Premium
JNK 1/2‐dependent phosphorylation of angulin‐1/ LSR is required for the exclusive localization of angulin‐1/ LSR and tricellulin at tricellular contacts in EpH4 epithelial sheet
Author(s) -
Nakatsu Daiki,
Kano Fumi,
Taguchi Yuki,
Sugawara Taichi,
Nishizono Takashi,
Nishikawa Kiyotaka,
Oda Yukako,
Furuse Mikio,
Murata Masayuki
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
genes to cells
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.912
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1365-2443
pISSN - 1356-9597
DOI - 10.1111/gtc.12158
Subject(s) - phosphorylation , biology , kinase , microbiology and biotechnology , serine , pak1 , biochemistry
Tricellular tight junctions (t TJ s) are specialized structural variants of tight junctions within tricellular contacts of an epithelial sheet and comprise several transmembrane proteins including lipolysis‐stimulated lipoprotein receptor (angulin‐1/LSR) and tricellulin. To elucidate the mechanism of its formation, we carried out stepwise screening of kinase inhibitors followed by RNA i screening to identify kinases that regulate intracellular localization of angulin‐1/ LSR to the tTJs using a fluorescence image‐based screen. We found that the activity of JNK 1 and JNK 2, but not JNK 3, was required for the exclusive localization of angulin‐1/LSR at the tTJs. Based on a bioinformatics approach, we estimated the potential phosphorylation site of angulin‐1/ LSR by JNK 1 to be serine 288 and experimentally confirmed that JNK 1 directly phosphorylates angulin‐1/LSR at this site. We found that JNK 2 was also involved in the phosphorylation of angulin‐1/LSR. Furthermore, GFP‐tagged angulin‐1/LSR(S288A), in which serine 288 was substituted by alanine, was observed to be dispersed to bicellular junctions, indicating that phosphorylation of Ser288 is crucial for the exclusive localization of angulin‐1/LSR and tricellulin at tTJs. Our fluorescence image‐based screening for kinases inhibitor or siRNAs combined with the phosphorylation site prediction could become a versatile and useful tool to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the maintenance of t TJ s regulated by kinase networks.