Induced cortical tension restores functional junctions in adhesion-defective carcinoma cells.
Shoko ItoSatoru OkudaMasako AbeMari FujimotoTetsuo OnukiTamako NishimuraMasatoshi TakeichiPublished in: Nature communications (2017)
Normal epithelial cells are stably connected to each other via the apical junctional complex (AJC). AJCs, however, tend to be disrupted during tumor progression, and this process is implicated in cancer dissemination. Here, using colon carcinoma cells that fail to form AJCs, we investigated molecular defects behind this failure through a search for chemical compounds that could restore AJCs, and found that microtubule-polymerization inhibitors (MTIs) were effective. MTIs activated GEF-H1/RhoA signaling, causing actomyosin contraction at the apical cortex. This contraction transmitted force to the cadherin-catenin complex, resulting in a mechanosensitive recruitment of vinculin to cell junctions. This process, in turn, recruited PDZ-RhoGEF to the junctions, leading to the RhoA/ROCK/LIM kinase/cofilin-dependent stabilization of the junctions. RhoGAP depletion mimicked these MTI-mediated processes. Cells that normally organize AJCs did not show such MTI/RhoA sensitivity. Thus, advanced carcinoma cells require elevated RhoA activity for establishing robust junctions, which triggers tension-sensitive reorganization of actin/adhesion regulators.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- living cells
- atomic force microscopy
- cell migration
- induced apoptosis
- squamous cell carcinoma
- smooth muscle
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- biofilm formation
- cell proliferation
- transcription factor
- papillary thyroid
- poor prognosis
- escherichia coli
- cell therapy
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- high resolution
- bone marrow
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- long non coding rna
- cell death
- drug induced
- stress induced
- fluorescent probe