p27Kip1 promotes invadopodia turnover and invasion through the regulation of the PAK1/Cortactin pathway
Autor: | Evangeline Bennana, Caroline Callot, Takanori Katsube, Stéphane Manenti, Arnaud Besson, François Guillonneau, Renaud T. Perchey, Ada Nowosad, Patrick Mayeux, Pauline Jeannot |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Mouse QH301-705.5 Science Cell macromolecular substances Matrix (biology) Biology General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology Cell Line Extracellular matrix 03 medical and health sciences Mice PAK1 Cell Movement medicine Animals Humans Biology (General) Cancer Biology invadopodia p27/Kip1 General Immunology and Microbiology General Neuroscience General Medicine Cell Biology cortactin invasion Cell biology 030104 developmental biology medicine.anatomical_structure p21-Activated Kinases PAK Invadopodia Cancer cell Podosomes biology.protein Medicine Nucleus Cortactin Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p27 Research Article Human |
Zdroj: | eLife eLife, Vol 6 (2017) |
ISSN: | 2050-084X |
Popis: | p27Kip1 (p27) is a cyclin-CDK inhibitor and negative regulator of cell proliferation. p27 also controls other cellular processes including migration and cytoplasmic p27 can act as an oncogene. Furthermore, cytoplasmic p27 promotes invasion and metastasis, in part by promoting epithelial to mesenchymal transition. Herein, we find that p27 promotes cell invasion by binding to and regulating the activity of Cortactin, a critical regulator of invadopodia formation. p27 localizes to invadopodia and limits their number and activity. p27 promotes the interaction of Cortactin with PAK1. In turn, PAK1 promotes invadopodia turnover by phosphorylating Cortactin, and expression of Cortactin mutants for PAK-targeted sites abolishes p27’s effect on invadopodia dynamics. Thus, in absence of p27, cells exhibit increased invadopodia stability due to impaired PAK1-Cortactin interaction, but their invasive capacity is reduced compared to wild-type cells. Overall, we find that p27 directly promotes cell invasion by facilitating invadopodia turnover via the Rac1/PAK1/Cortactin pathway. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.22207.001 eLife digest When animals develop from embryos to adults, or try to heal wounds later in life, their cells have to move. Moving means that the cells must invade into their surroundings, a dense network of proteins called the extracellular matrix. The cell first attaches to the extracellular matrix; degrades it; and then moves into the newly opened space. Cells have developed specialized structures called invadosomes to enable all these steps. Invadosomes are never static, they first assemble where cells interact with extracellular matrix, they then release proteins that loosen the matrix, and finally disassemble again to allow cells to move. Invadosomes in cancer cells often become overactive, and can allow the tumor cells to spread throughout the body. A lot of different proteins are involved in controlling how and when cells move. p27 is a well-known protein usually found in a cell’s nucleus along with the cell’s DNA. Inside the nucleus, p27 suppresses tumor growth by stopping cells from dividing. However, often in cancer cells p27 moves outside of the cell’s nucleus where it contributes to cell movement via an unknown mechanism. To answer how p27 controls cell invasion, Jeannot et al. used a biochemical technique to uncover which proteins p27 binds to when it is outside of the nucleus. One of its interaction partners was called Cortactin. This protein is known to be an important building block of invadosomes, and is involved in both the assembly and disassembly of these structures. In further experiments, Jeannot studied mouse cells with or without p27 and human cancer cells that can be grown in the laboratory. The experiments revealed that p27 promotes an enzyme called PAK1 to also bind to Cortactin. PAK1 then modified Cortactin, causing whole invadosomes to disassemble, which in turn allowed cells to de-attach from the matrix and move forward. In contrast, cells lacking p27 had more stable invadosomes, attached more strongly to the matrix and were better at degrading it, but could not invade as well as cells with p27. Overall these experiments showed a new way that p27 promotes cell invasion. The next steps will include finding out exactly how the modification of Cortactin causes the invadosomes to disassemble. Furthermore, it will be important to study whether forcing p27 back into the nucleus can reduce the spread of cancer cells in the body. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.22207.002 |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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