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Vol. 19, Issue 4, 1561-1574, April 2008
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Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104
Submitted September 25, 2007;
Revised December 26, 2007;
Accepted January 24, 2008
Monitoring Editor: Thomas Pollard
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Despite the significant recent progress in understanding the molecular mechanisms of actin-based protrusion, the identity of actin filament nucleators responsible for formation of filopodia remains unknown. We previously proposed that Arp2/3 complex-dependent nucleation provides a filamentous resource to build filopodial bundles (Svitkina et al., 2003
). Other data showing Arp2/3 complex at the bases of filopodia (Lorenz et al., 2004
; Diez et al., 2005
) are also consistent with this scenario. Furthermore, lamellipodial protrusion could be shifted to filopodial protrusion by inhibiting capping protein (Mejillano et al., 2004
), suggesting that lamellipodia and filopodia are dynamically interrelated and their filaments may be generated by common nucleator(s). An alternative model proposes that formins are solely responsible for nucleation of filopodial filaments, whereas Arp2/3 complex is specialized for lamellipodia and is not necessary for filopodia formation (Millard et al., 2004
; Nicholson-Dykstra et al., 2005
; Faix and Rottner, 2006
). This idea has been inspired by the discovery of nucleating activity of formins (Pruyne et al., 2002
; Zigmond, 2004
) and their involvement in filopodia formation (Peng et al., 2003
; Pellegrin and Mellor, 2005
; Schirenbeck et al., 2005
), and supported by reports that Arp2/3 complex is functionally dispensable for filopodia formation (Strasser et al., 2004
; Steffen et al., 2006
). Disagreement between these sets of data prompted us to apply a previously unexplored combination of functional, kinetic, and structural approaches to thoroughly investigate a role of Arp2/3 complex in filopodia formation using neuronal cells as a model system. We report here that Arp2/3 complex functionally contributes to generation of filopodia and also seems to be involved in regulation of RhoA activity.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Antibodies.
The following rabbit polyclonal antibodies were used: p16-Arc subunit of Arp2/3 complex (Vignjevic et al., 2003
), nonmuscle myosin II from bovine spleen (Verkhovsky et al., 1987
); spectrin (Chemicon International, Temecula, CA); Arp3 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA), and p34-Arc subunit of Arp2/3 complex (Upstate Biotechnology, Charlottesville, VA). The following mouse monoclonal antibodies were used: cortactin (clone 411F; Upstate Biotechnology), fascin (clone 55K2; Chemicon International), and vinculin (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO). Secondary antibodies were from Invitrogen or Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories (West Grove, PA). AlexaFluor 488-, 594-, and 647-labeled phalloidins were from Invitrogen. All other reagents were from Sigma-Aldrich unless indicated otherwise.
Cell Culture
B35 rat neuroblastoma cells (Otey et al., 2003
) and NG108-15 rat/mouse hybrid neuroblastoma cells were maintained in DMEM (Invitrogen) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Invitrogen), 2 mM glutamine, 50 U/ml penicillin, and 50 µg/ml streptomycin (Invitrogen). For microscopy, cells were plated onto coverslips or glass-bottomed dishes coated sequentially with 1 mg/ml poly-L-lysine and 1.25 µg/ml laminin. To induce differentiation, cells were first cultured in a regular culture medium for 24 h after plating and then transferred to a differentiation medium consisting of DMEM with 0.1 mM dbcAMP and N2 supplement (Invitrogen).
Xenopus neural crest cells were prepared as described previously (Chang et al., 1999
) and plated on glass coverslips precoated with 0.1 to 1.0 µg/cm2 concanavalin A. The cultures were kept at 20°C in a culture medium consisting of (vol/vol) 50% Leibovitz L-15 medium (Invitrogen), 49% Ringer's solution (115 mM NaCl, 2 mM CaCl2, 2.5 mM KCl, and 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.6), 1% fetal bovine serum (Invitrogen), and 50 ng/ml neurotrophin-3. Experiments were performed 24–48 h after cell culture preparation (Zakharenko and Popov, 2000
).
Rat hippocampal neurons isolated as described previously (Wilcox et al., 1994
) and grown on poly-L-lysine-coated (1 mg/ml) coverslips in serum-free Neurobasal media (Invitrogen) with B27 supplement (Invitrogen) and without antibiotics were kindly provided by Marc Dichter or Rita Balice-Gordon (University of Pennsylvania). Growth cones were analyzed after cultivation for 3–5 d in vitro.
Immunofluorescence
For detection of F-actin in cells, staining with fluorescently labeled phalloidin (0.033 µM) was performed after fixation with 4% paraformaldehyde and permeabilization with 0.1% Triton X-100 in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Immunostaining was usually performed after cell extraction for 5 min with 1% Triton X-100 in PEM buffer (100 mM PIPES-KOH, pH 6.9, 1 mM MgCl2, and 1 mM EGTA) optionally containing 4% polyethelene glycol (PEG) (mol. wt. 35,000) and 2 µM phalloidin, followed by fixation with 4% paraformaldehyde or 0.2% glutaraldehyde. Glutaraldehyde-fixed samples were quenched with 2 mg/ml NaBH4. For p34-Arc immunostaining, extracted unfixed cells were incubated with primary antibody in PEM buffer containing 5 µM unlabeled phalloidin for 15 min, and then they were washed with PEM buffer, fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, and stained with secondary antibody. For VASP staining, cells were extracted with a mixture containing 0.5% paraformaldehyde and 1% Triton X-100 in PEM buffer, and then they were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde and costained with phalloidin. Fascin staining was performed after methanol fixation without extraction. Extracted and paraformaldehyde-fixed samples were used for myosin II staining. For costaining of F-actin, labeled phalloidin was added to the secondary antibody solution.
Microscopy
Light microscopy was performed using an inverted microscope (Eclipse TE2000; Nikon, Tokyo, Japan) equipped with Planapo 100 x 1.3 or 20 x 0.75 objectives and Cascade 512B charge-coupled device camera (Roper Scientific, Trenton, NJ) driven by MetaMorph imaging software (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). For live cell imaging, cells were plated on glass-bottomed dishes coated with appropriate substrates and kept on the microscope stage at 35°C under a layer of mineral oil. No oil was applied to dishes imaged for correlative microscopy. For overnight movies, cells were transferred into bicarbonate-free DMEM.
Samples for platinum replica electron microscopy (EM) and for correlative light and electron microscopy were processed essentially as described previously (Svitkina and Borisy, 2006
). Hippocampal neurons for EM were extracted in a mixture of 0.25% glutaraldehyde and 0.5% Triton X-100 in PEM buffer for
5 min and postfixed with 2% glutaraldehyde. Other cells were extracted as for immunofluorescence but without addition of PEG. Immunoelectron microscopy with p16-Arc and p34-Arc antibodies was performed as described previously (Svitkina and Borisy, 2006
). Primary p34-Arc antibody was applied to unfixed cells as for immunofluorescence, followed by fixation with 2% glutaraldehyde. Samples were analyzed using JEOL 1200EX (JEOL, Tokyo, Japan) transmission EM operated at 120 kV. For three-dimensional (3D) images, stereo pairs were taken at +/–6–20° angles by rotating a grid holder. Anaglyph images were produced by placing one image of the stereo pair into the red channel and another into the green and blue channels of the same RGB image by using Adobe Photoshop software (Adobe Systems, Mountain View, CA). Red/cyan or red/green anaglyph glasses (left eye is red) should be used to view 3D images.
RNA Interference (RNAi)
Small interfering RNA (siRNA) duplexes against following target sequences were used: 5'-GAAAGGCGTGGATGACCTA-3' (rat Arp3) and 5'-AAGGAACTTCAGGCACACGGA-3' (rat p34-Arc subunit of Arp2/3 complex, a.k.a. ARPC2) were obtained from Dharmacon RNA Technologies (Lafayette, CO); control siRNA was obtained from QIAGEN (Valencia, CA). siRNAs were labeled with cyanine (Cy)3 or fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) by using a Silencer siRNA labeling kit (Ambion, Austin, TX) and used at 20 nM concentration. Transfection with siRNA was performed using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) 24 h after plating for neuroblastoma cells and after 1–3 d in vitro for hippocampal neurons. Effects of siRNA were analyzed 2–3 d after transfection. Efficiency of siRNA transfection was
95% of the cell population for B35 cells and
30–50% for hippocampal neurons. For immunoblotting, B35 cell lysates were prepared 2 or 3 d after siRNA transfection. For rescue experiments, B35 cells were cotransfected with Arp3 siRNA and human pEYFP-Arp3, and they were analyzed 2 d posttransfection as undifferentiated cells, or they were switched to differentiation conditions 24 h after transfection and analyzed 1–2 d later. For the overnight differentiation assay, cell cultures transfected with Cy3-p34-Arc or FITC-control siRNAs were mixed and plated into the same dish. Control and inhibited cells were distinguished by the color of the siRNA label.
Western Blot
Cells were washed with PBS at 4°C and lysed either in a buffer containing 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 10% glycerol, and a protease inhibitor tablet (Roche Diagnostics) or in 1% SDS solution in water. Protein concentration in lysates was determined using bicinchoninic acid reagent (Pierce Chemical, Rockford, IL). SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (10% polyacrylamide), and immunoblotting were performed according to standard protocols. Spectrin was used as a loading control. Immunoblots were developed using enhanced chemifluorescence Western blotting kit (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom).
Determination of RhoA Activity
B35 cells growing in six-well plates were transfected with control or p34-Arc siRNA, and they were allowed to grow to
60% confluence. After 24 h of transfection, cells were switched to differentiating conditions, and cell lysates were prepared 1 h later. After equalization of total protein concentrations, lysates were assayed using G-LISA Active RhoA Assay kit (Cytoskeleton, Denver, CO) according to the manufacturer's protocol. In this assay, active RhoA from lysates binds to Rhotekin RBD domain immobilized in the 96-well plate and is subsequently detected by immunostaining with a primary RhoA antibody and an HRP-conjugated secondary antibody. The intensity of HRP reaction product is then determined by colorimetry at 490-nm wavelength, and results are expressed in units of optical density.
Image Analysis and Statistics
All morphometric measurements were done using MetaMorph Imaging software (Molecular Devices) unless indicated otherwise, and they were repeated for at least two independent experiments. At least 10 cells were analyzed to get a value for each parameter. Data were analyzed using Excel (Microsoft, Redmond, WA) or SigmaPlot (Systat Software, Point Richmond, CA) software packages. Significance was determined using a two-tailed t test.
To determine changes in the F-actin contents in growth cones of B35 neuroblastoma, cells were extracted as described above, and then they were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde, stained with fluorescently labeled phalloidin, and imaged using the same acquisition settings. An average intensity of phalloidin fluorescence after background subtraction was measured for regions of interest containing a 2-µm-wide area adjacent to the growth cone's leading edge. To determine changes in Arp2/3 complex contents in hippocampal neurons after p34-Arc siRNA treatment, cells were extracted and stained with p34-Arc antibody and phalloidin as described above. An average intensity of phalloidin and p34-Arc staining after background subtraction was determined for entire growth cone area.
For quantification purposes, lamellipodia in growth cones were defined as regions of dense actin network adjacent to the leading edge and positioned between neighboring filopodial bundles. The width of lamellipodia was determined using Adobe Photoshop software by measuring the distance from the leading edge of the growth cone to the beginning of a significantly sparser actin network along a line orthogonal to the leading edge. Actin filament branch frequency (number of branches per unit area), and distribution of Arp2/3 complex immunogold labeling (number of gold particles per unit area) in lamellipodial regions of growth cones was determined using high-resolution EM images. Stereo images were used for quantification of branches. Areas between neighboring filopodial bundles spanning a zone from the leading edge to up to 3 µm inward were used for the analysis. Branches or gold particles in 0.2-µm-wide and 1-µm-long slices were scored, expressed as density per square micrometer, and plotted against the distance from the edge. Only clearly visible gold particles and Y-shaped actin filament configurations were scored.
Parameters of lamellipodia and filopodia dynamics were determined using phase-contrast or fluorescence (for YFP-actin–expressing cells) time-lapse sequences acquired with 2- to 3-s intervals between frames at 100x magnification. Both approaches gave quantitatively similar results for each data set. Rates of lamellipodia protrusion and retrograde flow were measured using kymographs generated along straight lines drawn perpendicular to the leading edge. Slopes produced by advancing leading edges or by retrogradely moving lamellipodial features were used to calculate the rates. For quantification of filopodia dynamics, a distance from a fixed point within a filopodium to the filopodial tip was measured every 10 s while the filopodium existed and movie lasted. A filopodium was considered pausing if its length change was <2 pixels for at least two time intervals. Data are expressed as a fraction of time which filopodia spent protruding, retracting or pausing.
The filopodia frequency was defined as the number of filopodia per unit length of growth cone perimeter, and it was determined using still phase-contrast images. Only filopodia extending beyond the cell edge were counted. The length of the growth cone perimeter was determined using MetaMorph line function. The rate of filopodia initiation was determined by counting newly formed filopodia during the period of observation (
4–5 min) per 10 µm of the growth cone perimeter per minute.
Neurite extension during differentiation of B35 neuroblastoma cells was analyzed using cells plated on coverslips or glass-bottomed dishes 1–2 d after transfection with control or inhibitory siRNA and induced to differentiate 1 d later. Total number and length of neurites was determined using fixed samples on coverslips. A number of neurites in hippocampal neurons was determined after 2–3 d in vitro and 24 h after transfection with control or inhibitory siRNA by using fixed and phalloidin-stained samples. For dynamics of neurite extension, phase-contrast time-lapse sequences were acquired from the beginning of differentiation for 10–12 h with 5-min time intervals using 20x objective. The length of each neurite was plotted against time.
| RESULTS |
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Analysis of phase contrast (Figure 1, A–C; and Supplemental Video 1) and fluorescence (Figure 1, D and E) sequences demonstrated that the majority of nascent filopodia arose from a lamellipodium-like protrusion in all tested neuronal cells. In growth cones, the common sites of filopodia formation were interfilopodial veils. The filopodia initiation at these sites began as a small phase-dense bulge (Figure 1, A–C) similar to previously described "nubs" in chicken dorsal root ganglia neurons (Steketee et al., 2001
) and to filopodial
-precursors in B16F1 melanoma cells (Svitkina et al., 2003
). Filopodia also emerged from neuronal shafts, usually close to growth cones. Although these sites seemed to lack lamellipodia, careful analysis of such events revealed that initiation of lateral filopodia also began as a lamellipodial structure, which then quickly produced filopodia through intermediate formation of small bulges (Figure 1, A–C; and Supplemental Video 2). Dynamics of YFP-actin in B35 neuroblastoma cells also showed filopodia initiation from lamellipodia-like protrusions (Figure 1, D and E). Both protruding filopodia and internal filopodial bundles (frequently called microspikes or ribs) were formed by gradual condensation of actin fluorescence with intermediate formation of cone-shaped actin densities (Figure 1D). Similarly, local actin densities served as precursors for formation of lateral filopodia on neuronal shafts (Figure 1E), consistent with published data (Loudon et al., 2006
). Together, we have analyzed at least 10 cells for each cell type, and
90% of filopodia in these cells were formed from lamellipodia. The remaining
10% were ambiguous cases, in which we could not clearly determine how filopodia were formed. We had only one case across all four cell types where a filopodium formed from a phase-dense bulge that did not have a flattened lamellipodia-like shape (Figure 1C, arrow in the lower sequence).
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Structural Organization of Neuronal Growth Cones
Lamellipodia-like "veils," which fill the narrow spaces between filopodia in growth cones look very similar to conventional lamellipodia; however, branched filaments and Arp2/3 complex were not detected in growth cones of rat hippocampal neurons (Strasser et al., 2004
), but they were found in chicken dorsal root ganglion neurons (Mongiu et al., 2007
). To control for potential variability between different neuronal cells regarding organization and molecular composition of growth cones, we analyzed the distribution of lamellipodial and filopodial markers and the structural organization of growth cones and lateral protrusions in four different types of neuronal cells.
Immunostaining of hippocampal neurons and neuroblastoma cells revealed enrichment of Arp2/3 complex at the periphery of growth cones (Figure 2, A–C), and in lateral protrusions extending from neuronal shafts (data not shown). Arp2/3 complex antibodies also stained the cell body, neurites, and central domains of growth cones, as reported previously (Strasser et al., 2004
), but the intensity and pattern of staining in these locations varied depending on cell type, antibody, and sample preparation protocol. Expression of YFP-Arp3 (Figure 2D) in B35 cells confirmed the enrichment of this protein at the growth cone periphery. Another lamellipodial marker, cortactin (Weaver et al., 2003
), was also enriched at the growth cone periphery (Supplemental Figure S1B). Time-lapse observations revealed that during filopodia initiation cortactin was present in the pre-existing interfilopodial veils and at the bases of emerging bulges, which served as filopodial precursors, but they became excluded from emerged filopodia (Supplemental Figure S1C). Similar to the previous reports (Cohan et al., 2001
; Lebrand et al., 2004
), the filopodial markers, fascin and VASP, were associated with filopodial bundles along the length (fascin) or at the tips (VASP); VASP also localized to the edge of veils (Supplemental Figure S1).
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These results show that growth cone veils of all tested neuronal cell types contain dendritic networks and the lamellipodial markers, Arp2/3 complex and cortactin, just like conventional lamellipodia, and that individual actin filaments in this network can merge into or arise from an actin bundle.
Age-dependent Lamellipodia-to-Filopodia Progression in Neuronal Protrusions
We performed EM of growth cones with known life histories to correlate the kinetics of filopodia initiation with the structural organization of the underlying actin cytoskeleton. Because the actin network predominantly assembles at the leading edge (Wang, 1985
; Watanabe and Mitchison, 2002
) and then moves backward relative to the advancing edge without significant reorganization except for some loss of filaments due to depolymerization (Theriot and Mitchison, 1991
; Mallavarapu and Mitchison, 1999
), the structure of the network allows one to deduce the recent history of the network assembly (Katoh et al., 1999
; Svitkina et al., 2003
). This analysis demonstrated that protruding veils of differentiated B35 cells contained dense actin networks rich in branched filaments (Supplemental Figure S3, A–D), which confirms the lamellipodial character of these protrusions. A similar observation was also recently reported by Mongiu et al. (2007)
for chicken dorsal root ganglia neurons.
EM analysis of filopodia with known histories showed that the structural organization of filopodia correlated with their age (Figure 4). Nascent filopodia, whether they were formed in the growth cone or at the neuronal shafts, were associated with the branched lamellipodial network at their roots. Two examples of recently formed filopodia are shown in Figure 4, A–E. Branched filaments were especially numerous at the roots of the youngest filopodia, such as filopodium 1 in Figure 4, which was not yet recognizable in the last live image (Figure 4A), but was visible by EM (Figure 4, B and D). Apparently, it formed during a short interval between acquisition of the last live image and cell extraction. In the slightly older filopodium 2 (Figure 4, A–E), which was formed a few seconds before extraction (Figure 4A), the actin network in the root was relatively sparse, apparently due to actin depolymerization, but branched filaments could still be detected there (Figure 4, B, C, and E). The EM structure can be correlated not only with the last frame of the movie, but also with the previous frames. When the life history of filopodium 2 was projected onto respective EM images, the phase contrast bulge, a filopodium precursor that occurred at time 0:14, corresponded to the filopodium root with branched filaments (Figure 4B), suggesting that the branched network served as a precursor for the filopodium formation. Importantly, some filaments in the nascent filopodial bundles could be traced back to their origin at a branch point (Figure 4C). In older filopodia, a fraction of filaments terminated with apparently free (not engaged in branch formation) "pointed" (as predicted from their orientation relative to the cell edge) ends (data not shown). The origin of many other filaments was obscured.
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Arp2/3 Complex Depletion by siRNA Impairs Lamellipodia and Filopodia in Growth Cones
The functional contribution of Arp2/3 complex to growth cone dynamics and filopodia formation in B35 neuroblastoma cells and primary rat hippocampal neurons was investigated using RNAi (Figure 5). Transfection with fluorescently labeled siRNA directed against p34-Arc or Arp3 subunits of the Arp2/3 complex suppressed expression of these proteins after 2–3 d of transfection by
50%, as estimated by Western blotting for B35 cells (Figure 5A) and by immunostaining for hippocampal neurons (Figure 5C). Immunofluorescence images showed that Arp2/3 complex depletion was especially evident at the periphery of growth cones in siRNA-treated cells (Figure 5, F and H).
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Importantly, depletion of the Arp2/3 complex inhibited growth cone filopodia in differentiated B35 cells and hippocampal neurons (Figure 5, I–M), as judged from the significantly reduced rates of filopodia initiation and decreased filopodia frequency along the growth cone perimeter (Figure 5, P and Q). Two siRNAs (p34-Arc and Arp3) produced comparable effects in B35 cells, but Arp3 siRNA seemed less potent and significantly inhibited the initiation rate, whereas a decrease in the steady-state filopodia frequency was not statistically significant. Inhibition of filopodia initiation by Arp3 siRNA could be rescued by coexpression of human YFP-Arp3. Additionally, p34-Arc siRNA treatment decreased the dynamic behavior of filopodia in B35 cells, namely, filopodia spent more time pausing and less time protruding or retracting (Figure 5R), whereas the velocity of filopodia protrusion during protrusive phases did not change. Filopodia in Arp2/3 complex-depleted B35 cells, like in control cells, contained VASP at their tips and fascin along the length of the bundles, but the intensity of staining was lower, apparently reflecting the decreased actin contents (Supplemental Figure S1).
Because of incomplete inhibition of filopodia in siRNA-treated cells and partial Arp2/3 complex depletion, we investigated how the remaining filopodia were formed. A very sparse actin network in growth cones of Arp2/3 complex-depleted B35 cells allowed us to follow many filopodial actin filaments back to their origin (Figure 6). Remarkably, many filopodial filaments originated as a branch on another filament (Figure 6B), similar to normal filopodia (Figure 4, B–E). Branched actin filaments entering filopodial bundles were found in all analyzed filopodia (10 filopodia in 4 cells), suggesting that filopodial bundles in Arp2/3 complex-depleted cells might be formed preferentially at sites of remaining activity of the Arp2/3 complex. Consistent with this idea, correlative EM of cells with known histories showed that nascent filopodia in Arp2/3 complex-depleted cells were associated with the dendritic network and their filopodial filaments originated at branch points (Figure 6, D–F).
Together, these results indicate that Arp2/3 complex is functionally involved in generation of both lamellipodia and filopodia, because Arp2/3 complex depletion inhibits lamellipodial protrusion, as well as filopodia initiation and dynamics. Incomplete inhibition of filopodia is likely related to partial knockdown of Arp2/3 complex, because the remaining filopodia were formed in association with the remaining dendritic network.
Arp2/3 Complex Is Important for Neuronal Differentiation and Motility
We next investigated whether Arp2/3 complex depletion changes neuritogenesis. We primarily used B35 neuroblastoma cells, because their differentiation can be induced at a desired time, when Arp2/3 complex is sufficiently depleted. Undifferentiated B35 cells had certain features of differentiated neurons, such as abundant filopodial bundles in protrusions and neurite-like processes. However, these "neurites" were short and usually completely covered by lateral protrusions (Figure 7A). Induction of differentiation in B35 cells led to extension of one to three dominant neurites, gradual loss of protrusive activity at the sides of neurites, and rounding of the cell body (Figure 7B).
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The time course of neurite extension in B35 cells after Arp2/3 complex depletion showed abnormal cycles of protrusion and retraction, whereas control neurites displayed relatively smooth growth (Figure 7I and Supplemental Video 5). During extension phases, however, the rate of neurite elongation was not significantly different in control and Arp2/3 complex-depleted cells.
Depletion of the Arp2/3 Complex Induces RhoA Activation in Cells
Defective neuritogenesis in Arp2/3 complex-depleted cells, in particular, an erratic style of neurite extension, is hard to explain by the decreased dynamics of the growth cones. Rather, it suggests additional changes, likely in adhesion and/or contraction. Stress fibers and focal adhesions perform major contractile and adhesive functions in many cell types. Therefore, we investigated the organization of stress fibers in control and Arp2/3 complex-depleted B35 cells.
Control differentiated B35 cells had a few slender F-actin bundles along the edges of neurites. Some shorter bundles were also present in the neurite interior and, in minor amounts, in the cell body (Figures 7B and 8A). Immunostaining with myosin II antibody revealed a characteristic punctate pattern along actin bundles (Figure 8, A and C), similar to that in fibroblast stress fibers (Verkhovsky et al., 1995
). In addition, bright myosin II puncta were scattered in the central domains of growth cones, where they occasionally colocalized with filopodial roots (Figure 8C), as also reported previously (Bridgman and Dailey, 1989
; Medeiros et al., 2006
). Relatively dim myosin II structures were also found in the cell body (Figure 8A). In fibroblasts, stress fibers are usually associated with prominent focal adhesions, which can be visualized by a focal adhesion marker, vinculin. Vinculin immunostaining in differentiated B35 cells showed a mostly weak punctate distribution throughout the cell with only occasional enrichment at the tip of the bundles (Figure 8, E and G).
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The observed changes in the neurite behavior and organization of actin bundles after Arp2/3 complex depletion were reminiscent of a phenotype induced by activation of a small GTPase RhoA (Govek et al., 2005
). Therefore, we tested whether activity of RhoA changed after Arp2/3 complex depletion. Lysates of differentiating control and siRNA-treated cells were assayed using G-LISA RhoA kit (see Materials and Methods). The results showed a significant increase in RhoA activity in p34-Arc siRNA-treated cells (Figure 8K).
Effects of Rac1V12 Expression on Arp2/3 Complex Knockdown Phenotype
Activities of RhoA and Rac1 in cells frequently display negative relationship with each other (Govek et al., 2005
). Therefore, Arp2/3 complex depletion might inhibit filopodia indirectly through inhibition of Rac1 associated with up-regulation of RhoA. To control for this possibility, we investigated a phenotype of p34-Arc-depleted B35 cells after expression of a constitutively active Rac1, GFP-Rac1V12.
Control B35 cells transfected with Rac1V12 and induced to differentiate had variable cell morphology, but all were severely impaired in neuritogenesis (Figure 9, A and B). The majority of cells failed to produce neurites, and their cell bodies were surrounded by protrusions, either by a smooth lamellipodium with no signs of filopodia, or by a mixture of lamellipodia and filopodia (Figure 9A). Some weakly expressing cells displayed rudimentary neuritogenesis with multiple short processes tipped with lamellipodia and filopodia (Figure 9B). Quantification of filopodia in the subset of cells expressing filopodia (cells without filopodia were excluded from quantification) showed that the filopodia frequency did not change, but the rate of filopodia initiation increased by
70% after Rac1V12 expression (Figure 9D).
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10-fold after Rac1V12 expression in p34-Arc–depleted cells, remained approximately twofold lower than in control cells with or without Rac1V12. These data suggest that the filopodia deficiency in Arp2/3 complex-depleted cells may in part be mediated by altered activities of Rho GTPases, and in part by a deficiency in actin nucleation. | DISCUSSION |
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Existing discrepancies regarding the presence of Arp2/3 complex in neuronal growth cones (Strasser et al., 2004
; Mongiu et al., 2007
) prompted us first to investigate the Arp2/3 complex requirement for lamellipodial dynamics. Using EM, immunochemistry, and gene expression, we showed the presence of branched actin filaments and Arp2/3 complex at the growth cone periphery of four different neuronal cells, consistent with findings in chicken dorsal root ganglion neurons and PC-12 pheochromocytoma cells (Mongiu et al., 2007
) and the presence of the members of the Arp2/3 complex-activating WAVE complex, WAVE1 and Sra1, in growth cones of hippocampal neurons (Kawano et al., 2005
). Furthermore, using RNAi we demonstrated that Arp2/3 complex is important for protrusion of growth cone veils, similar to lamellipodia in other cell types (Kunda et al., 2003
; Rogers et al., 2003
; Steffen et al., 2006
; see however, Di Nardo et al., 2005
). Discrepancies between our data and those of Strasser et al. (2004)
, who reported Arp2/3 complex-independent growth cone motility in hippocampal neurons, may potentially derive from an alternative functional approach. Thus, Strasser et al. (2004)
expressed the CA fragment of neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (N-WASP), which is expected to sequester Arp2/3 complex, but the expression level might be insufficient, as they used only moderately expressing cells; or the CA construct might be inefficient in this experimental system. In contrast, using a well established and controllable siRNA technique, we observed a clear and reproducible phenotype even after partial depletion of the Arp2/3 complex. The specificity of the phenotype was extensively controlled by using different cell types, different target sequences, nontargeting control siRNA, and rescue by a nontargeted gene.
Importantly, depletion of Arp2/3 complex inhibited filopodia, indicating the functional contribution of Arp2/3 complex to their generation. These observations, however, conflict with the reported absence of the filopodial phenotype in non-neuronal cells after inhibition of Arp2/3 complex (Steffen et al., 2006
). Because these authors evaluated filopodia in the presence of the constitutively active Cdc42 after depletion of the WAVE complex, it is possible that N-WASP, another major Arp2/3 complex activator and a Cdc42 effector, produced an alternative source of Arp2/3 complex-nucleated filaments for filopodia initiation.
Our study also provides a mechanistic explanation of Arp2/3 complex functions during filopodia formation (Figure 10). Thus, correlative light and electron microscopy revealed that filopodia initiation in growth cones is associated with the dendritic network that is especially prominent in interfilopodial veils (Figure 10, A and B). During protrusion, this network is reorganized into bundles of long filaments (Figure 10, B–D). Activities of anti-capping proteins, such as Ena/VASP proteins (Bear et al., 2002
; Lebrand et al., 2004
) and formins (Zigmond et al., 2003
), and cross-linkers, such as fascin (Vignjevic et al., 2006
), are likely responsible for this reorganization. Overall, this process is consistent with the convergent elongation mechanism, we previously proposed for filopodia formation in B16F1 melanoma cells (Svitkina et al., 2003
). Lateral filopodia, which were reported to arise from actin patches of unknown structure (Loudon et al., 2006
), are formed by a similar mechanism. The constant presence of branched filaments at filopodial roots and their fusion with the filopodial bundles suggests that Arp2/3 complex-mediated nucleation supplies filaments for making filopodia. Although it is possible that some of these branches are formed not by Arp2/3 complex, but by another cross-linking protein, a parallel decrease in branched filaments and Arp2/3 complex labeling after siRNA treatment suggests that the majority of structurally observed branches were made by Arp2/3 complex. Branched filaments also constantly occur in the roots of filopodia remaining after Arp2/3 complex depletion, suggesting that remaining Arp2/3 complex forms preferred sites for filopodia initiation. If filopodia formation was mediated exclusively by formins, as proposed previously (Faix and Rottner, 2006
), we would be able to see at least some filopodia not associated with branched filaments after Arp2/3 complex depletion. It should be noted, however, that until complete inhibition of the Arp2/3 complex is achieved, it is not possible to determine whether the dendritic network creates highly favorable conditions for filopodia formation or it is absolutely necessary for it.
|
The reorganization of the dendritic network into filopodia seemed more efficient in neuronal cells, compared with B16 F1 cells (Svitkina et al., 2003
). We previously proposed a two-step mode of signaling leading to filopodia formation, in which a first step is responsible for dendritic nucleation and a second one for reorganization of the dendritic network into bundles (Biyasheva et al., 2004
). Our current data suggest that the relative activities of two proposed signaling modules may be shifted toward the second one in neuronal cells. This hypothesis may also explain the domination of filopodia over lamellipodia in neurons.
Arp2/3 Complex in Neuronal Signaling
Functions of Arp2/3 complex in growth cone dynamics are predicted to influence neuritogenesis, as we indeed observed. Inhibition of axonal outgrowth was also observed after knockdown of Sra-1 or WAVE1 members of WAVE complex in hippocampal neurons (Kawano et al., 2005
). However, the interpretation of these results is not straightforward, because we also detected increased RhoA activity after Arp2/3 complex depletion, which might explain the altered pattern of neurite extension analogous to that induced by constitutively active RhoA (Gallo, 2006
). Although the mechanisms of Arp2/3 complex interaction with RhoA signaling remain unknown, this finding fits well to an emerging theme that actin filament nucleators may also function in signaling through Rho GTPases and form feedback loops. Thus, Arp2/3 complex was shown to bind and activate the Rac GEF Tiam1 (Ten Klooster et al., 2006
), and several formins act upstream of Rho GTPases (Habas et al., 2001
; Koka et al., 2003
; Kitzing et al., 2007
).
Involvement of Arp2/3 complex in signaling through Rho GTPases may indicate that its role in filopodia formation is indirect and mediated, for example, by decreased Rac activity. We addressed this concern by expressing Rac1V12 in siRNA-treated cells, and we found that it rescued filopodia formation, but only partially, suggesting that Arp2/3 complex may contribute to filopodia formation not only by nucleating actin filaments in lamellipodia but also by altering activities of Rho GTPases. How active Rac1 stimulates filopodia in Arp2/3 complex-depleted cells is still an open question. One possibility is that Rac1 fully activates the remaining Arp2/3 complex through WAVE complex. Alternatively, Rac1 may induce actin polymerization through other known or unknown actin nucleators. At present, we cannot distinguish between these nonexclusive possibilities. Rac1V12 expression also increased the rate of filopodia initiation in control cells, consistent with an idea of lamellipodia-dependent filopodia formation.
In conclusion, we showed here that Arp2/3 complex is a key component of actin-based protrusion in neuronal growth cones and that it is involved in generation of lamellipodia, and, importantly, filopodia. Besides its roles in constructing the actin machinery for protrusion, Arp2/3 complex seems to play a role in signaling through Rho GTPases and thus influences neuritogenesis during neuronal differentiation.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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Address correspondence to: Tatyana M. Svitkina (svitkina{at}sas.upenn.edu).
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