| Literature DB >> 27046832 |
Magdalene Michael1, Joyce C M Meiring2, Bipul R Acharya2, Daniel R Matthews3, Suzie Verma2, Siew Ping Han2, Michelle M Hill4, Robert G Parton5, Guillermo A Gomez2, Alpha S Yap6.
Abstract
In this study we sought to identify how contractility at adherens junctions influences apoptotic cell extrusion. We first found that the generation of effective contractility at steady-state junctions entails a process of architectural reorganization whereby filaments that are initially generated as poorly organized networks of short bundles are then converted into co-aligned perijunctional bundles. Reorganization requires coronin 1B, which is recruited to junctions by E-cadherin adhesion and is necessary to establish contractile tension at the zonula adherens. When cells undergo apoptosis within an epithelial monolayer, coronin 1B is also recruited to the junctional cortex at the apoptotic/neighbor cell interface in an E-cadherin-dependent fashion to support actin architectural reorganization, contractility, and extrusion. We propose that contractile stress transmitted from the apoptotic cell through E-cadherin adhesions elicits a mechanosensitive response in neighbor cells that is necessary for the morphogenetic event of apoptotic extrusion to occur.Entities:
Keywords: E-cadherin; actin organization; apoptosis; contractility; coronin
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27046832 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2016.03.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270