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An EMMPRIN/γ-catenin/Nm23 complex drives ATP production and actomyosin contractility at endothelial junctions
Author(s) -
Vanessa Moreno,
Pilar Gonzalo,
Jesús Gómez-Escudero,
Ángela Pollán,
Rebeca AcínPérez,
Mark T. Breckenridge,
Marı́a Yáñez-Mó,
Olga Barreiro,
Fabrizio Orsenigo,
Kenji Kadomatsu,
Christopher S. Chen,
José Antonio Enrı́quez,
Elisabetta Dejana,
Francisco SánchezMadrid,
Alicia G. Arroyo
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of cell science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.384
H-Index - 278
eISSN - 1477-9137
pISSN - 0021-9533
DOI - 10.1242/jcs.149518
Subject(s) - plakoglobin , microbiology and biotechnology , adherens junction , biology , cell junction , contractility , endothelial stem cell , cadherin , angiogenesis , catenin , cell , signal transduction , biochemistry , wnt signaling pathway , cancer research , endocrinology , in vitro
Cell-cell adhesions are important sites through which cells experience and resist forces. In endothelial cells, these forces regulate junction dynamics and determine endothelial barrier strength. We identify the Ig superfamily member EMMPRIN (also known as basigin) as a coordinator of forces at endothelial junctions. EMMPRIN localization at junctions correlates with endothelial junction strength in different mouse vascular beds. Accordingly, EMMPRIN-deficient mice show altered junctions and increased junction permeability. Lack of EMMPRIN alters the localization and function of VE-cadherin (also known as cadherin-5) by decreasing both actomyosin contractility and tugging forces at endothelial cell junctions. EMMPRIN ensures proper actomyosin-driven maturation of competent endothelial junctions by forming a molecular complex with γ-catenin (also known as junction plakoglobin) and Nm23 (also known as NME1), a nucleoside diphosphate kinase, thereby locally providing ATP to fuel the actomyosin machinery. These results provide a novel mechanism for the regulation of actomyosin contractility at endothelial junctions and might have broader implications in biological contexts such as angiogenesis, collective migration and tissue morphogenesis by coupling compartmentalized energy production to junction assembly.

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