Rho family GTPases, particularly Rac1 and Cdc42, are key regulators of cell polarization and directional migration. Adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) is also thought to play a pivotal role in polarized cell migration. We have found that IQGAP1, an effector of Rac1 and Cdc42, interacts directly with APC. IQGAP1 and APC localize interdependently to the leading edge in migrating Vero cells, and activated Rac1/Cdc42 form a ternary complex with IQGAP1 and APC. Depletion of either IQGAP1 or APC inhibits actin meshwork formation and polarized migration. Depletion of IQGAP1 or APC also disrupts localization of CLIP-170, a microtubule-stabilizing protein that interacts with IQGAP1. Taken together, these results suggest a model in which activation of Rac1 and Cdc42 in response to migration signals leads to recruitment of IQGAP1 and APC which, together with CLIP-170, form a complex that links the actin cytoskeleton and microtubule dynamics during cell polarization and directional migration.
Mural cells (MCs) consisting of vascular smooth muscle cells and pericytes cover the endothelial cells (ECs) to regulate vascular stability and homeostasis. Here, we clarified the mechanism by which MCs develop and cover ECs by generating transgenic zebrafish lines that allow live imaging of MCs and by lineage tracing in vivo. To cover cranial vessels, MCs derived from either neural crest cells or mesoderm emerged around the preformed EC tubes, proliferated and migrated along EC tubes. During their migration, the MCs moved forward by extending their processes along the inter-EC junctions, suggesting a role for inter-EC junctions as a scaffold for MC migration. In the trunk vasculature, MCs derived from mesoderm covered the ventral side of the dorsal aorta (DA), but not the posterior cardinal vein. Furthermore, the MCs migrating from the DA or emerging around intersegmental vessels (ISVs) preferentially covered arterial ISVs rather than venous ISVs, indicating that MCs mostly cover arteries during vascular development. Thus, live imaging and lineage tracing enabled us to clarify precisely how MCs cover the EC tubes and to identify the origins of MCs.
The small guanosine triphosphatase Rac1 is activated by E-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion and is required for the accumulation of actin filaments, E-cadherin, and -catenin at sites of cell-cell contact. However, the modes of activation and action of Rac1 remain to be clarified. We here found that suppression of IQGAP1, an actin-binding protein and an effector of Rac1, by small interfering RNA apparently reduced the accumulation of actin filaments, E-cadherin, and -catenin at sites of cell-cell contact in Madin-Darby canine kidney II epithelial cells under the conditions in which knockdown of Rac1 reduced them. Knockdown of Rac1 did not affect the localization of these junctional components in cells expressing a constitutively active IQGAP1 mutant defective in Rac1/Cdc42 binding. Knockdown of either Rac1 or IQGAP1 accelerated the 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-induced cell-cell dissociation. The basal Rac1 activity, which was maintained by E-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion, was inhibited in the IQGAP1-knocked down cells, whereas the Rac1 activity was increased in the cells overexpressing IQGAP1. Together, these results indicate that Rac1 enhances the accumulation of actin filaments, E-cadherin, and -catenin by acting on IQGAP1 and suggest that there exists a positive feedback loop comprised of "E-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion3 Rac1 activation3actin-meshwork formation by IQGAP13increasing E-cadherin-mediated cell-cell adhesion."
Axin is known to have an important role in the degradation of b-catenin in the Wnt pathway. Here, we reveal a new function of Axin at the centrosome. Axin was localized to the centrosome in various cell lines and formed a complex with c-tubulin. Knockdown of Axin reduced the localization of c-tubulin and c-tubulin complex protein 2-components of the c-tubulin ring complex-to the centrosome and the centrosomal microtubule nucleation activity after treatment with nocodazole. These phenotypes could not be rescued by the reduction in the levels of b-catenin. Although the expression of Axin rescued these phenotypes in Axin-knockdown cells, overexpression of Axin2, which is highly homologous to Axin, could not. Axin2 was also localized to the centrosome, but it did not form a complex with c-tubulin. These results suggest that Axin, but not Axin2, is involved in microtubule nucleation by forming a complex with c-tubulin at the centrosome.
Notch signaling controls fundamental aspects of angiogenic blood vessel growth including the selection of sprouting tip cells, endothelial proliferation and arterial differentiation. The E3 ubiquitin ligase Fbxw7 is part of the SCF protein complex responsible for the polyubiquitination and thereby proteasomal degradation of substrates such as Notch, c-Myc and c-Jun. Here, we show that Fbxw7 is a critical regulator of angiogenesis in the mouse retina and the zebrafish embryonic trunk, which we attribute to its role in the degradation of active Notch. Growth of retinal blood vessel was impaired and the Notch ligand Dll4, which is also a Notch target, upregulated in inducible and endothelial cell-specific Fbxw7 iECKO mutant mice. The stability of the cleaved and active Notch intracellular domain was increased after siRNA knockdown of the E3 ligase in cultured human endothelial cells. Injection of fbxw7 morpholinos interfered with the sprouting of zebrafish intersegmental vessels (ISVs). Arguing strongly that Notch and not other Fbxw7 substrates are primarily responsible for these phenotypes, the genetic inactivation of Notch pathway components reversed the impaired ISV growth in the zebrafish embryo as well as sprouting and proliferation in the mouse retina. Our findings establish that Fbxw7 is a potent positive regulator of angiogenesis that limits the activity of Notch in the endothelium of the growing vasculature.
Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) is known to play a role in the regulation of the dynamics of microtubule networks in cells. Here we show the role of GSK-3 in the proper formation of the mitotic spindles through an interaction with GCP5, a component of the ␥-tubulin ring complex (␥TuRC). GCP5 bound directly to GSK-3 in vitro, and their interaction was also observed in intact cells at endogenous levels. Depletion of GCP5 dramatically reduced the GCP2 and ␥-tubulin in the ␥TuRC fraction of sucrose density gradients and disrupted ␥-tubulin localization to the spindle poles in mitotic cells. GCP5 appears to be required for the formation or stability of ␥TuRC and the recruitment of ␥-tubulin to the spindle poles. A GSK-3 inhibitor not only led to the accumulation of ␥-tubulin and GCP5 at the spindle poles but also enhanced microtubule nucleation activity at the spindle poles. Depletion of GCP5 rescued this disrupted organization of spindle poles observed in cells treated with the GSK-3 inhibitor. Furthermore, the inhibition of GSK-3 enhanced the binding of ␥TuRC to the centrosome isolated from mitotic cells in vitro. Our findings suggest that GSK-3 regulates the localization of ␥TuRC, including GCP5, to the spindle poles, thereby controlling the formation of proper mitotic spindles.
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