National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, NIH, Bethesda, MD, 20892, USA.
MRC-LMCB, University College London, London, WC1E6BT, UK.
BMC Biol. 2019 Feb 11;17(1):12. doi: 10.1186/s12915-019-0625-9.
Notch-Delta signaling functions across a wide array of animal systems to break symmetry in a sheet of undifferentiated cells and generate cells with different fates, a process known as lateral inhibition. Unlike many other signaling systems, however, since both the ligand and receptor are transmembrane proteins, the activation of Notch by Delta depends strictly on cell-cell contact. Furthermore, the binding of the ligand to the receptor may not be sufficient to induce signaling, since recent work in cell culture suggests that ligand-induced Notch signaling also requires a mechanical pulling force. This tension exposes a cleavage site in Notch that, when cut, activates signaling. Although it is not known if mechanical tension contributes to signaling in vivo, others have suggested that this is how endocytosis of the receptor-ligand complex contributes to the cleavage and activation of Notch. In a similar way, since Notch-mediated lateral inhibition at a distance in the dorsal thorax of the pupal fly is mediated via actin-rich protrusions, it is possible that cytoskeletal forces generated by networks of filamentous actin and non-muscle myosin during cycles of protrusion extension and retraction also contribute to Notch signaling.
To test this hypothesis, we carried out a detailed analysis of the role of myosin II-dependent tension in Notch signaling in the developing fly and in cell culture. Using dynamic fluorescence-based reporters of Notch, we found that myosin II is important for signaling in signal sending and receiving cells in both systems-as expected if myosin II-dependent tension across the Notch-Delta complex contributes to Notch activation. While myosin II was found to contribute most to signaling at a distance, it was also required for maximal signaling between adjacent cells that share lateral contacts and for signaling between cells in culture.
Together these results reveal a previously unappreciated role for non-muscle myosin II contractility in Notch signaling, providing further support for the idea that force contributes to the cleavage and activation of Notch in the context of ligand-dependent signaling, and a new paradigm for actomyosin-based mechanosensation.
Notch-Delta 信号通路在广泛的动物系统中发挥作用,打破未分化细胞薄片的对称性,并产生具有不同命运的细胞,这个过程被称为侧向抑制。然而,与许多其他信号系统不同的是,由于配体和受体都是跨膜蛋白,Delta 通过 Notch 的激活严格依赖于细胞-细胞接触。此外,配体与受体的结合可能不足以诱导信号转导,因为最近的细胞培养研究表明,配体诱导的 Notch 信号转导还需要机械拉力。这种张力使 Notch 上的一个切割位点暴露出来,当被切割时,就会激活信号转导。虽然目前尚不清楚机械张力是否有助于体内信号转导,但其他人认为,这就是受体-配体复合物的内吞作用如何促进 Notch 的切割和激活。同样地,由于在蛹蝇背部的远距离通过富含肌动蛋白的突起进行 Notch 介导的侧向抑制,因此在突起延伸和缩回的循环过程中由丝状肌动蛋白和非肌肉肌球蛋白网络产生的细胞骨架力也可能有助于 Notch 信号转导。
为了验证这一假说,我们对发育中的果蝇和细胞培养中 Notch 信号转导中肌球蛋白 II 依赖性张力的作用进行了详细分析。使用 Notch 的动态荧光报告基因,我们发现肌球蛋白 II 对于两个系统中信号发送和接收细胞的信号转导都很重要——如果肌球蛋白 II 依赖性张力跨越 Notch-Delta 复合物有助于 Notch 激活,那么这是可以预期的。虽然肌球蛋白 II 对远距离信号转导的贡献最大,但它对于相邻细胞之间共享侧向接触的最大信号转导以及细胞培养物中细胞之间的信号转导也是必需的。
这些结果揭示了非肌肉肌球蛋白 II 收缩性在 Notch 信号转导中以前未被认识到的作用,为以下观点提供了进一步的支持,即力有助于配体依赖性信号转导中 Notch 的切割和激活,并为基于肌动蛋白的机械感觉提供了一个新的范例。