| Literature DB >> 16314921 |
Abstract
The parvins are a family of proteins involved in linking integrins and associated proteins with intracellular pathways that regulate actin cytoskeletal dynamics and cell survival. Both alpha-parvin (PARVA) and beta-parvin (PARVB) localize to focal adhesions and function in cell adhesion, spreading, motility and survival through interactions with partners, such as integrin-linked kinase (ILK), paxillin, alpha-actinin and testicular kinase 1. A complex of PARVA with ILK and the LIM protein PINCH-1 is critical for cell survival in a variety of cells, including certain cancer cells, kidney podocytes and cardiac myocytes. While PARVA inhibits the activities of Rac1 and testicular kinase 1 and cell spreading, PARVB binds alphaPIX and alpha-actinin, and can promote cell spreading. In contrast to PARVA, PARVB inhibits ILK activity and reverses some of its oncogenic effects in cancer cells. This review focuses on the structure and function of the parvins and some possible roles in human diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16314921 PMCID: PMC2792345 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-005-5355-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Figure 1Structural features of PARVA and PARVB proteins. Numbers indicate amino acid positions. Protein binding sites are indicated with a horizontal line. Effect of point mutations is indicated by ↓. Sequences required for localization are indicated by ↑. Both PARVA and PARVB contain two calponin homology domains (CH) and nuclear localization sequences (NLS) at their N-termini. In addition to full-length PARVB (PARVB-l), PARVB-s and PARVB-ss can be produced by alternative translation initiation. A PARVB isoform expressed from alternative 5′ exons (CLINT) has also been detected in certain cell types.
Relative tissue distribution of parvin proteins. An arbitrary scale of + to +++ refers to the relative intensity of the bands in Western blot analysis [2–4, 34]. (+ to +++); protein expression not determined, inferred from mRNA expression [4, 7]. ?; expression unknown. The expression levels were based on results from different experiments and therefore might not always be directly comparable (see [2–4, 7, 34] for detail).
| Tissue | PARVA | PARVB | PARVG |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart | +++ | ++ | (+ to ++) |
| Skeletal Muscle | ++ | +++ | (+) |
| Brain | + | + | (+) |
| Lung | + to ++ | + | (++) |
| Liver | ++ | + | (+ to ++) |
| Pancreas | (++) | ? | ? |
| Intestine | ++ | + | (++) |
| Thymus | + | + | (+++) |
| Spleen | + | +++ (PARVB-ss) | (+++) |
| Testis | + | + | (+++) |
| Kidney | ++ | (++) | (+) |
| Placenta | ++ | (+) | (+) |
Figure 2A working model for the functions of parvins and their binding proteins. ILK binds PINCH through its N-terminal domain and binds PARVA or PARVB through its C-terminal domain, resulting in formation of PINCH-ILK-parvin ternary complexes. Formation of these complexes occurs before localization to integrin-rich adhesion sites and is required for preventing degradation of ILK, PINCH1 and parvins. Recruitment of these complexes to integrin-rich adhesion sites is mediated by interactions of the complexes with additional proteins, such as β1-integrin, Mig-2 and paxillin. Phosphorylation of the N-terminus of PARVA increases binding to ILK and inhibits binding to TESK-1. Since PARVA inhibits TESK-1 activity, release of TESK-1 upon phosphorylation of PARVA results in inhibition of cofilin by phosphorylation and consequently, reduction of the turnover rates of actin filaments. PARVA can bind to F-actin in vitro but the functional significance of this interaction remains to be established. The PINCH1-ILK-PARVA complex plays a critical role in cell survival by promoting membrane recruitment of Akt and its activation by phosphorylation. PARVA and PARVB compete for binding to ILK and have opposite effects on ILK kinase activity. While PARVA binding increases ILK kinase activity, PARVB binding represses it. Also, PARVB promotes adhesion and spreading through binding of α-actinin, α-PIX and activation of Rac1, while PARVA represses Rac1.
Effect of ILK, PINCH and parvin proteins on cell adhesion, spreading, motility, and actin polymerization (F-actin).
| Intervention | Adhesion | Spreading | Motility | F-actin | Other effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ILK siRNA | delayed | ⇓ | ⇓ | ⇓ PINCH-1 | [ | |
| PINCH-1 siRNA | ⇓ | ⇓ | ⇓ ILK | [ | ||
| ILK kinase inhibitor | delayed | ⇓ | ⇓ | ⇓ | [ | |
| PARVA siRNA | ⇑ | ⇓ ILK, ⇓PINCH-1 | [ | |||
| PARVA 223–372 (CH2) | ⇓ | ⇓ | ⇓ | [ | ||
| PARVA PBS mutant | ⇓ | ⇓ | ⇓ | ILK binds OK | [ | |
| V282G/L285R | ||||||
| PARVA F271D | ⇓ | ⇓ | ⇓ | [ | ||
| PARVA ΔN | ⇓ | ⇓ | [ | |||
| PARVA S4/S8/S14/T16 | ⇓ | ⇓ | thick | [ | ||
| /S19 to A mutant | ||||||
| PARVA S4D/S8D | ⇑ | ⇑ | fine | ILK binds OK | [ | |
| PARVB siRNA | ⇓ | in some cell types | [ | |||
| PARVB 225–364 (CH2) | ⇓ | reversed by active ILK | [ | |||
| PARVB 53–262 (CH1) | ⇑ | [ | ||||
| PARVB 249–272, 249–262 (α-actinin binding site) | ⇓ | ⇓ α-actinin binding | [ |
Common and distinguishing features of PARVA and PARVB.
| Effect | PARVA | PARVB | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| ILK binding | yes | yes | [ |
| Paxillin binding | yes | no | [ |
| α-actinin binding | no | yes | [ |
| F-actin binding | yes | no | [ |
| αPIX binding | ? | yes | [ |
| Rac1 inhibition | yes | no | [ |
| Effect of depletion | apoptosis | ⇓ spreading | [ |
| Phosphorylation site | N-terminus | CH2 | [ |
| Phosphorylated by | Cdc2, ERK | ILK | [ |
| Localization to early lamellipodia | +/- (?) | +++ | [ |
| Effect on ILK kinase | ⇑ activity | ⇓ activity | [ |
Note that in most studies, PARVA and PARVB were not compared side-by-side in the same experiments.