Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Montrer: 20 | 50 | 100
Résultats 1 - 11 de 11
Filtrer
Plus de filtres











Base de données
Gamme d'année
1.
Curr Opin Cell Biol ; 80: 102153, 2023 02.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36827850

RÉSUMÉ

Microvilli are actin bundle-supported surface protrusions assembled by diverse cell types to mediate biochemical and physical interactions with the external environment. Found on the surface of some of the earliest animal cells, primordial microvilli likely contributed to bacterial entrapment and feeding. Although millions of years of evolution have repurposed these protrusions to fulfill diverse roles such as detection of mechanical or visual stimuli in inner ear hair cells or retinal pigmented epithelial cells, respectively, solute uptake remains a key essential function linked to these structures. In this mini review, we offer a brief overview of the composition and structure of epithelial microvilli, highlight recent discoveries on the growth of these protrusions early in differentiation, and point to fundamental questions surrounding microvilli biogenesis that remain open for future studies.


Sujet(s)
Actines , Animaux , Microvillosités/métabolisme , Actines/métabolisme
2.
Mol Biol Cell ; 34(4): ar31, 2023 04 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36790915

RÉSUMÉ

Microvilli are defining morphological features of the apical surfaces in diverse epithelial tissues. To develop our understanding of microvillus biogenesis, we used a biotin proximity-labeling approach to uncover new molecules enriched near EPS8, a well-studied marker of the microvillus distal tip compartment. Mass spectrometry of biotinylated hits identified KIAA1671, a large (∼200 kDa), disordered, and previously uncharacterized protein. Based on immunofluorescent staining and expression of fluorescent protein-tagged constructs, we found that KIAA1671 localizes to the base of the brush border in native intestinal tissue and polarized epithelial-cell culture models, as well as dynamic actin-rich structures in unpolarized, nonepithelial cell types. Live imaging also revealed that during the early stages of microvillar growth, KIAA1671 colocalizes with EPS8 in diffraction-limited puncta. However, once elongation of the core bundle begins, these two factors separate, with EPS8 tracking the distal end and KIAA1671 remaining behind at the base of the structure. These results suggest that KIAA1671 cooperates with EPS8 and potentially other assembly factors to initiate growth of microvilli on the apical surface. These findings offer new details on how transporting epithelial cells builds the brush border and may inform our understanding of how apical specializations are assembled in other epithelial contexts.


Sujet(s)
Actines , Cellules épithéliales , Actines/métabolisme , Cellules épithéliales/métabolisme , Microvillosités/métabolisme , Protéines de liaison à l'ARN/métabolisme
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(34): e2204332119, 2022 08 23.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35976880

RÉSUMÉ

Attaching and effacing (AE) lesion formation on enterocytes by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) requires the EPEC type III secretion system (T3SS). Two T3SS effectors injected into the host cell during infection are the atypical kinases, NleH1 and NleH2. However, the host targets of NleH1 and NleH2 kinase activity during infection have not been reported. Here phosphoproteomics identified Ser775 in the microvillus protein Eps8 as a bona fide target of NleH1 and NleH2 phosphorylation. Both kinases interacted with Eps8 through previously unrecognized, noncanonical "proline-rich" motifs, PxxDY, that bound the Src Homology 3 (SH3) domain of Eps8. Structural analysis of the Eps8 SH3 domain bound to a peptide containing one of the proline-rich motifs from NleH showed that the N-terminal part of the peptide adopts a type II polyproline helix, and its C-terminal "DY" segment makes multiple contacts with the SH3 domain. Ser775 phosphorylation by NleH1 or NleH2 hindered Eps8 bundling activity and drove dispersal of Eps8 from the AE lesion during EPEC infection. This finding suggested that NleH1 and NleH2 altered the cellular localization of Eps8 and the cytoskeletal composition of AE lesions during EPEC infection.


Sujet(s)
Protéines adaptatrices de la transduction du signal , Escherichia coli entéropathogène , Infections à Escherichia coli , Protéines Escherichia coli , Phosphotransferases , Protéines adaptatrices de la transduction du signal/génétique , Protéines adaptatrices de la transduction du signal/métabolisme , Noyau de la cellule/métabolisme , Escherichia coli entéropathogène/pathogénicité , Infections à Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Infections à Escherichia coli/microbiologie , Protéines Escherichia coli/métabolisme , Humains , Microvillosités/métabolisme , Phosphorylation , Phosphotransferases/métabolisme
4.
STAR Protoc ; 2(4): 100998, 2021 12 17.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34950883

RÉSUMÉ

A key facet of epithelial differentiation is the assembly of actin-based protrusions known as microvilli, which amplify apical membrane surface area for various cell functions. To probe mechanisms of microvillus assembly, we developed a protocol using spinning disk confocal microscopy to directly visualize microvillus biogenesis on the surface of cultured porcine kidney epithelial cell monolayers engineered to express fluorescent proteins. This protocol offers access to the molecular details of individual protrusion growth events at high spatiotemporal resolution. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Gaeta et al. (2021).


Sujet(s)
Cellules épithéliales/cytologie , Rein/cytologie , Microscopie confocale/méthodes , Microvillosités , Animaux , Techniques de culture cellulaire , Cellules cultivées , Microvillosités/composition chimique , Microvillosités/métabolisme , Suidae
5.
Comput Biol Med ; 134: 104501, 2021 07.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34107436

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: The quantitative analysis of microscope videos often requires instance segmentation and tracking of cellular and subcellular objects. The traditional method consists of two stages: (1) performing instance object segmentation of each frame, and (2) associating objects frame-by-frame. Recently, pixel-embedding-based deep learning approaches these two steps simultaneously as a single stage holistic solution. Pixel-embedding-based learning forces similar feature representation of pixels from the same object, while maximizing the difference of feature representations from different objects. However, such deep learning methods require consistent annotations not only spatially (for segmentation), but also temporally (for tracking). In computer vision, annotated training data with consistent segmentation and tracking is resource intensive, the severity of which is multiplied in microscopy imaging due to (1) dense objects (e.g., overlapping or touching), and (2) high dynamics (e.g., irregular motion and mitosis). Adversarial simulations have provided successful solutions to alleviate the lack of such annotations in dynamics scenes in computer vision, such as using simulated environments (e.g., computer games) to train real-world self-driving systems. METHODS: In this paper, we propose an annotation-free synthetic instance segmentation and tracking (ASIST) method with adversarial simulation and single-stage pixel-embedding based learning. CONTRIBUTION: The contribution of this paper is three-fold: (1) the proposed method aggregates adversarial simulations and single-stage pixel-embedding based deep learning (2) the method is assessed with both the cellular (i.e., HeLa cells); and subcellular (i.e., microvilli) objects; and (3) to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to explore annotation-free instance segmentation and tracking study for microscope videos. RESULTS: The ASIST method achieved an important step forward, when compared with fully supervised approaches: ASIST shows 7%-11% higher segmentation, detection and tracking performance on microvilli relative to fully supervised methods, and comparable performance on Hela cell videos.


Sujet(s)
Traitement d'image par ordinateur , Microscopie , Simulation numérique , Cellules HeLa , Humains
6.
Curr Biol ; 31(12): 2561-2575.e6, 2021 06 21.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33951456

RÉSUMÉ

Microvilli are actin-bundle-supported surface protrusions that play essential roles in diverse epithelial functions. To develop our understanding of microvilli biogenesis, we used live imaging to directly visualize protrusion growth at early stages of epithelial differentiation. Time-lapse data revealed that specific factors, including epidermal growth factor pathway substrate 8 (EPS8) and insulin-receptor tyrosine kinase substrate (IRTKS) (also known as BAIAP2L1), appear in diffraction-limited puncta at the cell surface and mark future sites of microvillus growth. New core actin bundles elongate from these puncta in parallel with the arrival of ezrin and subsequent plasma membrane encapsulation. In addition to de novo growth, we also observed that new microvilli emerge from pre-existing protrusions. Moreover, we found that nascent microvilli can also collapse, characterized first by loss of membrane wrapping and ezrin enrichment, followed by a sharp decrease in distal tip EPS8 and IRTKS levels, and ultimately disassembly of the core actin bundle itself. These studies are the first to offer a temporally resolved microvillus growth mechanism and highlight factors that participate in this process; they also provide important insights on the growth of apical specializations that will likely apply to diverse epithelial contexts.


Sujet(s)
Cellules épithéliales/cytologie , Cellules épithéliales/métabolisme , Microvillosités/métabolisme , Imagerie accélérée , Actines/métabolisme , Protéines adaptatrices de la transduction du signal/métabolisme , Animaux , Lignée cellulaire , Membrane cellulaire/métabolisme , Humains , Protéines des microfilaments/métabolisme , Opossum , Suidae
7.
Dev Cell ; 50(5): 545-556.e4, 2019 09 09.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31378589

RÉSUMÉ

Transporting epithelial cells generate arrays of microvilli, known as a brush border, to enhance functional capacity. To understand brush border formation, we used live cell imaging to visualize apical remodeling early in this process. Strikingly, we found that individual microvilli exhibit persistent active motility, translocating across the cell surface at âˆ¼0.2 µm/min. Perturbation with inhibitors and photokinetic experiments revealed that microvillar motility is driven by actin assembly at the barbed ends of core bundles, which in turn is linked to robust treadmilling of these structures. Actin regulatory factors IRTKS and EPS8 localize to the barbed ends of motile microvilli, where they control the kinetics and nature of movement. As the apical surface of differentiating epithelial cells is crowded with nascent microvilli, persistent motility promotes collisions between protrusions and ultimately clustering and consolidation into higher-order arrays. Thus, microvillar motility represents a previously unrecognized driving force for apical surface remodeling and maturation during epithelial differentiation.


Sujet(s)
Actines/métabolisme , Différenciation cellulaire , Cellules épithéliales/cytologie , Microvillosités/métabolisme , Protéines adaptatrices de la transduction du signal/métabolisme , Animaux , Cellules Caco-2 , Cadhérines/métabolisme , Mouvement cellulaire , Cellules épithéliales/métabolisme , Cellules HEK293 , Humains , Protéines des microfilaments/métabolisme , Myosines/métabolisme , Suidae
8.
Cancer Res ; 78(16): 4658-4670, 2018 08 15.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29871936

RÉSUMÉ

Macropinocytosis has emerged as an important pathway of protein acquisition in cancer cells, particularly in tumors with activated Ras such as pancreatic and colon cancer. Macropinocytosis is also the route of entry of Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) and other microbial therapies of cancer. Despite this important role in tumor biology and therapy, the full mechanisms by which cancer cells can activate macropinocytosis remain incompletely defined. Using BCG uptake to assay macropinocytosis, we executed a genome-wide shRNA screen for macropinocytosis activators and identified Wnt pathway activation as a strong driver of macropinocytosis. Wnt-driven macropinocytosis was downstream of the ß-catenin-dependent canonical Wnt pathway, was PAK1 dependent, and supported albumin-dependent growth in Ras-WT cells. In cells with activated Ras-dependent macropinocytosis, pharmacologic or genetic inhibition of Wnt signaling suppressed macropinocytosis. In a mouse model of Wnt-driven colonic hyperplasia via APC silencing, Wnt-activated macropinocytosis stimulated uptake of luminal microbiota, a process reversed by topical pharmacologic inhibition of macropinocytosis. Our findings indicate that Wnt pathway activation drives macropinocytosis in cancer, and its inhibition could provide a therapeutic vulnerability in Wnt-driven intestinal polyposis and cancers with Wnt activation.Significance: The Wnt pathway drives macropinocytosis in cancer cells, thereby contributing to cancer growth in nutrient-deficient conditions and, in the context of colon cancer, to the early phases of oncogenesis. Cancer Res; 78(16); 4658-70. ©2018 AACR.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs/traitement médicamenteux , Pinocytose/génétique , Voie de signalisation Wnt/génétique , Protéine de la polypose adénomateuse colique/antagonistes et inhibiteurs , Animaux , Lignée cellulaire tumorale , Extinction de l'expression des gènes , Génome humain/génétique , Humains , Souris , Mycobacterium bovis/génétique , Tumeurs/génétique , Tumeurs/anatomopathologie , Petit ARN interférent/génétique , bêta-Caténine/génétique
9.
J Leukoc Biol ; 101(3): 683-692, 2017 03.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28250113

RÉSUMÉ

Although growth factors and chemokines elicit different overall effects on cells-growth and chemotaxis, respectively-and activate distinct classes of cell-surface receptors, nonetheless, they trigger similar cellular activities and signaling pathways. The growth factor M-CSF and the chemokine CXCL12 both stimulate the endocytic process of macropinocytosis, and both activate the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1), a protein complex that regulates cell metabolism. Recent studies of signaling by M-CSF in macrophages identified a role for macropinocytosis in the activation of mTORC1, in which delivery of extracellular amino acids into lysosomes via macropinocytosis was required for activation of mTORC1. Here, we analyzed the regulation of macropinosome (MP) formation in response to CXCL12 and identified 2 roles for macropinocytosis in the activation of mTORC1. Within 5 min of adding CXCL12, murine macrophages increased ruffling, macropinocytosis and amino acid-dependent activation of mTORC1. Inhibitors of macropinocytosis blocked activation of mTORC1, and various isoform-specific inhibitors of type 1 PI3K and protein kinase C (PKC) showed similar patterns of inhibition of macropinocytosis and mTORC1 activity. However, unlike the response to M-CSF, Akt phosphorylation (pAkt) in response to CXCL12 required the actin cytoskeleton and the formation of macropinocytic cups. Quantitative fluorescence microscopy showed that phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-trisphosphate (PIP3), a product of PI3K and an upstream activator of Akt, localized to macropinocytic cups and that pAkt occurred primarily in cups. These results indicate that CXCL12 activates mTORC1 via 2 mechanisms: 1) that the macropinocytic cup localizes Akt signaling and 2) that MPs convey extracellular nutrients to lysosomes.


Sujet(s)
Chimiokine CXCL12/pharmacologie , Macrophages/cytologie , Macrophages/métabolisme , Complexes multiprotéiques/métabolisme , Pinocytose/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Transduction du signal/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Sérine-thréonine kinases TOR/métabolisme , Acides aminés/métabolisme , Animaux , Cellules de la moelle osseuse/cytologie , Prolongements cytoplasmiques/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Prolongements cytoplasmiques/métabolisme , Espace extracellulaire/métabolisme , Isoenzymes/métabolisme , Macrophages/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Complexe-1 cible mécanistique de la rapamycine , Souris de lignée C57BL , Modèles biologiques , Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases/métabolisme , Phosphorylation/effets des médicaments et des substances chimiques , Inhibiteurs de protéines kinases/pharmacologie , Protéines proto-oncogènes c-akt/métabolisme , Ribosomal Protein S6 Kinases/métabolisme
10.
Front Physiol ; 6: 8, 2015.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25688212

RÉSUMÉ

The cellular movements that construct a macropinosome have a corresponding sequence of chemical transitions in the cup-shaped region of plasma membrane that becomes the macropinosome. To determine the relative positions of type I phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and phospholipase C (PLC) in this pathway, we analyzed macropinocytosis in macrophages stimulated by the growth factor macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) and by the diacylglycerol (DAG) analog phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA). In cells stimulated with M-CSF, microscopic imaging of fluorescent probes for intracellular lipids indicated that the PI3K product phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-trisphosphate (PIP3) appeared in cups just prior to DAG. We then tested the hypothesis that PMA and DAG function after PI3K and prior to Ras and protein kinase C (PKC) during macropinosome formation in macrophages. Although the PI3K target Akt was activated by M-CSF, the Akt inhibitor MK-2206 did not inhibit macropinocytosis. The phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitor U73122 blocked macropinocytosis by M-CSF but not PMA. Macropinocytosis in response to M-CSF and PMA was inhibited by the Ras inhibitor farnesyl thiosalicylate (FTS), by the PKC inhibitor Calphostin C and by the broad specificity inhibitor rottlerin. These studies support a model in which M-CSF stimulates PI3K in macropinocytic cups, and the resulting increase in PIP3 activates PLC, which in turn generates DAG necessary for activation of PKC, Ras and the late stages of macropinosome closure.

11.
Mol Biol Cell ; 21(3): 470-80, 2010 Feb 01.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19955216

RÉSUMÉ

Fcgamma Receptor (FcR)-mediated phagocytosis by macrophages requires phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and activation of the Rho-family GTPases Cdc42 and Rac1. Cdc42 is activated at the advancing edge of the phagocytic cup, where actin is concentrated, and is deactivated at the base of the cup. The timing of 3' phosphoinositide (3'PI) concentration changes in cup membranes suggests a role for 3'PIs in deactivation of Cdc42. This study examined the relationships between PI3K and the patterns of Rho-family GTPase signaling during phagosome formation. Inhibition of PI3K resulted in persistently active Cdc42 and Rac1, but not Rac2, in stalled phagocytic cups. Patterns of 3'PIs and Rho-family GTPase activities during phagocytosis of 5- and 2-mum-diameter microspheres indicated similar underlying mechanisms despite particle size-dependent sensitivities to PI3K inhibition. Expression of constitutively active Cdc42(G12V) increased 3'PI concentrations in plasma membranes and small phagosomes, indicating a role for Cdc42 in PI3K activation. Cdc42(G12V) inhibited phagocytosis at a later stage than inhibition by dominant negative Cdc42(N17). Together, these studies identified a Cdc42 activation cycle organized by PI3K, in which FcR-activated Cdc42 stimulates PI3K and actin polymerization, and the subsequent increase of 3'PIs in cup membranes inactivates Cdc42 to allow actin recycling necessary for phagosome formation.


Sujet(s)
Phagocytose/physiologie , Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases/métabolisme , Récepteur Fc/métabolisme , Protéine G cdc42/métabolisme , Actines/métabolisme , Animaux , Activation enzymatique , Antienzymes/métabolisme , Macrophages/cytologie , Macrophages/métabolisme , Souris , Microsphères , Taille de particule , Phagosomes/métabolisme , Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases/génétique , Récepteur Fc/génétique , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/génétique , Protéines de fusion recombinantes/métabolisme , Transduction du signal/physiologie , Protéine G cdc42/génétique , Protéine G rac1/génétique , Protéine G rac1/métabolisme
SÉLECTION CITATIONS
DÉTAIL DE RECHERCHE