| Literature DB >> 23891662 |
Sachiko Kamakura1, Masatoshi Nomura, Junya Hayase, Yuko Iwakiri, Akihiko Nishikimi, Ryoichi Takayanagi, Yoshinori Fukui, Hideki Sumimoto.
Abstract
Successful chemotaxis requires not only increased motility but also sustained directionality. Here, we show that, during neutrophil chemotaxis via receptors coupled with the Gi family of heterotrimeric G proteins, directional movement is regulated by mInsc, a mammalian protein distantly related to the Drosophila polarity-organizer Inscuteable. The GDP-bound, Gβγ-free Gαi subunit accumulates at the front of chemotaxing neutrophils to recruit mInsc-complexed with the Par3-aPKC evolutionarily conserved polarity complex-via LGN/AGS3 that simultaneously binds to Gαi-GDP and mInsc. Both mInsc-deficient and aPKC-blocked neutrophils exhibit a normal motile activity but migrate in an undirected manner. mInsc deficiency prevents neutrophils from efficiently stabilizing pseudopods at the leading edge; the stability is restored by wild-type mInsc, but not by a mutant protein defective in binding to LGN/AGS3. Thus, mInsc controls directional migration via noncanonical G protein signaling, in which Gβγ-free Gαi-GDP, a product from Gαi-GTP released after receptor activation, plays a central role.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23891662 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2013.06.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270