Actin dynamics determines podocyte morphology during development and in response to podocyte injury and might be necessary for maintaining normal podocyte morphology. Because podocyte intercellular junction receptor Nephrin plays a role in regulating actin dynamics, and given the described role of cofilin in actin filament polymerization and severing, we hypothesized that cofilin-1 activity is regulated by Nephrin and is necessary in normal podocyte actin dynamics. Nephrin activation induced cofilin dephosphorylation via intermediaries that include phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, SSH1, 14-3-3, and LIMK in a cell culture model. This Nephrin-induced cofilin activation required a direct interaction between Nephrin and the p85 subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. In a similar fashion, cofilin-1 dephosphorylation was observed in a rat model of podocyte injury at a time when foot process spreading is initially observed. To investigate the necessity of cofilin-1 in the glomerulus, podocyte-specific Cfl1 null mice were generated. Cfl1 null podocytes developed normally. However, these mice developed persistent proteinuria by 3 months of age, although they did not exhibit foot process spreading until 8 months, when the rate of urinary protein excretion became more exaggerated. In a mouse model of podocyte injury, protamine sulfate perfusion of the Cfl1 mutant mouse induced a broadened and flattened foot process morphology that was distinct from that observed following perfusion of control kidneys, and mutant podocytes did not recover normal structure following additional perfusion with heparin sulfate. We conclude that cofilin-1 is necessary for maintenance of normal podocyte architecture and for actin structural changes that occur during induction and recovery from podocyte injury.Glomerular visceral epithelial cells or podocytes play a central role in maintaining the selective filtration barrier of the kidney that prevents the passage of cellular elements and large macromolecules from the blood into the urinary space. Podocytes are unique cells with interdigitating foot-like actin-rich processes that arise from their cell bodies and surround glomerular capillary walls. An ultrafiltrate of serum passes across this specialized intercellular junction, also termed the slit diaphragm, formed at the interface of these interdigitating foot processes.There appears to be a direct relationship between the integrity of the podocyte intercellular junction and the three-dimensional architecture of the podocyte. When injured, podocytes undergo a dramatic change in their morphology termed foot process effacement that appears to result from incompletely understood alterations in cytoskeletal and intercellular junctional architecture. Foot process effacement is a dynamic and reversible process that correlates with the development of proteinuria both in human disease and in experimental models. Recent investigations have demonstrated a functional relationship between molecular components of the foot process intercellular junction and...
The p21-activated serine-threonine kinase (PAK1) is activated by small GTPase-dependent and -independent mechanisms and regulates cell motility. Both PAK1 and the hormone prolactin (PRL) have been implicated in breast cancer by numerous studies. We have previously shown that the PRL-activated tyrosine kinase JAK2 (Janus tyrosine kinase 2) phosphorylates PAK1 in vivo and identified tyrosines (Tyr) 153, 201, and 285 in the PAK1 molecule as sites of JAK2 tyrosyl phosphorylation. Here, we have used human breast cancer T47D cells stably overexpressing PAK1 wild type or PAK1 Y3F mutant in which Tyr(s) 153, 201, and 285 were mutated to phenylalanines to demonstrate that phosphorylation of these three tyrosines are required for maximal PRL-dependent ruffling. In addition, phosphorylation of these three tyrosines is required for increased migration of T47D cells in response to PRL as assessed by two independent motility assays. Finally, we show that PAK1 phosphorylates serine (Ser) 2152 of the actin-binding protein filamin A to a greater extent when PAK1 is tyrosyl phosphorylated by JAK2. Down-regulation of PAK1 or filamin A abolishes the effect of PRL on cell migration. Thus, our data presented here bring some insight into the mechanism of PRL-stimulated motility of breast cancer cells.
Actin dynamics has emerged at the forefront of podocyte biology. Slit diaphragm junctional adhesion protein Nephrin is necessary for development of the podocyte morphology and transduces phosphorylation-dependent signals that regulate cytoskeletal dynamics. The present study extends our understanding of Nephrin function by showing in cultured podocytes that Nephrin activation induced actin dynamics is necessary for lamellipodia formation. Upon activation Nephrin recruits and regulates a protein complex that includes Ship2 (SH2 domain containing 5′ inositol phosphatase), Filamin and Lamellipodin, proteins important in regulation of actin and focal adhesion dynamics, as well as lamellipodia formation. Using the previously described CD16-Nephrin clustering system, Nephrin ligation or activation resulted in phosphorylation of the actin crosslinking protein Filamin in a p21 activated kinase dependent manner. Nephrin activation in cell culture results in formation of lamellipodia, a process that requires specialized actin dynamics at the leading edge of the cell along with focal adhesion turnover. In the CD16-Nephrin clustering model, Nephrin ligation resulted in abnormal morphology of actin tails in human podocytes when Ship2, Filamin or Lamellipodin were individually knocked down. We also observed decreased lamellipodia formation and cell migration in these knock down cells. These data provide evidence that Nephrin not only initiates actin polymerization but also assembles a protein complex that is necessary to regulate the architecture of the generated actin filament network and focal adhesion dynamics.
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