| Literature DB >> 25748676 |
Robert Goggs1, Christopher M Williams2, Harry Mellor3, Alastair W Poole2.
Abstract
Rho GTPases are critical for platelet function. Although the roles of RhoA, Rac and Cdc42 are characterized, platelets express other Rho GTPases, whose activities are less well understood. This review summarizes our understanding of the roles of platelet Rho GTPases and focuses particularly on the functions of Rif and RhoG. In human platelets, Rif interacts with cytoskeleton regulators including formins mDia1 and mDia3, whereas RhoG binds SNARE-complex proteins and cytoskeletal regulators ELMO and DOCK1. Knockout mouse studies suggest that Rif plays no critical functions in platelets, likely due to functional overlap with other Rho GTPases. In contrast, RhoG is essential for normal granule secretion downstream of the collagen receptor GPVI. The central defect in RhoG-/- platelets is reduced dense granule secretion, which impedes integrin activation and aggregation and limits platelet recruitment to growing thrombi under shear, translating into reduced thrombus formation in vivo. Potential avenues for future work on Rho GTPases in platelets are also highlighted, including identification of the key regulator for platelet filopodia formation and investigation of the role of the many Rho GTPase regulators in platelet function in both health and disease.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25748676 PMCID: PMC4357237 DOI: 10.1042/BJ20141404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem J ISSN: 0264-6021 Impact factor: 3.857
Figure 1A schematic representation of the known roles of Cdc42, Rac1 and RhoA in the shape change and granule secretion functions of platelets
The potential roles of RhoG and Rif are also included for comparison. Cdc42 plays a role in regulating dense granule secretion and may be partly responsible for platelet filopodia formation. Rac is involved in lamellipodia formation downstream of both collagen-GPVI and thrombin interactions with PARs. RhoA is also involved in regulating lamellipodia formation, integrin activation and is responsible for generating stress fibres.
Platelet Rho GTPase effectors
A list of known effector proteins for RhoA, Rac1 and Cdc42 compiled from Bishop and Hall [113] and Bustelo et al. [144] and cross-referenced against mRNA transcripts from human platelets [35], and two recent proteomic databases such that only proteins known to be expressed are listed [145,146].
| Effector | Protein type (alternate protein name) | Upstream GTPase | Main biological function |
|---|---|---|---|
| FilaminA | Actin binding protein | RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42 | Cytoskeletal regulation, actin filament cross-linking |
| CopG2 | Coatomer protein (γ2-Cop) | Cdc42 | Vesicle trafficking (clathrin route) |
| DIAPH1,2 | Formin | RhoA, Rac1 | Cytoskeletal change via profilin and IRSp53 |
| FHOD1 | Formin | Rac1 | Cytoskeletal and transcriptional regulation |
| FMNL1 | Formin | Rac1 | Cytoskeletal organization, cell polarity, cytokinesis |
| IP3R1 | Inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor | RhoA | Calcium entry in endothelial cells |
| PI4,5PK | Lipid kinase | RhoA | Phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate level modulation |
| CybA | NADPH oxidase complex subunit | Rac1 | Superoxide production |
| NCF1,2 | NADPH oxidase complex subunit | Rac1, Cdc42 | Superoxide production |
| PLC-β2 | Phospholipase, C type (PLC-β2) | Cdc42, Rac1 | Production of second messengers |
| KCNA2 | Potassium Channel subunit | RhoA | Potassium entry |
| PIK3R1 | Regulatory p85 subunit of PIK3C | Rac1, Cdc42 | Regulation of PIK3C activity, signal transduction |
| PPP1R12A | Regulatory subunit of phosphatase1 | RhoA | MLC inactivation, cytoskeletal regulation |
| IQGAP1,2 | RhoGAP and scaffold protein | Rac1, Cdc42 | Cytoskeletal regulation, cell–cell contacts |
| ARFIP2 | Scaffold protein (Por1) | Rac1 | Cytoskeletal regulation |
| Cdc42SE1,2 | Scaffold protein (Spec1,2) | Rac1, Cdc42 | Modulation of GTPase signalling outputs |
| CYFIP1,2 | Scaffold protein (Pir121) | Rac1 | Regulation of the cytoskeleton via WASF proteins |
| MTSS1 | Scaffold protein | Rac1 | Cytoskeletal organization via WASF/WAVE |
| Kinectin1 | Scaffold protein | RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42 | Kinesin binding, microtubule vesicular trafficking |
| NCK1 | Scaffold protein with SH2/3 domains | Rac1 | Complex formation with WASP, signal transduction |
| NCKAP1 | Scaffold protein (Nap125, Nap1) | Rac1 | Regulation of the cytoskeleton via WASF proteins |
| N-WASP | Scaffold protein | Cdc42 | Cytoskeletal regulation via Arp2/3 complex |
| Pard6 A,G | Scaffold protein (Par6α,γ) | Rac1, Cdc42 | Cell polarity. Links GTPases and atypical PKCs |
| Trip10 | Scaffold protein | Cdc42 | Binding of WASP to microtubules |
| WASP | Scaffold protein | Rac1 | Cytoskeletal regulation via the Arp2/3 complex |
| WAVE/Scar1,2 | Scaffold protein | Cdc42, Rac1 | Cytoskeletal regulation via the Arp2/3 complex |
| Cdc42bpgB | Serine/threonine kinase (MRCKβ) | Rac1, Cdc42 | Cytoskeletal regulation |
| p70S6K | Serine/threonine kinase | Cdc42 | Regulation of translation, cell cycle |
| PAK2 | Serine/threonine kinase | Rac1, Cdc42 | Cytoskeletal organization, kinase activation |
| PKCα | Serine/threonine kinase | RhoA, Rac1, Cdc42 | Signal transduction |
| PKN1,2 | Serine/threonine kinase (Prk) | RhoA | Vesicle recycling, PLD1 activation |
| ROCK1,2 | Serine/threonine kinase (Rok α,β) | RhoA | Cytoskeleton, blockage of cell contact inhibition |
| Stat3 | Transcriptional factor | Rac1, Cdc42 | Transcription |
| α-Tubulin-1C | Tubulin | Rac1 | Integral component of microtubules |
Figure 2A schematic overview of the role of RhoG in the regulation of platelet secretion
The interaction of fibrillar collagen with GPVI leads to the dimerization of the receptor and the association of the ITAM domains of the FcRγ chains. These are phosphorylated by Src family kinases Lyn and Fyn. In the model suggested by the Kunapuli group data, Fyn phosphorylates the Rho GEF TRIO, which in turn activates RhoG [115]. In the model supported by data from our laboratory [112], the activity of the Src family kinases leads to the activation of Syk [112]. The activity of Syk then assembles various signalling adapters, kinases and GEF proteins including Vav, which leads to the GTP loading of RhoG. Active RhoG then interacts with SNARE regulators and SNARE proteins including VAMP2 to promote dense granule secretion. Autocrine and paracrine feedback signalling then occurs through P2Y12 receptors.
A list of the most prevalent Rho GTPase GEFs, GAPs and GDIs in human platelets with their known target GTPases
The list was based on Takai et al. [147] augmented with information from domain homology searches conducted using protein sequence (www.uniprot.org/) and protein interaction (string-db.org/) databases. Table entries were cross-referenced against two recent proteomic databases such that only proteins known to be expressed are listed [145,146], and then ranked using mRNA transcript levels from human platelets [35].
| UniProt ID | Gene name | Protein name | GTPase target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q9NZN5 | ARHGEF12 | Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 12 | RhoA, RhoB, Rac |
| Q5JSP0 | FGD3 | FYVE, RhoGEF and PH domain-containing protein 3 | Cdc42 |
| Q92888 | ARHGEF1 | Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 1 | RhoA |
| Q9NR81 | ARHGEF3 | Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 3 | RhoA, RhoB, Cdc42 |
| O60229 | KALRN | Kalirin | Rac |
| Q8TCU6 | PREX1 | P-Rex1 (PtdIns(3,4,5)-dependent Rac exchanger 1) | Rac |
| Q9UKW4 | VAV3 | Guanine nucleotide exchange factor VAV3 | Rac, Cdc42 |
| O75962 | TRIO | Triple functional domain protein (TRIO) | Rac, RhoA |
| Q15052 | ARHGEF6 | Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 6 | Rac, Cdc42 |
| Q8NF50 | DOCK8 | Dedicator of cytokinesis protein 8 | Rac, Cdc42 |
| Q6ZSZ5 | ARHGEF18 | Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 18 | RhoB, Rac |
| Q9H7D0 | DOCK5 | Dedicator of cytokinesis protein 5 | RhoA, Rac |
| Q92974 | ARHGEF2 | Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor 2 | RhoA |
| Q07889 | SOS1 | Son of sevenless homologue 1 (SOS-1) | Rac |
| Q92608 | DOCK2 | Dedicator of cytokinesis protein 2 | Rac |
| P15498 | VAV1 | Proto-oncogene Vav | Rac, Cdc42 |
| Q9NZM3 | ITSN2 | Intersectin-2 | Cdc42 |
| Q5T5U3 | ARHGAP21 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 21 | RhoA, Cdc42 |
| Q8N392 | ARHGAP18 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 18 | Rac, RhoQ, RhoU |
| O43182 | ARHGAP6 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 6 | Rac |
| P11274 | BCR | Breakpoint cluster region protein | Rac, Cdc42 |
| Q96P48 | ARAP1 | Arf-GAP with Rho-GAP, ANK repeat, PH domains 1 | ? |
| Q9P107 | GMIP | GEM-interacting protein | RhoA |
| P98171 | ARHGAP4 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 4 | Rac |
| Q92502 | STARD8 | StAR-related lipid transfer protein 8 | RhoA, Cdc42 |
| Q07960 | ARHGAP1 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 1 | Cdc42 |
| Q7Z6I6 | ARHGAP30 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 30 | Rac, RhoH |
| Q9BRR9 | ARHGAP9 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 9 | Cdc42, Rac, RhoA |
| O60890 | OPHN1 | Oligophrenin-1 | RhoA, Rac |
| A1A4S6 | ARHGAP10 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 10 | RhoA, Cdc42 |
| P42331 | ARHGAP25 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 25 | ? |
| Q12979 | ABR | Active breakpoint cluster region-related protein | Rac, Cdc42 |
| Q6ZUM4 | ARHGAP27 | Rho GTPase-activating protein 27 | Cdc42, Rac |
| Q8N103 | TAGAP | T-cell activation Rho GTPase-activating protein | ? |
| P52566 | ARHGDIB | Rho GDP-dissociation inhibitor 2 | Rac, RhoA, RhoB, RhoH |
| P52565 | ARHGDIA | Rho GDP-dissociation inhibitor 1 | Rac, RhoA, RhoH |