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The membrane-associated protein, supervillin, accelerates F-actin-dependent rapid integrin recycling and cell motility. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Supervillin plays a crucial role in coordinating the movement and recycling of key membrane proteins, such as integrins and growth factor receptors, within migrating cells.
  • Supervillin associates with early and sorting endosomes and components of the Arf6 recycling pathway, facilitating the movement of transmembrane proteins in response to cell signaling.
  • It enhances signaling pathways (like EGFR to ERKs 1 and 2) and improves cell movement, indicating that supervillin and the cytoskeleton work together to support cell motility and recycling of membrane proteins.

Article Abstract

In migrating cells, the cytoskeleton coordinates signal transduction and redistribution of transmembrane proteins, including integrins and growth factor receptors. Supervillin is an F-actin- and myosin II-binding protein that tightly associates with signaling proteins in cholesterol-rich, 'lipid raft' membrane microdomains. We show here that supervillin also can localize with markers for early and sorting endosomes (EE/SE) and with overexpressed components of the Arf6 recycling pathway in the cell periphery. Supervillin tagged with the photoswitchable fluorescent protein, tdEos, moves both into and away from dynamic structures resembling podosomes at the basal cell surface. Rapid integrin recycling from EE/SE is inhibited in supervillin-knockdown cells, but the rates of integrin endocytosis and recycling from the perinuclear recycling center (PNRC) are unchanged. A lack of synergy between supervillin knockdown and the actin filament barbed-end inhibitor, cytochalasin D, suggests that both treatments affect actin-dependent rapid recycling. Supervillin also enhances signaling from the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) to extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs) 1 and 2 and increases the velocity of cell translocation. These results suggest that supervillin, F-actin and associated proteins coordinate a rapid, basolateral membrane recycling pathway that contributes to ERK signaling and actin-based cell motility.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2888608PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0854.2010.01062.xDOI Listing

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