| Literature DB >> 33725480 |
Ritusree Biswas1, Avinanda Banerjee2, Sergio Lembo3, Zhihai Zhao4, Vairavan Lakshmanan1, Ryan Lim5, Shimin Le4, Manando Nakasaki6, Vassily Kutyavin7, Graham Wright8, Dasaradhi Palakodeti3, Robert S Ross6, Colin Jamora3, Valeri Vasioukhin7, Yan Jie9, Srikala Raghavan10.
Abstract
Vinculin, a mechanotransducer associated with both adherens junctions (AJs) and focal adhesions (FAs), plays a central role in force transmission through cell-cell and cell-substratum contacts. We generated the conditional knockout (cKO) of vinculin in murine skin that results in the loss of bulge stem cell (BuSC) quiescence and promotes continual cycling of the hair follicles. Surprisingly, we find that the AJs in vinculin cKO cells are mechanically weak and impaired in force generation despite increased junctional expression of E-cadherin and α-catenin. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that vinculin functions by keeping α-catenin in a stretched/open conformation, which in turn regulates the retention of YAP1, another potent mechanotransducer and regulator of cell proliferation, at the AJs. Altogether, our data provide mechanistic insights into the hitherto-unexplored regulatory link between the mechanical stability of cell junctions and contact-inhibition-mediated maintenance of BuSC quiescence.Entities:
Keywords: YAP1; adherens junctions; contact inhibition; hair follicle stem cells; mechanical forces; quiescence; stretched/open α-catenin; vinculin
Year: 2021 PMID: 33725480 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2021.02.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270