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1.
Ihara S  Nishiwaki K 《The EMBO journal》2007,26(11):2607-2620
Members of the ADAMTS (a disintegrin and metalloprotease with thrombospondin motifs) family of secreted proteins play important roles in animal development and pathogenesis. However, the lack of in vivo models has hampered elucidation of the mechanisms by which these enzymes are recruited to specific target tissues and the timing of their activation during development. Using transgenic worms and primary cell cultures, here we show that MIG-17, an ADAMTS family protein required for gonadal leader cell migration in Caenorhabditis elegans, is recruited to the gonadal basement membrane in a prodomain-dependent manner. The activation of MIG-17 to control leader cell migration requires prodomain removal, which is suggested to occur autocatalytically in vitro. Although the prodomains of ADAMTS proteases have been implicated in maintaining enzymatic latency, polypeptide folding and secretion, our findings demonstrate that the prodomain has an unexpected function in tissue-specific targeting of MIG-17; this prodomain targeting function may be shared by other ADAMTSs including those in vertebrates.  相似文献   

2.
ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease) family proteins play important roles in animal development and pathogenesis. In C. elegans, a secreted ADAM protein, MIG-17, acts from outside the gonad to control the migration of gonadal distal tip cells (DTCs) that promote gonad morphogenesis. Here, we report that dominant mutations in the fbl-1 gene encoding fibulin-1 spliced isoforms, which are calcium binding extracellular matrix proteins, bypass the requirement for MIG-17 activity in directing DTC migration. Specific amino acid substitutions in the third EGF-like motif of one of the two isoforms, FBL-1C, which corresponds to mammalian fibulin-1C, suppress mig-17 mutations. FBL-1C is synthesized in the gut cells and localizes strongly to the gonadal basement membrane in a MIG-17-dependent manner. Localization of mutant FBL-1C is weaker than that of the wild-type protein and is insensitive to MIG-17 activity, suggesting that it gains a novel function that compensates for its reduced molecular density. We propose that proteolysis by MIG-17 recruits FBL-1C to the gonadal basement membrane, where it is required for the guidance of DTCs, and that mutant FBL-1C acts in a manner that mimics the downstream events of MIG-17-mediated proteolysis.  相似文献   

3.
In C. elegans, the gonad acquires two U-shaped arms through directed migration of gonadal distal tip cells (DTCs). A member of the ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease) family, MIG-17, is secreted from muscle cells and localizes to the gonadal basement membrane where it functions in DTC migration. Mutations in cogc-3 and cogc-1 cause misdirected DTC migration similar to that seen in mig-17 mutants. Here, we report that COGC-3 and COGC-1 proteins are homologous to mammalian COG-3/Sec34 and COG-1/ldlBp, respectively, two of the eight components of the conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex required for Golgi function. Knockdown of any of the other six components by RNA interference also produces DTC migration defects, suggesting that the eight components function in a common pathway. COGC-3 and COGC-1 are required for the glycosylation and gonadal localization of MIG-17, but not for secretion of MIG-17 from muscle cells. Furthermore, COGC-3 requires MIG-17 activity for its action in DTC migration. Our findings demonstrate that COG complex-dependent glycosylation of an ADAM protease plays a crucial role in determining organ shape.  相似文献   

4.
The members of the ADAMTS (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs) family of secreted proteins, MIG-17 and GON-1, play essential roles in Caenorhabditis elegans gonadogenesis. The genetic and molecular analyses of these proteinases uncovered novel molecular interactions regulating the basement membrane (BM) during the migration of the gonadal leader cells. MIG-17, which is localized to the gonadal BM recruits or activates fibulin-1 and type IV collagen, which then recruits nidogen, thereby inducing the remodeling of the BM that is required for directional control of leader cell migration. GON-1 acts antagonistically with fibulin-1 to regulate the levels of type IV collagen accumulation in the gonadal BM, which facilitates active migration of the leader cells. The cooperative action of MIG-17 and GON-1 represents an excellent model for understanding the mechanisms of organogenesis mediated by ADAMTS proteinases.  相似文献   

5.
6.
In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the gonad acquires two U-shaped arms through the directed migration of its distal tip cells (DTCs), which are located at the tip of the growing gonad arms. A member of the ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease) family, MIG-17, regulates directional migration of DTCs: MIG-17 is synthesized and secreted from the muscle cells of the body wall, and diffuses to the gonad where it is required for DTC migration. The mig-23 mutation causes defective migration of DTCs and interacts genetically with mig-17. Here, we report that mig-23 encodes a membrane-bound nucleoside diphosphatase (NDPase) required for glycosylation and proper localization of MIG-17. Our findings indicate that an NDPase affects organ morphogenesis through glycosylation of the MIG-17 ADAM protease.  相似文献   

7.
In Caenorhabditis elegans gonad morphogenesis, the final U-shapes of the two hermaphrodite gonad arms are determined by migration of the distal tip cells (DTCs). These somatic cells migrate in opposite directions on the ventral basement membrane until specific extracellular cues induce turning from ventral to dorsal and then centripetally toward the midbody region on the dorsal basement membrane. To dissect the mechanism of DTC turning, we examined the role of a novel gene, F40F11.2/mig-38, whose depletion by RNAi results in failure of DTC turning so that DTCs continue their migration away from the midbody region. mig-38 is expressed in the gonad primordium, and expression continues throughout DTC migration where it acts cell-autonomously to control DTC turning. RNAi depletion of both mig-38 and ina-1, which encodes an integrin adhesion receptor, enhanced the loss of turning phenotype indicating a genetic interaction between these genes. Furthermore, the integrin-associated protein MIG-15/Nck-interacting kinase (NIK) works with MIG-38 to direct DTC turning as shown by mig-38 RNAi with the mig-15(rh80) hypomorph. These results indicate that MIG-38 enhances the role of MIG-15 in integrin-dependent DTC turning. Knockdown of talin, a protein that is important for integrin activation, causes the DTCs to stop migration prematurely. When both talin and MIG-38 were depleted by RNAi treatment, the premature stop phenotype was suppressed. This suppression effect was reversed upon additional depletion of MIG-15 or its binding partner NCK-1. These results suggest that both talin and the MIG-15/NCK-1 complex promote DTC motility and that MIG-38 may act as a negative regulator of the complex. We propose a model to explain the dual role of MIG-38 in motility and turning.  相似文献   

8.
In Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodites, the U-shaped gonad arms are formed by directed migration of the gonadal distal tip cells (DTCs). The stereotyped pattern of DTC migration is carefully controlled by extracellular and cell surface molecules during larval development. Here we report that two proteins, SQV-5 (chondroitin synthase) and its cofactor MIG-22 (chondroitin polymerizing factor), are required for chondroitin biosynthesis and are essential for the dorsally guided migration of DTCs. We found that MIG-22 is expressed in migrating DTCs, hypodermal seam cells, developing vulva and oocytes. The expression of SQV-5 or MIG-22 in both DTCs and hypodermis rescued the DTC migration defects of the relevant mutants more efficiently than when they were expressed in either single tissue. Furthermore, the expression of SQV-5 by the mig-22 promoter significantly rescued sqv-5 mutants, implying that these two proteins act in the same tissues and that chondroitin proteoglycans produced in both of these tissues are required for DTC migration. The DTC migration defects caused by sqv-5 or mig-22 mutations were partially suppressed in the anterior and enhanced in the posterior DTCs in unc-6, unc-5 or unc-40 mutant backgrounds, suggesting that chondroitin proteoglycans play roles in the UNC-6/netrin-dependent guidance of DTCs.  相似文献   

9.
The unc-52 gene of Claenorhabditis elegans encodes a homologue of the basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan perlecan. Viable alleles reduce the abundance of UNC-52 in late larval stages and increase the frequency of distal tip cell (DTC) migration defects caused by mutations disrupting the UNC-6/netrin guidance system. These unc-52 alleles do not cause circumferential DTC migration defects in an otherwise wild-type genetic background. The effects of unc-52 mutations on DTC migrations are distinct from effects on myofilament organization and can be partially suppressed by mutations in several genes encoding growth factor-like molecules, including EGL-17/FGF, UNC-129/TGF-beta, DBL-1/TGF-beta, and EGL-20/WNT. We propose that UNC-52 serves dual roles in C. elegans larval development in the maintenance of muscle structure and the regulation of growth factor-like signaling pathways.  相似文献   

10.
The conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex is an octameric protein complex associated with the Golgi apparatus and is required for proper sorting and glycosylation of Golgi resident enzymes and secreted proteins. Although COG complex function has been extensively studied at the cellular and subcellular levels, its role in animal development mostly remains unknown. Recently, mutations in the components of the COG complex were found to cause abnormal gonad morphogenesis in Caenorhabditis elegans. In C. elegans, the COG complex acts in the glycosylation of an ADAM (a disintegrin and metalloprotease) family protein, MIG-17, which directs migration of gonadal distal tip cells to lead gonad morphogenesis. This is the first link between the COG complex and the function of an ADAM protease that is directly involved in organ morphogenesis, demonstrating the potential of C. elegans as a model system to study COG function in animal development.  相似文献   

11.
Kubota Y  Nagata K  Sugimoto A  Nishiwaki K 《Genetics》2012,190(4):1379-1388
Molecules in the extracellular matrix (ECM) regulate cellular behavior in both development and pathology. Fibulin-1 is a conserved ECM protein. The Caenorhabditis elegans ortholog, FBL-1, regulates gonad-arm elongation and expansion by acting antagonistically to GON-1, an ADAMTS (a disintegrin and metalloprotease with thrombospondin motifs) family protease. The elongation of gonad arms is directed by gonadal distal tip cells (DTCs). Here we report that a dominant mutation in the EMB-9/type IV collagen α1 subunit can compensate for loss of FBL-1 activity in gonadogenesis. A specific amino acid substitution in the noncollagenous 1 (NC1) domain of EMB-9 suppressed the fbl-1 null mutant. FBL-1 was required to maintain wild-type EMB-9 in the basement membrane (BM), whereas mutant EMB-9 was retained in the absence of FBL-1. EMB-9 (either wild type or mutant) localization in the BM enhanced PAT-3/β-integrin expression in DTCs. In addition, overexpression of PAT-3 partially rescued the DTC migration defects in fbl-1 mutants, suggesting that EMB-9 acts in part through PAT-3 to control DTC migration. In contrast to the suppression of fbl-1(tk45), mutant EMB-9 enhanced the gonadal defects of gon-1(e1254), suggesting that it gained a function similar to that of wild-type FBL-1, which promotes DTC migration by inhibiting GON-1. We propose that FBL-1 and GON-1 control EMB-9 accumulation in the BM and promote PAT-3 expression to control DTC migration.  相似文献   

12.
Cell fate determination and cell migration are two essential events in the development of an organism. We identify mig-5, a Dishevelled family member, as a gene that regulates several cell fate decisions and cell migrations that are important during C. elegans embryonic and larval development. In offspring from mig-5 mutants, cell migrations are defective during hypodermal morphogenesis, QL neuroblast migration, and the gonad arm migration led by the distal tip cells (DTCs). In addition to abnormal migration, DTC fate is affected, resulting in either an absent or an extra DTC. The cell fates of the anchor cell in hermaphrodites and the linker cells in the male gonad are also defective, often resulting in the cells adopting the fates of their sister lineage. Moreover, 2 degrees vulval precursor cells occasionally adopt the 3 degrees vulval cell fate, resulting in a deformed vulva, and the P12 hypodermal precursor often differentiates into a second P11 cell. These defects demonstrate that MIG-5 is essential in determining proper cell fate and cell migration throughout C. elegans development.  相似文献   

13.
The Caenorhabditis elegans distal tip cells (DTCs) are an in vivo model for the study of developmentally regulated cell migration. In this study, we characterize a novel role for CCDC-55, a conserved coiled-coil domain containing protein, in DTC migration and larval development in C. elegans. Although animals homozygous for a probable null allele, ccdc-55(ok2851), display an early larval arrest, RNAi depletion experiments allow the analysis of later phenotypes and suggest that CCDC-55 is needed within the DTC for migration to cease at the end of larval morphogenesis. The ccdc-55 gene is found in an operon with rnf-121 and rnf-5, E3 ubiquitin ligases that target cell migration genes such as the β-integrin PAT-3. Genetic interaction studies using RNAi depletion and the deletion alleles rnf-121(ok848) and rnf-5(tm794) indicate that CCDC-55 and the RNF genes act at least partially in parallel to promote termination of cell migration in the adult DTC.  相似文献   

14.
Several features of the pigment defect in belted (bt) mutant mice suggest that it occurs as a result of a defect in melanocyte development that is unique from those described for other classical white-spotting mutations. We report here that bt mice carry mutations in Adamts20, a novel member of the ADAMTS family of secreted metalloproteases. Adamts20 shows a highly dynamic pattern of expression in the developing embryo that generally precedes the appearance of melanoblasts in the same region, and is not expressed in the migrating cells themselves. Adamts20 shows remarkable homology with GON-1, an ADAMTS family protease required for distal tip cell migration in C. elegans. Our results suggest that the role of ADAMTS proteases in the regulation of cell migration has been conserved in mammalian development.  相似文献   

15.
Two monoclonal antibodies raised against laminin isolated from a mouse parietal yolk sac cell line were used for immunohistochemical studies of basement membranes of the mouse embryo and various fetal and adult tissues. No immunoreactivity with either of the two monoclonal antibodies could be detected in the preimplantation-stage embryos, although it has been shown that these embryos contain extracellular laminin reactive with the conventional polyclonal antilaminin antibodies. Reichert's membrane in early postimplantation stages of development reacted with the monoclonal antibody LAM-I but not with the antibody LAM-II. However, from day 8 of pregnancy onward the Reichert's membrane reacted with both antibodies. Basement membranes of the embryo proper were unreactive with both monoclonal antibodies until day 12 of pregnancy. By day 14 some basement membranes of the fetal tissues became reactive with one or both monoclonal antibodies, whereas others remained still unreactive. In the 17-d fetus and the newborn mouse most of the basement membranes reacted with both monoclonal antibodies, whereas others still reacted with only one. Similar heterogeneity in the immunoreactivity of basement membranes of various tissues was noted in the adult mouse as well. These results indicate that the immunoreactivity of laminin in the extracellular matrix changes during development and that the basement membranes in various anatomic locations display heterogeneity even in the adult mouse.  相似文献   

16.
While endocytosis can regulate morphogen distribution, its precise role in shaping these gradients is unclear. Even more enigmatic is the role of retromer, a complex that shuttles proteins between endosomes and the Golgi apparatus, in Wnt gradient formation. Here we report that DPY-23, the C. elegans mu subunit of the clathrin adaptor AP-2 that mediates the endocytosis of membrane proteins, regulates Wnt function. dpy-23 mutants display Wnt phenotypes, including defects in neuronal migration, neuronal polarity, and asymmetric cell division. DPY-23 acts in Wnt-expressing cells to promote these processes. MIG-14, the C. elegans homolog of the Wnt-secretion factor Wntless, also acts in these cells to control Wnt function. In dpy-23 mutants, MIG-14 accumulates at or near the plasma membrane. By contrast, MIG-14 accumulates in intracellular compartments in retromer mutants. Based on our observations, we propose that intracellular trafficking of MIG-14 by AP-2 and retromer plays an important role in Wnt secretion.  相似文献   

17.
Type XVIII collagen is a homotrimeric basement membrane molecule of unknown function, whose COOH-terminal NC1 domain contains endostatin (ES), a potent antiangiogenic agent. The Caenorhabditis elegans collagen XVIII homologue, cle-1, encodes three developmentally regulated protein isoforms expressed predominantly in neurons. The CLE-1 protein is found in low amounts in all basement membranes but accumulates at high levels in the nervous system. Deletion of the cle-1 NC1 domain results in viable fertile animals that display multiple cell migration and axon guidance defects. Particular defects can be rescued by ectopic expression of the NC1 domain, which is shown to be capable of forming trimers. In contrast, expression of monomeric ES does not rescue but dominantly causes cell and axon migration defects that phenocopy the NC1 deletion, suggesting that ES inhibits the promigratory activity of the NC1 domain. These results indicate that the cle-1 NC1/ES domain regulates cell and axon migrations in C. elegans.  相似文献   

18.
During the wound healing process lysis of basement membranes precedes keratinocyte migration into the wound bed. We studied, in vitro, whether this degradation of basement membranes could be regulated by transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1), which is known to accelerate wound healing in vivo. Transforming growth factor-beta 1 was found to increase the expression of both 92- and 72-kDa type IV collagenases (gelatinases) in cultured human mucosal and dermal keratinocytes. The 92-kDa enzyme predominated in both unstimulated and stimulated cultures. The 92-kDa form was stimulated over 5-fold, and the other form by a factor of 2-3. This increase in the synthesis of type IV collagenases was associated with a marked increase in the mRNA levels of these enzymes as well. The induction of the 92-kDa enzyme was similar in culture medium containing either 0.15 or 1.2 mM calcium chloride. Rat mucosal keratinocytes secreted only 92-kDa type IV collagenase, the secretion of which was not regulated by TGF-beta 1. Also, TGF-beta 1 did not cause any significant induction (maximum about 1.2-fold) of either type IV collagenase in human gingival fibroblasts. The induction levels of both collagenases in human keratinocytes were independent of the type of the extracellular matrix the cells were grown on. However, the basement membrane matrix (Matrigel) activated about half of the 92-kDa type to its 84-kDa active form. The data suggest that TGF-beta 1 has a specific function in up-regulating the expression of type IV collagenases in human keratinocytes, offering a possible explanation of how keratinocytes detach from basement membranes prior to the migration over the wound bed.  相似文献   

19.
The transmembrane protein MIG-13 is a key regulator required for anterior migration of neural cells in Caenorhabditis elegans, but the signaling mechanisms involved remain unknown. Here, we isolated a suppressor mutation in the unc-71/adm-1 gene, which rescued the AVM neuron migration defect in mig-13 mutants. Genetic analyses revealed that UNC-71 at least partly acts downstream of MIG-13 and has an inhibitory effect on the anterior cell migration. The unc-71 mutation also rescued the anterior migration defect of AVM neuron in src-1 mutants. These findings suggest that MIG-13 controls anteroposterior cell migration by interacting with UNC-71 and SRC-1 in C. elegans.  相似文献   

20.
Migrating cells and growth cones extend lamellipodial and filopodial protrusions that are required for outgrowth and guidance. The mechanisms of cytoskeletal regulation that underlie cell and growth cone migration are of much interest to developmental biologists. Previous studies have shown that the Arp2/3 complex and UNC-115/abLIM act redundantly to mediate growth cone lamellipodia and filopodia formation and axon pathfinding. While much is known about the regulation of Arp2/3, less is known about regulators of UNC-115/abLIM. Here we show that the Caenorhabditis elegans counterpart of the Receptor for Activated C Kinase (RACK-1) interacts physically with the actin-binding protein UNC-115/abLIM and that RACK-1 is required for axon pathfinding. Genetic interactions indicate that RACK-1 acts cell-autonomously in the UNC-115/abLIM pathway in axon pathfinding and lamellipodia and filopodia formation, downstream of the CED-10/Rac GTPase and in parallel to MIG-2/RhoG. Furthermore, we show that RACK-1 is involved in migration of the gonadal distal tip cells and that the signaling pathways involved in this process might be distinct from those involved in axon pathfinding. In sum, these studies pinpoint RACK-1 as a component of a novel signaling pathway involving Rac GTPases and UNC-115/abLIM and suggest that RACK-1 might be involved in the regulation of the actin cytoskeleton and lamellipodia and filopodia formation in migrating cells and growth cones.  相似文献   

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