Keratin-binding ability of the N-terminal Solo domain of Solo is critical for its function in cellular mechanotransduction.
Sachiko FujiwaraTsubasa S MatsuiKazumasa OhashiKensaku MizunoShinji DeguchiPublished in: Genes to cells : devoted to molecular & cellular mechanisms (2019)
Solo (ARHGEF40) is a RhoA-targeting guanine nucleotide exchange factor that regulates tensional force-induced cytoskeletal reorganization. Solo binds to keratin 8/keratin 18 (K8/K18) filaments through multiple sites, but the roles of these interactions in the localization and mechanotransduction-regulating function of Solo remain unclear. Here, we constructed two Solo mutants (L14R/L17R and L49R/L52R) with leucine-to-arginine replacements in the N-terminal conserved region (which we termed the Solo domain) and analyzed their K18-binding activities. These mutations markedly decreased the K18-binding ability of the N-terminal fragment (residues 1-329) of Solo but had no apparent effect on the K18-binding ability of full-length (FL) Solo. When expressed in cultured cells, wild-type Solo-FL showed a unique punctate localization near the ventral surface of cells and caused the reinforcement of actin filaments. In contrast, despite retaining the K18-binding ability, the L14R/L17R and L49R/L52R mutants of Solo-FL were diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm and barely induced actin cytoskeletal reinforcement. Furthermore, wild-type Solo-FL promoted traction force generation against extracellular matrices and tensional force-induced stress fiber reinforcement, but its L14R/L17R and L49R/L52R mutants did not. These results suggest that the K18-binding ability of the N-terminal Solo domain is critical for the ventral localization of Solo and its function in regulating mechanotransduction.
Keyphrases
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- dna binding
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- magnetic resonance imaging
- nitric oxide
- single molecule
- transcription factor
- cell cycle arrest
- magnetic resonance
- cell proliferation
- signaling pathway
- drug induced
- spinal cord injury
- wastewater treatment
- cell migration
- drug delivery
- prefrontal cortex