Title: Piyush Bajaj
1Cadherin-Catenin-Actin Complex
- Piyush Bajaj
- BIOE 506
- April 29th, 2008
2Cadherins in developmentcell adhesion, sorting
and tissue morphogenesisJennifer M. Halbleib and
W. James Nelson, Genes and Development , 2006
- Summary
- Although cadherins evolved to facilitate
mechanical cell-cell adhesion, they play a very
important role in tissue morphogenesis
3Cadherins
- Surface glycoprotein responsible for Ca2
dependent cell-cell adhesion - Greater than 100 family members have been
identified with diverse protein structures but
with same extracellular cadherin repeats (ECs) - Important to vertebrates, insects, nematodes and
even unicellular organisms. - Important in the formation and maintenance of
diverse tissues and organs - Defects will lead to different types of diseases
- 3 different types of cadherin and their roles in
development
1
1 http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadherins
4Classical cadherin
- First type of cadherin family to be identified
- These are subdivided into Type 1 and Type 2 each
of which have 5 ECs in the extracellular domain - Type 1 mediate strong cell-cell adhesion and have
a conserved HAV tripeptide motif in the most
distal EC1 - Type 2 cadherin lacks this motif
- EC domains interact with different binding
partners
5Classical cadherin
- The cytoplasmic domain is highly conserved in
different types of classical cadherin and binds
to several proteins - However, recent study Dress et al., 2005 showed
that a-catenin acts in an allosteric manner with
ß-catenin and actin
1
1 http//calcium.uhnres.utoronto.ca/cadherin/pub
_pages/general/intro_cadherins.htm 2 Dress et
al., a-catenin is a molecular swiitch that binds
Ecadherin -ß-catenin and regulates actin
filament assembly. Cell 123 903-915
6Regulation of cadherin activity
- Regulation happens at many levels including gene
expression, transport and protein turnover at the
cell surface - Methylation and repression of the promoter
activity - During carcinogenesis, methylation of the
E-cadherin promoter reduces its expression and
leads to disease progression and metastasis - Decreased E-cadherin gene transcription results
in a loss of cell-cell adhesion and increased
cell migration - Newly synthesized E-cadherin at the plasma
membrane requires binding of ß-catenin and this
process is regulated by phosphorylation,
proteolysis, etc. - E-cadherin is actively endocytosed via clathrin
coated vesicles which can result in rapid loss of
cell-cell adhesion
7Classical cadherins in cell sorting
- Each type of classical cadherin tends to be
expressed at the highest level in distinct
tissues during development - E-cadherin is expresses in expressed in all
epithelial tissue and is important for cell
polarity - N-cadherin is expressed in neural tissue and
muscle - R-cadherin is expressed in forebrain and muscle
- The role of cadherin subtypes in mediating cell
sorting has been shown in tissue culture
8Classical cadherins in cell sorting
- The specificity of adhesion by the EC1 domain
provides one mechanism to explain how cells
segregate from each other within complex cell
mixtures - Each type of cadherin might activate tissue
specific intracellular signaling pathway by using
the conserved binding partners of the cytoplasmic
domain
9Cadherin subtype switching in development
- Subtype switching is a prominent physiological
feature of cadherin morphogenetic function during
development - Conversion from E-cadherin to N-cadherin is
observed during neurulation in chick embryos - Cells loose their previous epithelial morphology
and get converted to a fibroblastic shape by a
process known as epithelial mesenchymal
transition - During tumor progression, E-cadherin is down
regulated and concomitantly N-cadherin is
upregulated - N-cadherin activates MAPK signaling which then
regulates mitosis, differentiation and cell
apoptosis
10Classic cadherins nervous system
- The development and maintenance of the nervous
system are major areas of focus - Different cadherins are expressed in different
cells and layers of the nervous system - Layers that receive information VS that send
- Dynamic cadherin adhesion is important in neurite
outgrowth and guidance and synapse formation - Cadherin 11 promotes axon elongation while
cadherin 13 acts as a repellant cue for growth
cones - Cadherins regulate synaptic plasticity
- LTP
11Protocadherin
- They are primarily expressed in the nervous
system although have important development
expressions in no-neuronal tissues. - Present in vertebrates and certain sea sponges
but not found in Drosophila or C. elegans - Work on understanding protocadherin function is
still in its infancy compared with classical
cadherin
12Structural organization and gene structure
- Protocadherins are type 1 transmembrane proteins
like classical cadherins. - However, they have six to seven EC domains
- They have weak adhesive properties
- The cytoplasmic domain of protocadherins is
structurally diverse in contrast to classic
cadherins - Majority of protocadherin can be classified into
three clusters (a,ß,?) each with a unique gene
structure that encode constant and variable
domains
13Protocadherin function in cell organization
- Pcdh 10 although mainly expressed in the nervous
system is also present in somites and facilitates
their segregation - Pcdh are present during embryogenesis and
gradually become enriched at synapses and their
expression decreases after the neurons mature and
become myelinated - However, deletion of the entire cluster of Pcdh-
? genes in mice resulted in no general defects
in neuronal survival, migration etc.
14Protocadherin function in cell signaling
- The primary function of protocadherins is to
relay a signal to the cytoplasm in response to
cell recognition and not maintain physical
interactions between cells - Pcdh-a proteins in mice have a RGD motif that can
facilitate interactions with integrins in vitro - Protocadherins play a crucial role during
embryogenesis, particularly in the CNS - These functions require activation of
intracellular signaling in response to engagement
of cell-cell interactions
15Atypical cadherins and PCP
- PCP refers to polarized orientation of epithelial
cells along the long axis of the cell monolayer - Large atypical cadherins Dachsous (Ds), Fat, and
Flamingo (Fmi) are involved in PCP signaling - Ds, Fat, Fmi have 27, 34 and 9 ECs instead of 5
in the classic cadherins - The cytoplasmic domains of Ds and Fat have
sequence homology with the ß-catenin binding site
of classic cadherins - Loss of Fat function leads to hyperproliferation
of Drosophila imaginal discs - However, only the cytoplasmic tail of cadherin is
required for this effect - Therefore, atypical cadherins mediate cell-cell
adhesion and thereby regulate tissue size and
polarity cues
16Atypical cadherins in vertebrate development
- In vertebrate development, PCP components
function in convergence and extension movements - Organization of hair cell in the stereocilia
within the inner ear because of the cadherin
interaction in the vertebrates - Involved in mechanotransduction
- Also, have roles in cell recognition and
participate in complex, highly conserved
signaling pathway
17Deconstructing the Cadherin-Catenin-Actin
ComplexYamada et al., Cell 2005
- Summary
- The prevailing dogma is that cadherins are linked
to the actin cytoskeleton through ß-catenin and
a-catenin, however, the authors show that this
quaternary complex does not happen
18Introduction
- The spatial and functional organization of cells
in tissues is determined by cell-cell adhesion - Disruption of this activity is a common occurence
in metastatic cancer - The cadherin cytoplasmic domain forms a high
affinity, 11 complex with ß-catenin, and
ß-catenin binds with lower affinity to a-catenin - Several studies (12) show that a-catenin
interacts with actin cytoskeleton - However, no experiment has shown the formation of
quarternary complex in solution or in cell
membranes - These are mutually exclusive events
19Binding of a-catenin to actin and ß-catenin is
mutually exclusive
- Actin-filament pelleting assay
- a-catenin pelleted with actin filaments in the
presence of increasing concentrations of
E-cadherin-ß-catenin complex - However, E-cadherin- ß-catenin did not pellet
above the background level - Result
- The chimera failed to bind actin in the pelleting
assay
20Reconstitution of ß and a-catenin assembly on
membrane patches
- A Unroofing of MDCK cells
- B After sonication, a patchwork of ventral
membranes attached to cadherin substratum - C - Reconstitute the actin catenin binding,
GnHcl was used - ß-catenin addition to the patches reached about
80 of the prestripped level while only 25 for
a-catenin
21Actin filaments do not assemble on reconstituted
membranes
- Actin binding was not detected on stripped
membrane patches which were preincubated with
a-catenin-ß-catenin complex
22Measurement of the complex at mature cell-cell
contacts
- E-cadherin, a-catenin, ß-catenin were tagged with
GFP - The level of exogenous protein expression in
stable cell lines was less than that of the
endogenous protein - Protein dynamics were measured by FRAP
- The recovery time and mobile fraction for
E-cadherin-GFP (0.54 min, 22.9), a-catenin (0.43
min, 33.7), ß-catenin (0.66, 34.2) were similar - Mutants of E-cadherin (lacking the cytomplasmic
domain) and a-catenin (lacking the actin binding
domain) were expressed - Both mutant E-cadherin and a-catenin had
mobility rate similar to those of full length of
these species - Therefore, cadherin-catenin complex and actin
cytoskeleton did not affect the dynamics of this
complex - The mobile fraction for GFP-actin was almost
complete (90) and rapid (0.16 min) in contrast
to more immobile E-cadherin, a-catenin, ß-catenin
- Rhod-actin had recovery kinetics similar to that
of GFP-actin (recovery 0.21 min)
23Contd.
- Thus actin associated with cell-cell contacts is
unusually dynamic compared to that associated
with cell substrate adhesion - Therefore, it is a mutually exclusive event
24Disrupting actin organization does not affect
cadherin or a-catenin dynamics
- Cytochalasin D was used to disrupt the actin
dynamics at cell-cell contacts and jasplakinolide
was used to stabalize it - After 1 hr treatment with CD, the actin dynamics
were redistributed and aggregated in the
cytoplasm - A small fraction remained associated with intact
cell-cell contacts - After photobleaching, the recovery rate and
mobile fraction of actin was much lower than the
control - The recovery rate and mobile fraction of
E-cadherin-GFP and acatenin-GFP remained the
same as control - Vice versa for jasplakinolide
- Together these results show that mobility of
cadherin-catenin complex at cell-cell contacts is
independent of actin organization
25(No Transcript)
26Conclusion
- A general assumption has been that binding of a
given protein to two distinct partners means that
all the three are in the same complex - The authors show that this is not the case
27Questions ?