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Vol. 18, Issue 6, 2203-2215, June 2007
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*The Margaret Dyson Institute of Vision Research and
Graduate Program in Physiology, Biophysics, and Systems Biology, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY 10021
Submitted February 2, 2007;
Revised March 16, 2007;
Accepted March 28, 2007
Monitoring Editor: Keith Mostov
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Studies in cultured kidney (Madin Darby canine kidney; MDCK), mammary (MCF-10A), or intestinal (T84) epithelial cells suggest that lumen formation in columnar cells is intimately linked to a differentiation program initiated by cellcell contact (Vega-Salas et al., 1987
; Vega-Salas et al., 1993
; Utech et al., 2005
). Cellcell contact provides spatial cues that serve as landmarks to recruit, in a hierarchical manner, scaffolding and signaling molecules, which define and reinforce luminal, basal, and lateral surface domains by instructing the reorganization of cytoskeletal networks and the establishment of polarized protein-targeting mechanisms (Yeaman et al., 1999
; Nelson, 2003
). Adhesion molecules of the cadherin family that depend on millimolar concentration of extracellular Ca2+ for their activity have been placed on top of the hierarchy of polarization cues. Thus, when cultured in low (<5 µM) Ca2+ medium, confluent epithelial monolayers not only fail to form cellcell adhesion junctions but also they lack all aspects of polarization, such as polarized surface domains, occluding junctions, or their epithelial-specific microtubule and actin organization. Raising the Ca2+ concentration to 1.82 mM leads to rapid and synchronous development of all aspects of polarity (Vega-Salas et al., 1988
; Gonzalez-Mariscal et al., 1990
; Mattey et al., 1990
). Among the Ca2+-dependent adhesion molecules, E-cadherin has been attributed the principal role as polarization trigger, as function-blocking antibodies to the E-cadherin extracellular domain inhibited the formation not only of adhesion junctions, but also of tight and desmosomal junctions (Gumbiner and Simons, 1987
; Gumbiner et al., 1988
). Notably, however, even high concentrations of E-cadherin antibodies only delayed but did not prevent the formation of tight junctions in Ca2+-switch assays. More recently, substitution of endogenous E-cadherin for an adhesion-deficient mutant (Troxell et al., 2000
, 2001
) and Ca2+-switch experiments in E-cadherindepleted MDCK cells (Capaldo and Macara, 2007
) further supported the notion that other Ca2+-dependent adhesion mechanisms can induce the development of tight junctions and polarized surface domains in the absence of E-cadherinmediated adhesion.
Although MDCK cells establish a bona fide luminal surface only upon cellcell adhesion, luminal proteins can polarize in the absence of cellcell contacts. In low Ca2+ medium, they form a specialized intracellular vacuolar apical compartment (VAC), also observed in several intestinal pathologies (Remy et al., 1990
; Vega-Salas et al., 1993
), that is excreted to give rise to the apical cell surface upon Ca2+ switch (Vega-Salas et al., 1987
, 1988
). Like MDCK cells in low Ca2+ medium, nonpolarized hepatic WIFB cells accumulate their luminal markers in a specialized intracellular organelle that gives rise to the BC-like luminal domains when polarity is established (Tuma et al., 2002
). The hepatic intracellular apical compartment, however, differs from the VACs of MDCK cells in morphology and in the trafficking itineraries for luminal markers: VACs contain microvilli and do not display endocytic markers; they accumulate apical proteins before their appearance at the cell surface (Vega-Salas et al., 1987
; Cohen et al., 2004b
). The hepatic apical compartment, by contrast, is devoid of actin and is endosomal in nature; luminal markers constitutively cycle between this compartment and the cell surface (Tuma et al., 2002
). These differences might reflect the distinct luminal targeting pathways that operate in polarized kidney and hepatic epithelia. Although polarized MDCK cells target most, if not all, of their luminal proteins directly to the apical domain (Powell and Rodriguez-Boulan, 1992
; Keller and Simons, 1997
; Schuck and Simons, 2006
), hepatocytes target many of their BC-markers via transcytosis from the basolateral domain (Hubbard, 1991
; Tuma and Hubbard, 2003
).
Unlike in MDCK cells, Ca2+-dependent cellcell contacts alone do not trigger the conversion of the apical endosome into bile-canalicularlike lumina in WIFB cells (Ihrke et al., 1993
). The polarization cue for cultured hepatocytes is not known.
We recently reported that the serine/threonine kinase Par1b/MARK2/EMK1, a mammalian orthologue of C. elegans Par1, promotes the formation of BC-like lateral lumina when overexpressed in MDCK cells (Cohen et al., 2004a
). Expression of Par1b also caused the appearance of an apical endosomal compartment in nonpolarized cells and a switch from a direct to a transcytotic mode of luminal protein targeting in polarized monolayers, all hallmarks of the liver epithelial phenotype (Cohen et al., 2004b
). We suggested that Par1b-MDCK cells represent a model system to elucidate the mechanisms that control the branching between columnar and hepatic polarity pathways. In the current study, we have begun to characterize signaling mechanisms for the Par1b-dependent establishment of hepatic-type polarity in MDCK cells.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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All experiments in which the effect of Par1b was assessed were conducted in a Par1b-MDCK cell line expressing COOH-terminal myc-tagged canine EMK1/Par1b under a doxycycline (dox)-regulated promotor as described previously (Cohen et al., 2004a
). The doxycycline-dependent
Ecadherin-MDCK cell line T151 (Troxell et al., 2000
) was provided by Dr. J. Marrs (University of Indiana). For control conditions, expression of the recombinant protein was repressed by 20 ng/ml dox; for Par1b (10-fold over endogenous levels) or
Ecadherin induction, dox was withdrawn for 24 h before cell seeding. For experiments with the rho-kinase (ROCK) and myosin II inhibitors, we used the parental MDCK-TET-OFF cells (provided by K. Mostov, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA). For low Ca2+-monolayer cultures and Ca2+-switch experiments, cells were plated at confluence in minimum essential medium modified for suspension (SMEM) (low Ca2+ medium; Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) with 10% fetal calf serum dialyzed against phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and maintained for 16 h before analysis or switch to normal growth medium.
Transduction with recombinant dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV)-green fluorescent protein (GFP) or Par1b adenovirus was in serum-free SMEM for 2 h with 1 plaque-forming unit (pfu)/cell. Cells were analyzed 1248 h after adenovirus transduction.
For E-cadherin and
-catenin depletion, Par1b-MDCK cells were transfected with 10 µg of the respective pSUPER-based cDNA by using Amaxa-nucleofection (Amaxa Biosystems, Cologne, Germany) as described previously (Cohen et al., 2004a
) and cultured in the presence of dox. Protein depletion was maximal 4872 h after transfection. For Ca2+-switch experiments, cells were reseeded in SMEM after 36 h and cultured for 16 h in the presence or absence of dox before Ca2+ switch. For experiments in low Ca2+ medium, dox was withdrawn after 36 h in culture, and cells were reseeded in SMEM 24 h later. They were analyzed after 16 h in SMEM.
N90
-catenin and control vector transfection was via Amaxa-nucleofection into Par1b-MDCK that were cultured for 18 h in the absence of dox before reseeding in SMEM.
cDNA and Adenovirus Generation
Rat DPPIV cDNA (provided by Ora Weisz; Weisz et al., 1992
) was cloned into pEGFP-C3 (Clontech, Mountain View, CA). A N-terminal 12-amino acid spacer (KLQSSVSRSRPT) separates the start-Met of DPPIV from the GFP-tag. A recombinant adenovirus expressing the DPPIV-GFP cDNA was generated with the pTrak/pAdenoEasy vector system (He et al., 1998
).
Myosin IIA Antisense Treatment
Morpholino antisense oligonucleotides (oligos) were produced by Gene Tools (Philomath, OR). The sequence of the control oligo was (standard control) 5'-CCTCTTACCTCAGTTACAATTTATA-3'; the sequence of the nonmuscle myosin II (myoII)A oligo was 5'-GACTCACAGCCAGGACCTACAGCAG-3'. Cells were transfected with 10 µg of the oligos by Amaxa-nucleofection and cultured for 36 h in DMEM before being reseeded for 12 h at confluence in SMEM. Total cell lysates for immunoblots were prepared 48 h after transfection.
Short Hairpin RNA (shRNA)
The pSUPER-Ecadherin RNA interference (RNAi) construct designed for the target sequence 5'-gtctaacagggacaaagaa-3' has been validated previously (Qin et al., 2005
) and was provided by I. Macara (University of Virginia); the target sequence for the pSUPER-based
-catenin canine RNAi-construct was 5'-cacgaagctgctctccaac-3'. It was designed for the GenBank entry XM_846441.
Antibodies
Antibodies used were as follows: gp135 (clone 3F21D8; provided by G. Ojakian, SUNY Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY); rat monoclonal zonula occludens (ZO)-1 (Chemicon International, Temecula, CA); E-cadherin monoclonal clone rr1 (Gumbiner and Simons, 1986
; provided by the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, Iowa City, IA, as hybridoma); anti-rat DPPIV clone MRC OX-61 (Serotec, Oxford, United Kingdom); Dlg-1, Scribble, ROCKII, Par6, and atypical protein kinase C
(aPKC
) (sc-9961, sc-11049, sc-1851, sc-25525, and sc-216, respectively; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA); Par3 (Zymed Laboratories, South San Francisco, CA); myosin light chain (MLC)-PS19 and MLC-PT18/19 (Cell Signaling Technology, Danvers, MA); MLC clone MY21 (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO); myosin IIA/p200 antibody clone AD7 (Narula et al., 1992
); Patj antibody (gift of A. LeBivic, University Marseille, France);
- and
-catenin polyclonal antibodies (Sigma-Aldrich), and hemagglutinin (HA) clone16B12 (Covance, Princeton, NJ).
Immunolabeling Techniques and Immunofluorescence (IF) Analysis
For phospho-MLC (MLC-P) labeling, cells were fixed at 4°C in 3% paraformaldehyde (PFA), permeabilized with 0.2% Triton X-100 (Tx100), and the primary antibody was incubated in PBS with 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA)/10% goat serum overnight at 4°C. For all other IF, MDCK cells were fixed at room temperature with 2% PFA, permeabilized with 0.2% Tx100, and subjected to indirect IF labeling at room temperature. Secondary antibodies were conjugated with Alexa-488, -568, or -633. Rhodamine-labeled phalloidin was used were indicated. Wide-field images were acquired with a 40x dry objective numerical aperture (NA) 0.75 on an upright microscope (model E-600; Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) equipped with a back-illuminated cooled charge-coupled device camera (model 1000-PB; Roper Scientific, Trenton, NJ) and processed with MetaMorph software (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). Confocal microscopy was performed with a Leica model TCS SP2 by using a 63x NA 1.4 oil objective. Presented are individual confocal x-y or x-z sections, or where indicated, x-y-z or x-z-y projections generated with LCS software (Leica Microsystems, Deerfield, IL). All image-figures were composed with Adobe Photoshop (Adobe Systems, Mountain View, CA).
Quantification of Lumen Polarity
Quantification of cells exhibiting VACs or lateral lumina in Figures 1, 2, 4, and 6 was from 40x wide-field images of fixed cells that were labeled for gp135, ZO-1, and with rhodamin-phalloidin. Lateral lumina were defined by phalloidin and gp135 accumulation between neighboring cells flanked by a circumferential ring of ZO-1. Graphs are from two experiments with three images (
400 cells/image) per time point; SEs are presented.
Immunoblots
Immunoblots from total cell lysates or kinase assays were probed with primary antibody, rabbit-anti mouse/goat antibodies where appropriate and with 125I-protein A and subjected to PhosphorImager (Typhoon Trio; GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom) analysis using IQMac software (GE Healthcare).
ROCK-Kinase Assays
Cells were lysed in 20 mM Tris, pH 8, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 1% Tx100, 1 mM DTT, 2 mM 4-(2-aminoethyl)benzenesulfonyl fluoride (AEBSF), 10 µg/ml each of leupeptin, pepstatin, and antipain, 2 mM Na-orthovanadate, 10 mM NaFl, and 25 mM
-glycerophosphate. One milligram of lysate was precleared with 20 µl of Pansorbin (Calbiochem, San Diego, CA) and incubated for 2 h with 2 µg of ROCKII and 4 µg of rabbit anti-goat antibody and an additional 90 min with 10 µl of protein A-Sepharose. Control immunoprecipitations (IPs) were conducted with normal 6 µg of normal rabbit immunoglobulin (IgG). Washed protein A-beads were equilibrated with kinase buffer (10 mM HEPES/KOH, pH 7.0, 150 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM ATP, 0.1% Tx100, 2 mM AEBSF, 10 µg/ml each of leupeptin, pepstatin, and antipain, 2 mM Na-orthovanadate, 25 mM
-glycerophosphate, and 1 mM DTT) and incubated with 30 µl of kinase buffer in the presence of 1.5 µg of recombinant MLC (produced from a recombinant glutathione S-transferase [GST]-fusion protein) for 30 min at 30°C. MLC phosphorylated at S19 (from the supernatants) and ROCKII amounts (from the protein A-beads) was determined by quantitative immunoblots.
Rho-Activity Assays
Rho activity was determined by isolating guanosine triphosphate-bound rho A from cell lysates (prepared from 1 10-cm dish/sample) on immobilized GST-RBD, the GST-tagged rho-binding domain of rhotenkin, exactly as described by Ren et al. (1999)
. GST-RBD was produced in bacteria and purified on gluthathione-Sepharose by standard procedures. The GST-RBD beads were stored in 10% glycerol at 70°C.
TCF/LEF Reporter Assays
T cell factor (TCF)/lymphoid enhancer binding factor (LEF) reporter assays where performed as described in Elbert et al. (2006)
. Briefly, cDNAs encoding pRLTK (Renilla luciferase reporter) and either TOPFLASH (firefly luciferase reporter with three LEF-binding domains) or FOPFLASH (LEF-binding defect reporter) cDNAs were cotransfected with shRNA-plasmids. Cells were cultured for 48 h in DMEM, lysed, and assayed for luciferase activities in a luminometer by using the Dual-Luciferase Reporter Assay system (Promega, Madison, WI). The net reporter activity was calculated as the ratio of firefly luciferase reporter activity to Renilla activity. Data are from two experiments with triplicate samples. SEs are indicated.
| RESULTS |
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We focused on contact-naïve cells, i.e., those grown in low Ca2+ medium, because we had previously observed differences in gp135 distribution between control and Par1-MDCK cells even in the absence of cellcell contacts. Contact-naïve Par1b-MDCK cells accumulated gp135 not in VACs but in endosomes that were in exchange with a substantial cell surface pool of gp135 (Cohen et al., 2004b
).
On close inspection, we noticed that
10% of Par1b-MDCK cells grown overnight in low Ca2+ medium formed lateral luminal surfaces (Figure 1A, arrow, column 1 in graph). No such polarization events were detected in control cultures (Figure 1, BD, control). The number of Par1b cells with lateral lumina increased to
40% when we seeded cells that were dislodged by nonenzymatic methods (with Cellstripper; Cellgro, Mediatech, Herndon, VA) rather than by trypsinization or when trypsinized cells were plated on collagen IV (Figure 1, graph). Cells with lateral lumina were characterized by the polarized distribution of gp135 and recombinant DPPIV-GFP and labeled heavily for phalloidin, presumably due to the presence of microvilli (Figure 1A, arrow). The luminal surfaces were always flanked by a belt of ZO-1 (Figure 1A). E-cadherin, which is largely removed from the cell cortex in contact-naïve cells (Le et al., 1999
; Low et al., 2000
), showed increased cortical distribution in Par1b cells. Likewise, the soluble polarity determinants Dlg and Scribble that translocate from the cytoplasm to the lateral cortex upon Ca2+ switch (Reuver and Garner, 1998
; Navarro et al., 2005
) were enriched at the cortex in contact-naïve Par1b-MDCK cells (Figure 1C). Importantly, all three proteins were excluded from the luminal domains, suggesting that Par1b-MDCK cells had segregated distinct luminal and lateral surface domains in the absence of Ca2+-dependent cellcell adhesion (Figure 1C, arrows). To determine whether the luminal surfaces were indeed segregated by tight junctions from lateral domains as suggested by ZO-1 labeling, we tested the accessibility of extracellular domain antibodies to the luminal marker DPPIV in DPPIV-GFPexpressing Par1b and control cells. When added to unpermeabilized, fixed cells, DPPIV antibodies had no access to lateral lumina in Par1b cells or to VACs in control cells. Only upon permeabilization with Tx100 did the antibody label the luminal surfaces and VACs that were apparent by GFP fluorescence (Figure 1B). Thus, Par1b cells assemble junctional complexes that prevent the penetration of antibodies from the basolateral to the luminal domain in the absence of Ca2+-mediated cellcell adhesion. Our data suggest that Par1b, dependent on surface receptor extracellular matrix (ECM) signaling, promotes polarization of MDCK cells independently of Ca2+-dependent cellcell adhesion.
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Addition of 50 µM blebbistatin, a specific inhibitor of myosin II (Straight et al., 2003
), to control cells cultured in low Ca2+ medium overnight resulted in 41 ± 5% of cells polarized with lateral lumina that were segregated from the lateral cortical pool of scribble (Figure 2, A and B). As observed for Par1b-MDCK cells, blebbistatin treatment led to an increased recruitment of E-cadherin, Scribble, and Dlg to the cell cortex (Figure 2A). As in Par1b-MDCK cells, the blebbistatin-induced phenotype was dependent on cells being either plated on collagen or dislodged by nonenzymatic methods (Figure 2B).
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60% and stimulated lateral lumen formation in low Ca2+ medium cells, albeit to a lesser extent than blebbistatin (Figure 2B). These data suggest that the pharmacological effect is caused by myosin II inhibition; the moderate effect of the morpholino is likely due to the incomplete depletion of myosin IIA and the presence of myosin IIB in MDCK cells.
Myosin II activity depends on the phosphorylation of regulatory MLC on S19 and T18 (Tan et al., 1992
). Myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and the rhoA effector ROCK are chief regulators of phosphorylation of these residues, and they have nonoverlapping functions to activate distinct myosin populations in epithelial (Prahalad et al., 2004
) and nonepithelial (Totsukawa et al., 2000
) cells. Inhibition of MLCK with 30 µM ML-7 or of ROCK with 20 µM Y-27632 led to a decrease in T18/S19P-MLC in contact-naïve MDCK cells, indicating that both kinases contribute to myosin activity under these conditions (Figure 2B). Yet, only the ROCK inhibitor Y-27632 promoted lateral lumen formation in low Ca2+ monolayers comparable with blebbistatin (38 ± 6%), whereas the MLCK inhibitor ML-7 was without effect (Figure 2, A and B; data for ML-7 not shown). We did not detect distinct subcellular localizations for the enzymes; antibodies to MLCK and ROCKII both gave a diffuse cytoplasmic staining (data not shown). Together, our data indicate that myosin II, controlled by ROCK, allows contacting cells to develop polarity with lateral lumina in the absence of Ca2+-dependent cellcell adhesion.
Par1b Inhibits MLC-Phosphorylation in Contact-Naïve Cells and Functions Synergistically with Blebbistatin
Does Par1b regulate myosin II activity? We determined in quantitative immunoblots that Par1b expression indeed decreased by
50% the S19 (52 ± 6% of control; n = 4 experiments) and T18/S19 (45 ± 5% of control; n = 4) phosphorylation of MLC in monolayers grown in low Ca2+ medium (Figure 3B). A decrease in active, S19-phosphorylated MLC was also apparent by immunofluorescence. Par1b-MDCK cells showed reduced MLC-pS19 at the basal lamellipodia and circumferential actin bundles as well as at the cortex of noncontacting surfaces (Figure 3A, see confocal basal and midplanes).
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To determine whether Par1b and myosin II inhibition function synergistically, we studied the effect of blebbistatin on the polarization of Par1b-MDCK cells in low Ca2+ medium. Although myosin II inhibition and Par1b alone each promoted lumen polarity in
40% of the cells, combined they yielded a monolayer with 80 ± 10% (n = 4) polarized cells. Together, these data suggest that Par1b acts in a pathway with rho, ROCK, and myosin II to promote a lateral lumen polarity phenotype in MDCK cells.
Blebbistatin and ROCK Inhibition Promotes Transient Lateral Lumina during MDCK Polarization in Ca2+-Switch Assays
To determine whether myosin II inhibition also mimicked the effect of Par1b on lumen polarity in the presence of Ca2+-dependent cellcell adhesion, we preincubated control MDCK cells kept in low Ca2+ medium overnight for 30 min before Ca2+ switch with blebbistatin or Y-27632 and maintained the drugs during the polarization process in normal Ca2+ medium. The myosin and ROCK inhibitors delayed exocytosis of VACs, and they noticeably increased the amount of lateral lumina detectable at all time points up to 24 h (18-fold for blebbistatin and 16-fold for Y-27632 at 5 h) (Figure 4). Despite their higher incidence, lateral lumina in myosin II-inhibited cells were transient with a peak occurrence at 45 h upon Ca2+ switch, and by 78 h, they had mostly given rise to apical surfaces. Thus, the lateral lumen polarity pathway stimulated by myosin II inhibition seems to compete with a cellcell adhesion-induced apical lumen pathway that eventually supplants it.
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We used two approaches to interfere with E-cadherin function: 1) shRNA-mediated E-cadherin depletion (Figure 5, A and D) and 2) substitution of endogenous E-cadherin for an adhesion-defective mutant that lacked a large part of its extracellular domain (Troxell et al., 2000
, 2001
). The recombinant protein, expressed under a doxycycline-regulated promotor, is faithfully targeted to the lateral domain, and it causes increased turnover of its endogenous counterpart (Troxell et al., 2000
) (Figure 5, B and D).
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The requirement for E-cadherin in lateral lumen formation was furthermore apparent in Par1b-MDCK cells: E-cadherin depletion (but not the E-cadherin mutant) drastically inhibited lateral lumen formation in Ca2+-switch experiments (Figure 6B, compare a and b with c and d). Twenty-four hours after Ca2+ switch, mock-depleted Par1b monolayers were completely polarized (Figure 6Bc and D, control); 62 ± 10% (n = 3) of cells featured lateral lumina, and the rest had apical surfaces. Only 20 ± 5% (n = 3) of E-cadherindepleted Par1b cells formed lateral lumina, and 44 ± 8% (n = 3) had apical surfaces. Of E-cadherindepleted Par1b cells, 36 ± 6% (n = 3) accumulated gp135 intracellularly in large, grape-like, F-actinrich vacuoles (Figure 6Bd and D, E-cadherin shRNA).
E-Cadherin Depletion Alters Apical Protein Trafficking in Nonpolarized Par1b Cells
As discussed in Figure 1, Par1b-MDCK monolayers cultured in the absence of collagen in low Ca2+ medium show few polarized cells; instead, most cells accumulate gp135 in a specialized apical endosome devoid of F-actin (Cohen et al., 2004b
; Figures 1A, arrowhead, and 7c; control shRNA in Figure 7, graph). Antibodies to the extracellular domain of gp135 incubated with live cells at 37°C readily labeled the endosomal compartment as it is in equilibration with a cell surface pool (Figure 7c'). Examination of gp135 in E-cadherindepleted Par1b-MDCK cells before and after Ca2+ switch revealed its localization in fragmented vacuoles that frequently labeled with phalloidin (Figures 7d, shRNA-Ecadherin in Figure 7, graph; and 6D) and were inaccessible to gp135 antibodies (Figure 7d'). These features are hallmarks of VACs characteristic of control MDCK cells.
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Ecadherin +/dox in Figure 7, graph). Thus, adhesion-independent E-cadherin signaling regulates both lumen polarity and apical protein targeting.
E-Cadherin Regulates Lumen Polarity Independently of
- and
-Catenin
To elucidate the E-cadherin signaling mechanisms that regulate the lumen polarity pathway, we evaluated the roles of the E-cadherinassociated proteins
- and
-catenin in lumen formation.
-Catenin, when not engaged in adhesion complexes, is either degraded or transported to the nucleus where it acts as cotranscription factor with TCF/LEF in the canonical wnt-signaling cascade (Nelson and Nusse, 2004
). Using the reporter gene TOPFLASH assay (Molenaar et al., 1996
), we determined that E-cadherin depletion indeed drastically increased TCF/LEF-dependent transcription activity (Figure 8A). This increase was apparent both in the presence and absence of LiCl, an inhibitor of glycogen synthase kinase 3
(GSK3
) that stimulates wnt signaling by preventing GSK3
-mediated
-catenin degradation. To assess whether stimulation of wnt signaling interferes with lateral lumen polarity, we expressed in Par1b-MDCK cells a stabilized form of
-catenin that is resistant to GSK3
-induced degradation (Figure 8B). We have previously demonstrated that this recombinant protein stimulates TCF/LEF transcription activity in MDCK cells in TOPFLASH assays (Elbert et al., 2006
). Consistent with our findings from this earlier study, we detected no effect of
catenin-
N90 on lateral lumen formation in Ca2+-switch assays (Figure 8C). Likewise, there was no inhibition of lateral lumen formation in the absence of Ca2+-mediated cellcell adhesion (Figure 8D) and most nonpolarized
90N
catenin-cells maintained gp135 in F-actinnegative endosomes rather than VACs (Figure 8, E and F). Thus, E-cadherin depletion does not seem to inhibit lateral lumina in Par1b cells by stimulating canonical wnt signaling.
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-Catenin associates with actin and actin-binding proteins and participates in the microfilament reorganization induced by E-cadherinmediated cellcell adhesion (Bershadsky, 2004
-catenin at the lateral cortex than control cells as judged by immunofluorescence (Figure 5C).
shRNA-mediated reduction of
-catenin levels in Par1b-MDCK cells (Figure 5, C and D) significantly delayed the establishment of luminal surfaces. Twenty-four hours after Ca2+ switch, 52 ± 9% of the cells still maintained gp135 intracellularly, but unlike in E-cadherindepleted cells, lumina always formed between contacting cells and never at the apex (Figure 6Bd and D). Also unlike E-cadherin depletion,
-catenin shRNA did not induce apical lumina in low Ca2+ medium. Similar to control monolayers,
-catenindepleted Par1b cells formed lateral lumina in low Ca2+ medium when treated with blebbistatin (Figure 6Ce).
-Catenin depletion also did not alter the trafficking itinerary of gp135 in nonpolarized Par1b cells in low Ca2+ medium as determined by gp135-antibody uptake and the absence of phalloidin staining of the gp135-positive endosomes (Figure 7e, e', shRNA
-catenin; and graph). This phenomenon was also apparent for the population of nonpolarized cells 24 h after Ca2+ switch: intracellular gp135 in
-catenindepleted cells was present mostly in F-actinnegative endosomes in contrast to the F-actinpositive vacuoles characteristic of nonpolarized cells lacking E-cadherin (Figure 6D). Thus, although
-catenin and E-cadherin depletion both inhibit the establishment of a luminal cell surface domain in Par1b-MDCK cells, lack of cortical
-catenin does not account for the change in lumen position and gp135 trafficking caused by E-cadherin depletion.
| DISCUSSION |
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We identified myosin II as a Par1b target responsible for the cellcell adhesion independent polarization process. Inhibition of myosin II or of the myosin activator rho-kinase mimicked the Par1b phenotype, and Par1b inhibited the activating phosphorylation on Ser19/Thr18 of myosin light chain by 50%. Consistent with a rho-dependent mechanism of myosin II inhibition, we detected 50% less active rho in contact-naïve Par1b monolayers and a reproducible, although smaller, decrease in rho-kinase activity.
Myosin inhibition in low Ca2+ monolayers relaxes tension at the cortex, where MLC is active in control cells (Castillo et al., 1998
; also see Figure 3A) and could help adjacent cells to make intimate cellcell contacts necessary for the formation of apical junctional complexes, a likely prerequisite for the establishment of distinct surface domains. Myosin inhibition most likely has additional effects that promote the targeting of luminal markers and/or preassembled luminal domains such as VACs to cellcell contact sites. This is suggested by our observation that the induction of apical junctional complexes is not by itself sufficient to establish polarized surface domains. Phorbol ester-induced PKC activation in MDCK monolayers promoted tight junction formation in low Ca2+ medium (Balda et al., 1993
), but it did not induce polarized luminal domains (Cohen and Müsch, unpublished observations). Myosin II-dependent events are likely linked to cellECM signaling processes. Par1b and myosin II inhibitors stimulate lumen formation only when trypsin-sensitive cell surface receptors remain intact. Those receptors might be involved in ECM signaling, because lumen formation in trypsinized cells can be rescued by collagen IV. Myosin activity is known to serve as regulator of focal adhesion signaling (Smilenov et al., 1999
; Fincham et al., 2000
; Delanoe-Ayari et al., 2004
) and is itself regulated by cellsubstrate interactions (Fincham et al., 2000
; Polte et al., 2004
; de Rooij et al., 2005
).
Although independent of Ca2+-mediated cellcell adhesion, the Par1b-induced lateral lumen polarity phenotype nevertheless required the presence of E-cadherin. How could E-cadherin regulate lumen polarity? On Ca2+ withdrawal or in noncontacting epithelial cells, E-cadherin is largely removed from the cell surface, and it is associated with intracellular organelles (Le et al., 1999
). During cell contact formation in the presence of Ca2+, the protein is first delivered to the plasma membrane where it progressively concentrates at sites of cellcell contact as adhesion junctions assemble and mature (Adams et al., 1998
). Lateral dimerization and concentration of E-cadherin into larger-scale clusters via interactions of their ectodomains in cis is crucial for homophilic cell-cell adhesion in trans (Brieher et al., 1996
; Yap et al., 1997
). The E-cadherin clustering is also regulated by signaling events at the cytoplasmic face (Yap et al., 1998
). Thus, once engaged in homophilic interactions, E-cadherin recruits myosin II to the lateral cortex, which in turn promotes lateral E-cadherin clustering and further strengthens cellcell adhesion (Shewan et al., 2005
). Myosin II inhibition or substitution of endogenous E-cadherin for a mutant deficient in homophilic ligation and lateral clustering promoted lateral lumina in Ca2+-switch assays. In addition, we observed that myosin II inhibitors and Par1b increased the population of (adhesion-incompetent) E-cadherin at sites of cellcell contact in low Ca2+ medium. Based on these findings, we propose that the presence of E-cadherin at cellcell contact sites in an adhesion-incompetent state serves as targeting patch for the establishment of lateral luminal surfaces flanked by a junctional belt perpendicular to the basal domain (see model in Figure 9).
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E-cadherin cells in 3D-collagen matrices resulted in cysts with apical lumina (Troxell et al., 2001
-catenin, an adhesion molecule thought to play a key role in actin organization at the lateral domain, decreased from 36 to 0 the percentage of Par1b cells displaying apical luminal surfaces (Figure 6D), hinting at an involvement of microfilaments in lumen positioning.
Depletion of E-cadherin had strikingly different effects on lumen formation in Par1b and control monolayers in Ca2+-switch experiments. Apical surfaces in control MDCK cells formed with only slightly delayed kinetics, a conclusion also reached by (Capaldo and Macara, 2007
). These authors determined that lack of E-cadherin did not induce or alter the expression of other cadherins in MDCK cells, suggesting that K-cadherin and/or the desmosomal cadherins expressed in MDCK cells are sufficient to mediate the Ca2+-dependent polarization process, although with delayed kinetics. Lumen formation in Par1b cells, by contrast, was severely compromised and gp135 accumulated in large, grapelike vacuoles (Figure 6D) that we observed even 48 h after Ca2+ switch and in E-cadherindepleted Par1b monolayers that were not preincubated in low Ca2+ medium (data not shown).
VACs were also apparent when E-cadherindepleted Par1b cells were cultured in low Ca2+ medium. This is in contrast to Par1b control cells that maintain gp135 in specialized apical endosomes also found in nonpolarized hepatocytes, Thus, in addition to inhibiting lumen formation, E-cadherin depletion also reversed the change in apical protein trafficking induced by Par1b overexpression in MDCK cells. The E-cadherin signaling mechanisms responsible for both phenotypes remain to be elucidated. We have focused here on
- and
-catenin, components of the "core adhesion complex" that showed altered subcellular distribution in response to E-cadherin depletion. However, neither a stabilized
-catenin mutant that mimicked the increase in nuclear
-catenin nor RNAi-mediated depletion of
-catenin phenocopied E-cadherin depletion. The elucidation of the molecular basis for this novel link between E-cadherin and apical protein trafficking will, therefore, be subject of future work.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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E-cadherin-cell line (T151). We thank Dr. A. Reilein (Cornell University Medical College, NY) for helpful comments on the manuscript. The hybridoma rr1 developed by Dr. B. Gumbiner (University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA) were obtained from the Developmental Hybridoma Bank developed under the auspices of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and maintained by the Department of Biological Sciences, University of Iowa. This work was supported by grant SDG 0235130N from the American Heart Association and National Institutes of Health grant R01 DK064842 (to A.M.) and by funds from the M. Dyson Foundation. | Footnotes |
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The online version of this article contains supplemental material at MBC Online (http://www.molbiolcell.org). ![]()
Address correspondence to: Anne Müsch (amuesch{at}mail.med.cornell.edu)
Abbreviations used: BC, bile canaliculi; dox, doxycycline; DPPIV, dipeptidyl aminopeptidase IV; ECM, extracellular matrix; IF, immunofluorescence; IP, immunoprecipitation; MLC, myosin light chain; MLCK, myosin light chain kinase; MyoII, nonmuscle myosin II; ROCK, rho-kinase; SMEM, minimum essential medium modified for suspension; VAC, vacuolar apical compartment.
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