role of MyoX in the transportation of VE-cadherin along intrafilopodial actin. The forward MyoX-mediated transport facilitates the accumulation of VE-Cad at the tips of filopodia, where VE-Cad can interact with partners of adjacent cells, thus establishing preliminary cell-cell contacts. Formation of these early cell-cell contacts can be inhibited by blocking MyoX transport capacity. At filopodium tips, VE-Cad linked to MyoX, but not engaged in homophilic interactions, may also be transported backwards to the cell body by the actin retrograde flow. Once at the lamellipodium edge, VE-Cad can be picked up again by newly formed filopodia. Our data suggest that MyoX-mediated transport of the VE-Cad-catenin complex along filopodia is a key event required for the early steps of formation of cell-cell contacts, a process that may be of functional importance in endothelium repair and angiogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
Ca2+ dependence of tight junction structure has been well documented in cultured epithelial tissues, and regulatory mechanisms have been identified. To analyse the possible control exerted on inter-Sertoli junctions, we exposed guinea-pig seminiferous tubules to the presence of a Ca2+ chelator (EGTA) and to a calmodulin blocker (Trifluoperazine, TFP) in vitro, for times ranging from 30 to 120 min. We observed the morphology of junctional complexes and the basal cytoplasmic regions in sections and replicas. Sertoli cell response to Ca2+ depletion involved several events: retraction of cells toward the base of the tubule and a consequent stretching of the points of fusion, augmented density of the cytoplasm, and destabilization of the array of intramembrane particles. Exposure of tubules to TFP resulted in disruption of the interactions between actin filaments and membrane junctional specialization, as well as a disorganization of other cytoskeletal elements. Thus, in vitro, junction integrity appears to be related to Ca2+ level, and Ca2+ depletion apparently interferes with Ca2+ distribution inside the cell and on microfilaments involved in junction regulation. Our results do not provide direct evidence for any particular mechanism of action of TFP, but a multiple effect is evident. TFP, which affects Ca2+ regulation and membrane fluidity, probably acts indirectly on junction-associated filaments. Both the experimental conditions tested suggest a Ca2+-mediated regulatory role of microfilaments of this complex junction.  相似文献   

20.
Throughout spermatogenesis, leptotene spermatocytes traverse the blood–testis barrier (BTB) to enter the adluminal compartment of the seminiferous epithelium for continued development. At the same time, the integrity of the BTB, which is constituted by co-existing tight junctions (TJ), basal ectoplasmic specializations (basal ES) and desmosome-like junctions, must be maintained since a breach in barrier function can result in spermatogenic arrest and even infertility. There is evidence to suggest that drug transporters may function at the BTB, but little is known about how they contribute to spermatogenesis. In this study, we investigate the role of P-glycoprotein (P-gp), a drug efflux pump, in BTB dynamics. A survey by RT-PCR revealed several transporter genes to be expressed by the testis, including Mdr1 (gene symbol for P-gp), Mrp1, Abcc5 and Slc15a1. It was also demonstrated that P-gp localizes to the BTB in all stages of the seminiferous epithelial cycle in the adult rat testis, as well as to the Sertoli cell–elongated spermatid interface in stages VII and VIII. We continued our study by examining the levels of several transporters in the testis following oral administration of Adjudin, a compound known to affect Sertoli–germ cell adhesion. In this experiment, the steady-state levels of P-gp, MRP1, ABCG1 and SLC15A1 were all found to increase by several-fold within hours of Adjudin treatment during junction restructuring. More importantly, an increase in P-gp association with TJ proteins (e.g., occludin, claudin-11 and JAM-A) was noted when testis lysates from Adjudin-treated rats were used for co-immunoprecipitation experiments, suggesting that P-gp may enhance BTB function during Sertoli–germ cell junction restructuring.  相似文献   

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