Laevsky Gary, Knecht David A
Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269, USA.
J Cell Sci. 2003 Sep 15;116(Pt 18):3761-70. doi: 10.1242/jcs.00684. Epub 2003 Jul 30.
Cells are frequently required to move in a local environment that physically restricts locomotion, such as during extravasation or metastatic invasion. In order to model these events, we have developed an assay in which vegetative Dictyostelium amoebae undergo chemotaxis under a layer of agarose toward a source of folic acid [Laevsky, G. and Knecht, D. A. (2001). Biotechniques 31, 1140-1149]. As the concentration of agarose is increased from 0.5% to 3% the cells are increasingly inhibited in their ability to move under the agarose. The contribution of myosin II and actin cross-linking proteins to the movement of cells in this restrictive environment has now been examined. Cells lacking myosin II heavy chain (mhcA-) are unable to migrate under agarose overlays of greater than 0.5%, and even at this concentration they move only a short distance from the trough. While attempting to move, the cells become stretched and fragmented due to their inability to retract their uropods. At higher agarose concentrations, the mhcA- cells protrude pseudopods under the agarose, but are unable to pull the cell body underneath. Consistent with a role for myosin II in general cortical stability, GFP-myosin dynamically localizes to the lateral and posterior cortex of cells moving under agarose. Cells lacking the essential light chain of myosin II (mlcE-), have no measurable myosin II motor activity, yet were able to move normally under all agarose concentrations. Mutants lacking either ABP-120 or alpha-actinin were also able to move under agarose at rates similar to wild-type cells. We hypothesize that myosin stabilizes the actin cortex through its cross-linking activity rather than its motor function and this activity is necessary and sufficient for the maintenance of cortical integrity of cells undergoing movement in a restrictive environment. The actin cross-linkers alpha-actinin and ABP-120 do not appear to play as major a role as myosin II in providing this cortical integrity.
细胞经常需要在物理上限制运动的局部环境中移动,比如在渗出或转移侵袭过程中。为了模拟这些事件,我们开发了一种实验方法,其中营养型盘基网柄菌变形虫在琼脂糖层下朝着叶酸源进行趋化运动[Laevsky, G.和Knecht, D. A.(2001年)。《生物技术》31卷,1140 - 1149页]。随着琼脂糖浓度从0.5%增加到3%,细胞在琼脂糖下移动的能力受到越来越大的抑制。现在已经研究了肌球蛋白II和肌动蛋白交联蛋白对细胞在这种受限环境中运动的贡献。缺乏肌球蛋白II重链(mhcA -)的细胞在大于0.5%的琼脂糖覆盖层下无法迁移,即使在这个浓度下,它们也只能从凹槽移动很短的距离。在试图移动时,细胞由于无法缩回其尾足而变得拉伸和破碎。在更高的琼脂糖浓度下,mhcA -细胞在琼脂糖下伸出伪足,但无法将细胞体拉到下面。与肌球蛋白II在一般皮质稳定性中的作用一致,绿色荧光蛋白标记的肌球蛋白动态定位于在琼脂糖下移动的细胞的外侧和后侧皮质。缺乏肌球蛋白II必需轻链(mlcE -)的细胞没有可测量的肌球蛋白II运动活性,但仍能够在所有琼脂糖浓度下正常移动。缺乏ABP - 120或α - 辅肌动蛋白的突变体也能够在琼脂糖下以与野生型细胞相似的速率移动。我们假设肌球蛋白通过其交联活性而非运动功能来稳定肌动蛋白皮质,并且这种活性对于在受限环境中运动的细胞维持皮质完整性是必要且充分的。肌动蛋白交联剂α - 辅肌动蛋白和ABP - 120在提供这种皮质完整性方面似乎没有肌球蛋白II起的作用大。