| Literature DB >> 31644899 |
Muna Taha1, Mohammed Aldirawi1, Sigrid März1, Jochen Seebach1, Maria Odenthal-Schnittler2, Olga Bondareva1, Vesna Bojovic3, Thomas Schmandra4, Benedikt Wirth5, Magdalena Mietkowska6, Klemens Rottner6, Hans Schnittler7.
Abstract
Actin-binding proteins are essential for linear and branched actin filament dynamics that control shape change, cell migration, and cell junction remodeling in vascular endothelium (endothelial cells [ECs]). The epithelial protein lost in neoplasm (EPLIN) is an actin-binding protein, expressed as EPLIN-α and EPLIN-β by alternative promoters; however, the isoform-specific functions are not yet understood. Aortic compared to cava vein ECs and shear stress-exposed cultured ECs express increased EPLIN-β levels that stabilize stress fibers. In contrast, EPLIN-α expression is increased in growing and migrating ECs, is targeted to membrane protrusions, and terminates their growth via interaction with the Arp2/3 complex. The data indicate that EPLIN-α controls protrusion dynamics while EPLIN-β has an actin filament stabilizing role, which is consistent with FRAP analyses demonstrating a lower EPLIN-β turnover rate compared to EPLIN-α. Together, EPLIN isoforms differentially control actin dynamics in ECs, essential in shear stress responses, cell migration, and barrier function.Entities:
Keywords: Arp2/3 complex; JAIL; VE-cadherin dynamics; actin binding proteins; hemodynamics; junction dynamics; junction-associated intermittent lamellipodia; lamellipodia; shear stress; stress fibers
Year: 2019 PMID: 31644899 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2019.09.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423