Literature DB >> 11682608

An actin barrier to resealing.

K Miyake1, P L McNeil, K Suzuki, R Tsunoda, N Sugai.   

Abstract

Plasma membrane disruption is a common form of cell injury in many normal biological environments, including many mammalian tissues. Survival depends on the initiation of a rapid resealing response that is mounted only in the presence of physiological levels of extracellular Ca(2+). Vesicle-vesicle and vesicle-plasma membrane fusion events occurring in cortical cytoplasm surrounding the defect are thought to be a crucial element of the resealing mechanism. However, in mammalian cells, the vesicles used in this fusion reaction (endosomes/lysosomes) are not present in a 'pre-docked' configuration and so must be brought into physical contact with one another and with the plasma membrane. We propose that a requisite prelude to fusion is the disassembly in local cell cortex of the physical barrier constituted by filamentous actin. Consistent with this hypothesis, we found that rat gastric epithelial (RGM1) cell cortical staining with phalloidin was apparently reduced at presumptive disruption sites. Moreover, flow cytofluorometric analysis of wounded RGM1 populations revealed a small, but significant, Ca(2+)-dependent reduction in whole cell phalloidin staining. The functional significance of this disruption-induced depolymerization response was confirmed in several independent tests. Introduction into RGM1 cells of the filamentous actin-depolymerizing agent, DNase1, enhanced resealing, although cytochalasin treatment, by itself, had no effect. By contrast, when the filamentous actin cytoskeleton was stabilized experimentally, using phalloidin or jasplakinolide, resealing was strongly inhibited. Cells in wounded cultures displayed an enhanced cortical array of filamentous actin, and resealing by such cells was enhanced strongly by both cytochalasin and DNase 1, demonstrating the specific reversibility of a biologically mediated, polymerization-induced inhibition of resealing. We conclude that localized filamentous actin disassembly removes a cortical barrier standing in the way of membrane-membrane contacts leading to resealing-requisite homotypic and exocytotic fusion events.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11682608     DOI: 10.1242/jcs.114.19.3487

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Sci        ISSN: 0021-9533            Impact factor:   5.285


  46 in total

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2.  A plasma membrane wound proteome: reversible externalization of intracellular proteins following reparable mechanical damage.

Authors:  Ronald L Mellgren
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Review 4.  Membrane Repair: Mechanisms and Pathophysiology.

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Review 5.  Rehabilitation and the single cell.

Authors:  William M Bement; Hoi-Ying E Yu; Brian M Burkel; Emily M Vaughan; Andrew G Clark
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6.  Structural and signaling role of lipids in plasma membrane repair.

Authors:  Adam Horn; Jyoti K Jaiswal
Journal:  Curr Top Membr       Date:  2019-07-25       Impact factor: 3.049

7.  A new twist on plasma membrane repair.

Authors:  Ronald L Mellgren
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8.  Single cell wound repair: Dealing with life's little traumas.

Authors:  Maria Teresa Abreu-Blanco; Jeffrey M Verboon; Susan M Parkhurst
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9.  Calcium-dependent plasma membrane repair requires m- or mu-calpain, but not calpain-3, the proteasome, or caspases.

Authors:  Ronald L Mellgren; Katsuya Miyake; Irina Kramerova; Melissa J Spencer; Nathalie Bourg; Marc Bartoli; Isabelle Richard; Peter A Greer; Paul L McNeil
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2009-09-23

10.  The T3SS effector EspT defines a new category of invasive enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC) which form intracellular actin pedestals.

Authors:  Richard Bulgin; Ana Arbeloa; David Goulding; Gordon Dougan; Valerie F Crepin; Benoit Raymond; Gad Frankel
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