Literature DB >> 18096610

JAM-A is both essential and inhibitory to development of hepatic polarity in WIF-B cells.

Lelita T Braiterman1, Sean Heffernan, Lydia Nyasae, David Johns, Alfred P See, Rebeca Yutzy, Allison McNickle, Mira Herman, Arun Sharma, Ulhas P Naik, Ann L Hubbard.   

Abstract

Junctional adhesion molecule (JAM) is involved in tight junction (TJ) formation in epithelial cells. Three JAMs (A, B, and C) are expressed in rat hepatocytes, but only rat JAM-A is present in polarized WIF-B cells, a rat-human hepatic line. We used knockdown (KD) and overexpression in WIF-B cells to determine the role of JAM-A in the development of hepatic polarity. Expression of rat JAM-A short hairpin RNA resulted in approximately 50% KD of JAM-A and substantial loss of hepatic polarity, as measured by the absence of apical cysts formed by adjacent cells and sealed by TJ belts. When inhibitory RNA-resistant human JAM-A (huWT) was expressed in KD cells, hepatic polarity was restored. In contrast, expression of JAM-A that either lacked its PDZ-binding motif (huDeltaC-term) or harbored a point mutation (T273A) did not complement, indicating that multiple sites within JAM-A's cytoplasmic tail are required for the development of hepatic polarity. Overexpression of huWT in normal WIF-B cells unexpectedly blocked WIF-B maturation to the hepatic phenotype, as did expression of three huJAM-A constructs with single point mutations in putative phosphorylation sites. In contrast, huDeltaC-term was without effect, and the T273A mutant only partially blocked maturation. Our results show that JAM-A is essential for the development of polarity in cultured hepatic cells via its possible phosphorylation and recruitment of relevant PDZ proteins and that hepatic polarity is achieved within a narrow range of JAM-A expression levels. Importantly, formation/maintenance of TJs and the apical domain in hepatic cells are linked, unlike simple epithelia.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18096610     DOI: 10.1152/ajpgi.00159.2007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol        ISSN: 0193-1857            Impact factor:   4.052


  12 in total

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Authors:  Sharon Leitch; Mingye Feng; Sabina Muend; Lelita T Braiterman; Ann L Hubbard; Rajini Rao
Journal:  Biometals       Date:  2010-10-28       Impact factor: 2.949

2.  Knockdown of tight junction protein claudin-2 prevents bile canalicular formation in WIF-B9 cells.

Authors:  Seiichi Son; Takashi Kojima; Catherine Decaens; Hiroshi Yamaguchi; Tatsuya Ito; Masafumi Imamura; Masaki Murata; Satoshi Tanaka; Hideki Chiba; Koichi Hirata; Norimasa Sawada
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Review 3.  Hepatocyte polarity.

Authors:  Aleksandr Treyer; Anne Müsch
Journal:  Compr Physiol       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 9.090

Review 4.  The unique polarity phenotype of hepatocytes.

Authors:  Anne Müsch
Journal:  Exp Cell Res       Date:  2014-06-20       Impact factor: 3.905

Review 5.  Phosphorylation of tight junction transmembrane proteins: Many sites, much to do.

Authors:  Christina M Van Itallie; James M Anderson
Journal:  Tissue Barriers       Date:  2017-10-30

Review 6.  Blood-Bile Barrier: Morphology, Regulation, and Pathophysiology.

Authors:  Tirthadipa Pradhan-Sundd; Satdarshan Pal Monga
Journal:  Gene Expr       Date:  2019-01-15

7.  Polarization restricts hepatitis C virus entry into HepG2 hepatoma cells.

Authors:  Christopher J Mee; Helen J Harris; Michelle J Farquhar; Garrick Wilson; Gary Reynolds; Christopher Davis; Sven C D van IJzendoorn; Peter Balfe; Jane A McKeating
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2009-04-08       Impact factor: 5.103

8.  Interaction of the hereditary hemochromatosis protein HFE with transferrin receptor 2 is required for transferrin-induced hepcidin expression.

Authors:  Junwei Gao; Juxing Chen; Maxwell Kramer; Hidekazu Tsukamoto; An-Sheng Zhang; Caroline A Enns
Journal:  Cell Metab       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 27.287

Review 9.  Structural and functional hepatocyte polarity and liver disease.

Authors:  Paul Gissen; Irwin M Arias
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  2015-06-24       Impact factor: 25.083

10.  Build them up and break them down: Tight junctions of cell lines expressing typical hepatocyte polarity with a varied repertoire of claudins.

Authors:  Brigitte Grosse; Jeril Degrouard; Danielle Jaillard; Doris Cassio
Journal:  Tissue Barriers       Date:  2013-06-04
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