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1.
PLoS Biol ; 18(8): e3000774, 2020 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32745097

RESUMO

The Scar/WAVE complex is the principal catalyst of pseudopod and lamellipod formation. Here we show that Scar/WAVE's proline-rich domain is polyphosphorylated after the complex is activated. Blocking Scar/WAVE activation stops phosphorylation in both Dictyostelium and mammalian cells, implying that phosphorylation modulates pseudopods after they have been formed, rather than controlling whether they are initiated. Unexpectedly, phosphorylation is not promoted by chemotactic signaling but is greatly stimulated by cell:substrate adhesion and diminished when cells deadhere. Phosphorylation-deficient or phosphomimetic Scar/WAVE mutants are both normally functional and rescue the phenotype of knockout cells, demonstrating that phosphorylation is dispensable for activation and actin regulation. However, pseudopods and patches of phosphorylation-deficient Scar/WAVE last substantially longer in mutants, altering the dynamics and size of pseudopods and lamellipods and thus changing migration speed. Scar/WAVE phosphorylation does not require ERK2 in Dictyostelium or mammalian cells. However, the MAPKKK homologue SepA contributes substantially-sepA mutants have less steady-state phosphorylation, which does not increase in response to adhesion. The mutants also behave similarly to cells expressing phosphorylation-deficient Scar, with longer-lived pseudopods and patches of Scar recruitment. We conclude that pseudopod engagement with substratum is more important than extracellular signals at regulating Scar/WAVE's activity and that phosphorylation acts as a pseudopod timer by promoting Scar/WAVE turnover.


Assuntos
Dictyostelium/genética , MAP Quinase Quinase Quinase 3/genética , Proteínas de Protozoários/genética , Pseudópodes/metabolismo , Família de Proteínas da Síndrome de Wiskott-Aldrich/genética , Animais , Sistemas CRISPR-Cas , Adesão Celular , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Quimiotaxia/genética , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Dictyostelium/ultraestrutura , Edição de Genes/métodos , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , MAP Quinase Quinase Quinase 3/metabolismo , Melanócitos/metabolismo , Melanócitos/ultraestrutura , Camundongos , Proteína Quinase 1 Ativada por Mitógeno/genética , Proteína Quinase 1 Ativada por Mitógeno/metabolismo , Mutação , Células NIH 3T3 , Fenótipo , Fosforilação , Ploidias , Proteínas de Protozoários/metabolismo , Pseudópodes/genética , Pseudópodes/ultraestrutura , Família de Proteínas da Síndrome de Wiskott-Aldrich/metabolismo
2.
EMBO J ; 37(13)2018 07 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29844016

RESUMO

The Arp2/3 complex generates branched actin networks that exert pushing forces onto different cellular membranes. WASH complexes activate Arp2/3 complexes at the surface of endosomes and thereby fission transport intermediates containing endocytosed receptors, such as α5ß1 integrins. How WASH complexes are assembled in the cell is unknown. Here, we identify the small coiled-coil protein HSBP1 as a factor that specifically promotes the assembly of a ternary complex composed of CCDC53, WASH, and FAM21 by dissociating the CCDC53 homotrimeric precursor. HSBP1 operates at the centrosome, which concentrates the building blocks. HSBP1 depletion in human cancer cell lines and in Dictyostelium amoebae phenocopies WASH depletion, suggesting a critical role of the ternary WASH complex for WASH functions. HSBP1 is required for the development of focal adhesions and of cell polarity. These defects impair the migration and invasion of tumor cells. Overexpression of HSBP1 in breast tumors is associated with increased levels of WASH complexes and with poor prognosis for patients.


Assuntos
Centrossomo/metabolismo , Proteínas de Choque Térmico/metabolismo , Proteínas dos Microfilamentos/metabolismo , Neoplasias da Mama/metabolismo , Neoplasias da Mama/patologia , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Proteínas de Choque Térmico/química , Proteínas de Choque Térmico/genética , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Prognóstico
3.
Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol ; 11(6): 453-8, 2010 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20445546

RESUMO

Current descriptions of eukaryotic chemotaxis and cell movement focus on how extracellular signals (chemoattractants) cause new pseudopods to form. This 'signal-centred' approach is widely accepted but is derived mostly from special cases, particularly steep chemoattractant gradients. I propose a 'pseudopod-centred' explanation, whereby most pseudopods form themselves, without needing exogenous signals, and chemoattractants only bias internal pseudopod dynamics. This reinterpretation of recent data suggests that future research should focus on pseudopod mechanics, not signal processing.


Assuntos
Quimiotaxia , Eucariotos/citologia , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Comunicação Celular , Eucariotos/metabolismo , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos
4.
PLoS Pathog ; 15(2): e1007551, 2019 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30730983

RESUMO

By engulfing potentially harmful microbes, professional phagocytes are continually at risk from intracellular pathogens. To avoid becoming infected, the host must kill pathogens in the phagosome before they can escape or establish a survival niche. Here, we analyse the role of the phosphoinositide (PI) 5-kinase PIKfyve in phagosome maturation and killing, using the amoeba and model phagocyte Dictyostelium discoideum. PIKfyve plays important but poorly understood roles in vesicular trafficking by catalysing formation of the lipids phosphatidylinositol (3,5)-bisphosphate (PI(3,5)2) and phosphatidylinositol-5-phosphate (PI(5)P). Here we show that its activity is essential during early phagosome maturation in Dictyostelium. Disruption of PIKfyve inhibited delivery of both the vacuolar V-ATPase and proteases, dramatically reducing the ability of cells to acidify newly formed phagosomes and digest their contents. Consequently, PIKfyve- cells were unable to generate an effective antimicrobial environment and efficiently kill captured bacteria. Moreover, we demonstrate that cells lacking PIKfyve are more susceptible to infection by the intracellular pathogen Legionella pneumophila. We conclude that PIKfyve-catalysed phosphoinositide production plays a crucial and general role in ensuring early phagosomal maturation, protecting host cells from diverse pathogenic microbes.


Assuntos
Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Fosfatidilinositol 3-Quinases/metabolismo , Fosfatos de Fosfatidilinositol/metabolismo , Adenosina Trifosfatases , Animais , Linhagem Celular , Dictyostelium/patogenicidade , Humanos , Hidrolases/metabolismo , Legionella pneumophila/patogenicidade , Legionelose/metabolismo , Macrófagos , Fagocitose , Fagossomos , Fosfatidilinositol 3-Quinases/fisiologia , Fosfatidilinositóis , Transporte Proteico , Infecções por Protozoários/metabolismo
5.
J Anat ; 239(6): 1241-1255, 2021 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34713444

RESUMO

A century ago this year, Pío del Río-Hortega (1921) coined the term 'oligodendroglia' for the 'interfascicular glia' with very few processes, launching an extensive discovery effort on his new cell type. One hundred years later, we review his original contributions to our understanding of the system of cytoplasmic channels within myelin in the context of what we observe today using light and electron microscopy of genetically encoded fluorescent reporters and immunostaining. We use the term myelinic channel system to describe the cytoplasm-delimited spaces associated with myelin; being the paranodal loops, inner and outer tongues, cytoplasm-filled spaces through compact myelin and further complex motifs associated to the sheath. Using a central nervous system myelinating cell culture model that contains all major neural cell types and produces compact myelin, we find that td-tomato fluorescent protein delineates the myelinic channel system in a manner reminiscent of the drawings of adult white matter by Río-Hortega, despite that he questioned whether some cytoplasmic figures he observed represented artefact. Together, these data lead us to propose a slightly revised model of the 'unrolled' sheath. Further, we show that the myelinic channel system, while relatively stable, can undergo subtle dynamic shape changes over days. Importantly, we capture an under-appreciated complexity of the myelinic channel system in mature myelin sheaths.


Assuntos
Sistema Nervoso Central , Bainha de Mielina , Citoplasma , Microscopia Eletrônica , Oligodendroglia
6.
PLoS Biol ; 16(5): e2005754, 2018 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29799847

RESUMO

Phagocytes locate microorganisms via chemotaxis and then consume them using phagocytosis. Dictyostelium amoebas are stereotypical phagocytes that prey on diverse bacteria using both processes. However, as typical phagocytic receptors, such as complement receptors or Fcγ receptors, have not been found in Dictyostelium, it remains mysterious how these cells recognize bacteria. Here, we show that a single G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), folic acid receptor 1 (fAR1), simultaneously recognizes the chemoattractant folate and the phagocytic cue lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a major component of bacterial surfaces. Cells lacking fAR1 or its cognate G-proteins are defective in chemotaxis toward folate and phagocytosis of Klebsiella aerogenes. Computational simulations combined with experiments show that responses associated with chemotaxis can also promote engulfment of particles coated with chemoattractants. Finally, the extracellular Venus-Flytrap (VFT) domain of fAR1 acts as the binding site for both folate and LPS. Thus, fAR1 represents a new member of the pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) and mediates signaling from both bacterial surfaces and diffusible chemoattractants to reorganize actin for chemotaxis and phagocytosis.


Assuntos
Quimiotaxia , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Receptor 1 de Folato/metabolismo , Fagocitose , Actinas/metabolismo , Fatores Quimiotáticos/metabolismo , Enterobacter aerogenes , Proteínas Heterotriméricas de Ligação ao GTP/metabolismo , Lipopolissacarídeos/metabolismo , Domínios Proteicos
7.
J Vis Commun Med ; 43(1): 35-46, 2020 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31642358

RESUMO

Cell biology and imaging technology have vastly improved over the past decades, enabling scientists to dissect the inner workings of a cell. In addition to technical limits on spatial and temporal resolution, which obscure the picture at the molecular level, the sheer density and complexity of information impede clear understanding. 3D molecular visualisation has therefore blossomed as a way to translate molecular data in a more tangible form. Whilst the molecular machinery involved in cell locomotion has been extensively studied, existing narratives describing how cells generate the forces that drive movement remain unclear. Polymerisation of a protein called actin is clearly essential. The general belief in the cell migration field is that actin polymerisation's main role is to push the leading edge of the cell forwards, while the rest of the cell follows passively. The cell migration & chemotaxis group at the CRUK Beatson Institute propose an alternative hypothesis, in which actin filaments constitute cables. Motor proteins pull on these cables, causing them to behave like the treads of a tank and drive cell movement. This article describes the development of a 3D animation that uses analogical reasoning to contrast the 'tank' hypothesis for cell locomotion with the current dogma.


Assuntos
Actinas/fisiologia , Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Ilustração Médica , Modelos Biológicos , Biologia Celular , Humanos
8.
J Cell Sci ; 130(10): 1785-1795, 2017 05 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28424231

RESUMO

The steps leading to constitutive exocytosis are poorly understood. In Dictyostelium WASH complex mutants, exocytosis is blocked, so cells that take up fluorescent dextran from the medium retain it and remain fluorescent. Here, we establish a FACS-based method to select cells that retain fluorescent dextran, allowing identification of mutants with disrupted exocytosis. Screening a pool of random mutants identified members of the WASH complex, as expected, and multiple mutants in the conserved HEAT-repeat-containing protein Mroh1. In mroh1 mutants, endosomes develop normally until the stage where lysosomes neutralize to postlysosomes, but thereafter the WASH complex is recycled inefficiently, and subsequent exocytosis is substantially delayed. Mroh1 protein localizes to lysosomes in mammalian and Dictyostelium cells. In Dictyostelium, it accumulates on lysosomes as they mature and is removed, together with the WASH complex, shortly before the postlysosomes are exocytosed. WASH-generated F-actin is required for correct subcellular localization; in WASH complex mutants, and immediately after latrunculin treatment, Mroh1 relocalizes from the cytoplasm to small vesicles. Thus, Mroh1 is involved in a late and hitherto undefined actin-dependent step in exocytosis.


Assuntos
Actinas/metabolismo , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Lisossomos/metabolismo , Proteínas de Protozoários/metabolismo , Complexo 2-3 de Proteínas Relacionadas à Actina/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Comportamento Animal , Endocitose , Exocitose , Recuperação de Fluorescência Após Fotodegradação , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/metabolismo , Mutação/genética , Fenótipo , Polimerização , Transporte Proteico , Proteínas de Protozoários/química , ATPases Vacuolares Próton-Translocadoras/metabolismo
9.
J Cell Sci ; 130(20): 3455-3466, 2017 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28871044

RESUMO

Melanoma cells steer out of tumours using self-generated lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) gradients. The cells break down LPA, which is present at high levels around the tumours, creating a dynamic gradient that is low in the tumour and high outside. They then migrate up this gradient, creating a complex and evolving outward chemotactic stimulus. Here, we introduce a new assay for self-generated chemotaxis, and show that raising LPA levels causes a delay in migration rather than loss of chemotactic efficiency. Knockdown of the lipid phosphatase LPP3 - but not of its homologues LPP1 or LPP2 - diminishes the cell's ability to break down LPA. This is specific for chemotactically active LPAs, such as the 18:1 and 20:4 species. Inhibition of autotaxin-mediated LPA production does not diminish outward chemotaxis, but loss of LPP3-mediated LPA breakdown blocks it. Similarly, in both 2D and 3D invasion assays, knockdown of LPP3 diminishes the ability of melanoma cells to invade. Our results demonstrate that LPP3 is the key enzyme in the breakdown of LPA by melanoma cells, and confirm the importance of attractant breakdown in LPA-mediated cell steering.This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.


Assuntos
Lisofosfolipídeos/metabolismo , Melanoma/metabolismo , Fosfatidato Fosfatase/fisiologia , Neoplasias Cutâneas/metabolismo , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Quimiotaxia , Humanos , Melanoma/patologia , Invasividade Neoplásica , Neoplasias Cutâneas/patologia
10.
PLoS Biol ; 14(3): e1002404, 2016 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26981861

RESUMO

Chemotaxis is fundamentally important, but the sources of gradients in vivo are rarely well understood. Here, we analyse self-generated chemotaxis, in which cells respond to gradients they have made themselves by breaking down globally available attractants, using both computational simulations and experiments. We show that chemoattractant degradation creates steep local gradients. This leads to surprising results, in particular the existence of a leading population of cells that moves highly directionally, while cells behind this group are undirected. This leading cell population is denser than those following, especially at high attractant concentrations. The local gradient moves with the leading cells as they interact with their surroundings, giving directed movement that is unusually robust and can operate over long distances. Even when gradients are applied from external sources, attractant breakdown greatly changes cells' responses and increases robustness. We also consider alternative mechanisms for directional decision-making and show that they do not predict the features of population migration we observe experimentally. Our findings provide useful diagnostics to allow identification of self-generated gradients and suggest that self-generated chemotaxis is unexpectedly universal in biology and medicine.


Assuntos
Fatores Quimiotáticos/metabolismo , Quimiotaxia , Movimento Celular , Dictyostelium
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(40): E5906-E5915, 2016 10 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27647881

RESUMO

Macropinocytosis is an ancient mechanism that allows cells to harvest nutrients from extracellular media, which also allows immune cells to sample antigens from their surroundings. During macropinosome formation, bulk plasma membrane is internalized with all its integral proteins. It is vital for cells to salvage these proteins before degradation, but the mechanisms for sorting them are not known. Here we describe the evolutionarily conserved recruitment of the WASH (WASP and SCAR homolog) complex to both macropinosomes and phagosomes within a minute of internalization. Using Dictyostelium, we demonstrate that WASH drives protein sorting and recycling from macropinosomes and is thus essential to maintain surface receptor levels and sustain phagocytosis. WASH functionally interacts with the retromer complex at both early and late phases of macropinosome maturation, but mediates recycling via retromer-dependent and -independent pathways. WASH mutants consequently have decreased membrane levels of integrins and other surface proteins. This study reveals an important pathway enabling cells to sustain macropinocytosis without bulk degradation of plasma membrane components.


Assuntos
Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Fagocitose , Fagossomos/metabolismo , Receptores de Superfície Celular/metabolismo , Proteínas de Transporte Vesicular/metabolismo , Complexo de Golgi/metabolismo , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/metabolismo , Integrinas/metabolismo , Lisossomos/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Ligação Proteica , Transporte Proteico , ATPases Vacuolares Próton-Translocadoras/metabolismo
12.
PLoS Biol ; 12(10): e1001966, 2014 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25313567

RESUMO

The high mortality of melanoma is caused by rapid spread of cancer cells, which occurs unusually early in tumour evolution. Unlike most solid tumours, thickness rather than cytological markers or differentiation is the best guide to metastatic potential. Multiple stimuli that drive melanoma cell migration have been described, but it is not clear which are responsible for invasion, nor if chemotactic gradients exist in real tumours. In a chamber-based assay for melanoma dispersal, we find that cells migrate efficiently away from one another, even in initially homogeneous medium. This dispersal is driven by positive chemotaxis rather than chemorepulsion or contact inhibition. The principal chemoattractant, unexpectedly active across all tumour stages, is the lipid agonist lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) acting through the LPA receptor LPAR1. LPA induces chemotaxis of remarkable accuracy, and is both necessary and sufficient for chemotaxis and invasion in 2-D and 3-D assays. Growth factors, often described as tumour attractants, cause negligible chemotaxis themselves, but potentiate chemotaxis to LPA. Cells rapidly break down LPA present at substantial levels in culture medium and normal skin to generate outward-facing gradients. We measure LPA gradients across the margins of melanomas in vivo, confirming the physiological importance of our results. We conclude that LPA chemotaxis provides a strong drive for melanoma cells to invade outwards. Cells create their own gradients by acting as a sink, breaking down locally present LPA, and thus forming a gradient that is low in the tumour and high in the surrounding areas. The key step is not acquisition of sensitivity to the chemoattractant, but rather the tumour growing to break down enough LPA to form a gradient. Thus the stimulus that drives cell dispersal is not the presence of LPA itself, but the self-generated, outward-directed gradient.


Assuntos
Movimento Celular , Quimiotaxia , Lisofosfolipídeos/metabolismo , Melanoma/metabolismo , Metástase Neoplásica , Animais , Peptídeos e Proteínas de Sinalização Intercelular/metabolismo , Camundongos
13.
Blood ; 123(2): 239-48, 2014 Jan 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24191150

RESUMO

Immunosenescence is the functional deterioration of the immune system during natural aging. Despite increased susceptibility to bacterial infections in older adults, age-associated changes to neutrophil responses are only partially understood, and neutrophil migration has not been characterized in detail. Here we describe reduced chemotaxis but preserved chemokinesis toward a range of inflammatory stimuli in migrating neutrophils isolated from healthy older subjects. Cross-sectional data indicate that migratory behavior changes in the sixth decade of life. Crucially, aberrant migration may increase "bystander" tissue damage and heighten inflammation as a result of excess proteinase release during inaccurate chemotaxis, as well as reducing pathogen clearance. We show evidence of increased neutrophil proteinase activity in older adults, namely, raised levels of neutrophil proteinase substrate-derived peptides and evidence of primary granule release, associated with increased systemic inflammation. Inaccurate migration was causally associated with increased constitutive phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling; untreated neutrophils from old donors demonstrated significant PI3K activation compared with cells from young donors. PI3K-blocking strategies, specifically inhibition of PI3Kγ or PI3Kδ, restored neutrophil migratory accuracy, whereas SHIP1 inhibition worsened migratory flaws. Targeting PI3K signaling may therefore offer a new strategy in improving neutrophil functions during infections and reduce inappropriate inflammation in older patients.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento/imunologia , Quimiotaxia de Leucócito/imunologia , Neutrófilos/imunologia , Neutrófilos/metabolismo , Inibidores de Fosfoinositídeo-3 Quinase , Adulto , Fatores Etários , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Degranulação Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Degranulação Celular/imunologia , Quimiotaxia de Leucócito/efeitos dos fármacos , Estudos Transversais , Citocinas/metabolismo , Citocinas/farmacologia , Ativação Enzimática , Humanos , Doenças do Sistema Imunitário/tratamento farmacológico , Doenças do Sistema Imunitário/imunologia , Interleucina-8/metabolismo , Interleucina-8/farmacologia , Transtornos Leucocíticos/tratamento farmacológico , Transtornos Leucocíticos/imunologia , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Mieloblastina/metabolismo , Neutrófilos/efeitos dos fármacos , Fosfatidilinositol 3-Quinases/metabolismo , Receptores de Citocinas/metabolismo , Transdução de Sinais , Adulto Jovem
14.
BMC Genomics ; 16: 80, 2015 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25758444

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Social amoebae are lower eukaryotes that inhabit the soil. They are characterized by the construction of a starvation-induced multicellular fruiting body with a spore ball and supportive stalk. In most species, the stalk is filled with motile stalk cells, as represented by the model organism Dictyostelium discoideum, whose developmental mechanisms have been well characterized. However, in the genus Acytostelium, the stalk is acellular and all aggregated cells become spores. Phylogenetic analyses have shown that it is not an ancestral genus but has lost the ability to undergo cell differentiation. RESULTS: We performed genome and transcriptome analyses of Acytostelium subglobosum and compared our findings to other available dictyostelid genome data. Although A. subglobosum adopts a qualitatively different developmental program from other dictyostelids, its gene repertoire was largely conserved. Yet, families of polyketide synthase and extracellular matrix proteins have not expanded and a serine protease and ABC transporter B family gene, tagA, and a few other developmental genes are missing in the A. subglobosum lineage. Temporal gene expression patterns are astonishingly dissimilar from those of D. discoideum, and only a limited fraction of the ortholog pairs shared the same expression patterns, so that some signaling cascades for development seem to be disabled in A. subglobosum. CONCLUSIONS: The absence of the ability to undergo cell differentiation in Acytostelium is accompanied by a small change in coding potential and extensive alterations in gene expression patterns.


Assuntos
Amoeba/genética , Genoma de Protozoário , Transcriptoma/genética , Amoeba/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Diferenciação Celular/genética , Expressão Gênica , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Filogenia
15.
J Biol Chem ; 288(4): 2464-74, 2013 Jan 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23223240

RESUMO

Phosphorylation of the actin-related protein 2 (Arp2) subunit of the Arp2/3 complex on evolutionarily conserved threonine and tyrosine residues was recently identified and shown to be necessary for nucleating activity of the Arp2/3 complex and membrane protrusion of Drosophila cells. Here we use the Dictyostelium diploid system to replace the essential Arp2 protein with mutants that cannot be phosphorylated at Thr-235/6 and Tyr-200. We found that aggregation of the resulting mutant cells after starvation was substantially slowed with delayed early developmental gene expression and that chemotaxis toward a cAMP gradient was defective with loss of polarity and attenuated F-actin assembly. Chemotaxis toward cAMP was also diminished with reduced cell speed and directionality and shorter pseudopod lifetime when Arp2 phosphorylation mutant cells were allowed to develop longer to a responsive state similar to that of wild-type cells. However, clathrin-mediated endocytosis and chemotaxis under agar to folate in vegetative cells were only subtly affected in Arp2 phosphorylation mutants. Thus, phosphorylation of threonine and tyrosine is important for a subset of the functions of the Arp2/3 complex, in particular an unexpected major role in regulating development.


Assuntos
Proteína 2 Relacionada a Actina/química , AMP Cíclico/metabolismo , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Citoesqueleto de Actina/metabolismo , Actinas/metabolismo , Alelos , Animais , Movimento Celular , Quimiotaxia , Endocitose , Modelos Biológicos , Mutação , Fosforilação , Espectroscopia de Infravermelho com Transformada de Fourier/métodos , Tirosina/química
16.
Nat Cell Biol ; 9(2): 193-200, 2007 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17220879

RESUMO

Current models of eukaryotic chemotaxis propose that directional sensing causes localized generation of new pseudopods. However, quantitative analysis of pseudopod generation suggests a fundamentally different mechanism for chemotaxis in shallow gradients: first, pseudopods in multiple cell types are usually generated when existing ones bifurcate and are rarely made de novo; second, in Dictyostelium cells in shallow chemoattractant gradients, pseudopods are made at the same rate whether cells are moving up or down gradients. The location and direction of new pseudopods are random within the range allowed by bifurcation and are not oriented by chemoattractants. Thus, pseudopod generation is controlled independently of chemotactic signalling. Third, directional sensing is mediated by maintaining the most accurate existing pseudopod, rather than through the generation of new ones. Finally, the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI(3)K) inhibitor LY294002 affects the frequency of pseudopod generation, but not the accuracy of selection, suggesting that PI(3)K regulates the underlying mechanism of cell movement, rather than control of direction.


Assuntos
Movimento Celular/fisiologia , Extensões da Superfície Celular/fisiologia , Quimiotaxia/fisiologia , Fosfatidilinositol 3-Quinases/fisiologia , Animais , Movimento Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Polaridade Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Polaridade Celular/fisiologia , Forma Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Forma Celular/fisiologia , Extensões da Superfície Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Cromonas/farmacologia , Dictyostelium/citologia , Humanos , Morfolinas/farmacologia , Inibidores de Fosfoinositídeo-3 Quinase , Valores de Referência , Fatores de Tempo
17.
PLoS Biol ; 9(5): e1000618, 2011 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21610858

RESUMO

The mechanism of eukaryotic chemotaxis remains unclear despite intensive study. The most frequently described mechanism acts through attractants causing actin polymerization, in turn leading to pseudopod formation and cell movement. We recently proposed an alternative mechanism, supported by several lines of data, in which pseudopods are made by a self-generated cycle. If chemoattractants are present, they modulate the cycle rather than directly causing actin polymerization. The aim of this work is to test the explanatory and predictive powers of such pseudopod-based models to predict the complex behaviour of cells in chemotaxis. We have now tested the effectiveness of this mechanism using a computational model of cell movement and chemotaxis based on pseudopod autocatalysis. The model reproduces a surprisingly wide range of existing data about cell movement and chemotaxis. It simulates cell polarization and persistence without stimuli and selection of accurate pseudopods when chemoattractant gradients are present. It predicts both bias of pseudopod position in low chemoattractant gradients and--unexpectedly--lateral pseudopod initiation in high gradients. To test the predictive ability of the model, we looked for untested and novel predictions. One prediction from the model is that the angle between successive pseudopods at the front of the cell will increase in proportion to the difference between the cell's direction and the direction of the gradient. We measured the angles between pseudopods in chemotaxing Dictyostelium cells under different conditions and found the results agreed with the model extremely well. Our model and data together suggest that in rapidly moving cells like Dictyostelium and neutrophils an intrinsic pseudopod cycle lies at the heart of cell motility. This implies that the mechanism behind chemotaxis relies on modification of intrinsic pseudopod behaviour, more than generation of new pseudopods or actin polymerization by chemoattractants.


Assuntos
Actinas/metabolismo , Quimiotaxia , Dictyostelium/citologia , Modelos Teóricos , Pseudópodes/fisiologia , Polaridade Celular , Dictyostelium/fisiologia , Ruído , Polimerização , Transfecção
18.
Eukaryot Cell ; 12(11): 1509-16, 2013 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24036345

RESUMO

The SCAR/WAVE complex drives actin-based protrusion, cell migration, and cell separation during cytokinesis. However, the contribution of the individual complex members to the activity of the whole remains a mystery. This is primarily because complex members depend on one another for stability, which limits the scope for experimental manipulation. Several studies suggest that Abi, a relatively small complex member, connects signaling to SCAR/WAVE complex localization and activation through its polyproline C-terminal tail. We generated a deletion series of the Dictyostelium discoideum Abi to investigate its exact role in regulation of the SCAR complex and identified a minimal fragment that would stabilize the complex. Surprisingly, loss of either the N terminus of Abi or the C-terminal polyproline tail conferred no detectable defect in complex recruitment to the leading edge or the formation of pseudopods. A fragment containing approximately 20% Abi--and none of the sites that couple to known signaling pathways--allowed the SCAR complex to function with normal localization and kinetics. However, expression of N-terminal Abi deletions exacerbated the cytokinesis defect of the Dictyostelium abi mutant, which was earlier shown to be caused by the inappropriate activation of SCAR. This demonstrates, unexpectedly, that Abi does not mediate the SCAR complex's ability to make pseudopods, beyond its role in complex stability. Instead, we propose that Abi has a modulatory role when the SCAR complex is activated through other mechanisms.


Assuntos
Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/metabolismo , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Proteínas de Protozoários/metabolismo , Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/química , Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Movimento Celular , Citocinese , Dictyostelium/citologia , Dictyostelium/genética , Dictyostelium/fisiologia , Deleção de Genes , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Peptídeos/química , Ligação Proteica , Estabilidade Proteica , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Transporte Proteico , Proteínas de Protozoários/química , Proteínas de Protozoários/genética , Pseudópodes/metabolismo
19.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 22(1): 82-8, 2011 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21145982

RESUMO

The actin cytoskeleton in eukaryotic cells provides cell structure and organisation, and allows cells to generate forces against membranes. As such it is a central component of a variety of cellular structures involved in cell motility, cytokinesis and vesicle trafficking. In multicellular organisms these processes contribute towards embryonic development and effective functioning of cells of all types, most obviously rapidly moving cells like lymphocytes. Actin also defines and maintains the architecture of complex structures such as neuronal synapses and stereocillia, and is required for basic housekeeping tasks within the cell. It is therefore not surprising that misregulation of the actin cytoskeleton can cause a variety of disease pathologies, including compromised immunity, neurodegeneration, and cancer spread. Dictyostelium discoideum has long been used as a tool for dissecting the mechanisms by which eukaryotic cells migrate and chemotax, and recently it has gained precedence as a model organism for studying the roles of conserved pathways in disease processes. Dictyostelium's unusual lifestyle, positioned between unicellular and multicellular organisms, combined with ease of handling and strong conservation of actin regulatory machinery with higher animals, make it ideally suited for studying actin-related diseases. Here we address how research in Dictyostelium has contributed to our understanding of immune deficiencies and neurological defects in humans, and briefly discuss its future prospects for furthering our understanding of neurodegenerative disorders.


Assuntos
Actinas/metabolismo , Movimento Celular , Dictyostelium/citologia , Dictyostelium/metabolismo , Animais , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos
20.
J Cell Sci ; 124(Pt 22): 3753-9, 2011 Nov 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22114305

RESUMO

The actin cytoskeleton provides scaffolding and physical force to effect fundamental processes such as motility, cytokinesis and vesicle trafficking. The Arp2/3 complex nucleates actin structures and contributes to endocytic vesicle invagination and trafficking away from the plasma membrane. Internalisation and directed recycling of integrins are major driving forces for invasive cell motility and potentially for cancer metastasis. Here, we describe a direct requirement for WASH and Arp2/3-mediated actin polymerisation on the endosomal membrane system for α5ß1 integrin recycling. WASH regulates the trafficking of endosomal α5ß1 integrin to the plasma membrane and is fundamental for integrin-driven cell morphology changes and integrin-mediated cancer cell invasion. Thus, we implicate WASH and Arp2/3-driven actin nucleation in receptor recycling leading to invasive motility.


Assuntos
Complexo 2-3 de Proteínas Relacionadas à Actina/metabolismo , Movimento Celular , Integrina alfa5beta1/metabolismo , Neoplasias/fisiopatologia , Proteína da Síndrome de Wiskott-Aldrich/metabolismo , Complexo 2-3 de Proteínas Relacionadas à Actina/genética , Actinas/metabolismo , Animais , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Membrana Celular/genética , Membrana Celular/metabolismo , Endossomos/genética , Endossomos/metabolismo , Humanos , Integrina alfa5beta1/genética , Invasividade Neoplásica , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Neoplasias/patologia , Transporte Proteico , Proteína da Síndrome de Wiskott-Aldrich/genética
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