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EHBP1L1, an apicobasal polarity regulator, is critical for nuclear polarization during enucleation of erythroblasts.

Ji WuKenta MoriwakiTatsuya AsukaRitsuko NakaiSatoshi KandaManabu TaniguchiTatsuki SugiyamaShin-Ichiro YoshimuraMasataka KuniiTakashi NagasawaNaoki HosenEiji MiyoshiAkihiro Harada
Published in: Blood advances (2023)
Cell polarity, the asymmetric distribution of proteins and organelles, is permanently or transiently established in various cell types and plays an important role in many physiological events. EH domain-binding protein 1 like 1 (EHBP1L1) is an adaptor protein that is localized on recycling endosomes and regulates apical-directed transport in polarized epithelial cells. However, the role of EHBP1L1 in non-epithelial cells remains unknown. In this study, Ehbp1l1-/- mice showed impaired erythroblast enucleation. Further analyses showed that nuclear polarization prior to enucleation was impaired in Ehbp1l1-/- erythroblasts. It was also revealed that EHBP1L1 interactors Rab10, Bin1, and dynamin were involved in erythroblast enucleation. In addition, Ehbp1l1-/- erythrocytes exhibited stomatocytic morphology and dehydration. These defects in erythroid cells culminated in early postnatal anemic lethality in Ehbp1l1-/- mice. Moreover, we found the mislocalization of nuclei and mitochondria in the skeletal muscle cells of Ehbp1l1-/- mice, as observed in patients with centronuclear myopathy with genetic mutations in Bin1 or dynamin 2. Taken together, our findings indicate that the Rab8/10-EHBP1L1-Bin1-dynamin axis plays an important role in multiple cell polarity systems in epithelial and non-epithelial cells.
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