
Phosphorylation of VE-cadherin controls endothelial phenotypes via p120-catenin coupling and Rac1 activation
Author(s) -
Kunihiko Hatanaka,
Michael Simons,
Masahiro Murakami
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
american journal of physiology. heart and circulatory physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.524
H-Index - 197
eISSN - 1522-1539
pISSN - 0363-6135
DOI - 10.1152/ajpheart.00650.2010
Subject(s) - ve cadherin , cadherin , microbiology and biotechnology , phosphorylation , rac1 , endothelial stem cell , catenin , adherens junction , biology , vascular permeability , lamellipodium , cell , cell migration , chemistry , signal transduction , wnt signaling pathway , in vitro , biochemistry , endocrinology
To establish the role of vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin in the regulation of endothelial cell functions, we investigated the effect of phosphorylation of a VE-cadherin site sought to be involved in p120-catenin binding on vascular permeability and endothelial cell migration. To this end, we introduced either wild-type VE-cadherin or Y658 phosphomimetic (Y658E) or dephosphomimetic (Y658F) VE-cadherin mutant constructs into an endothelial cell line (rat fat pad endothelial cells) lacking endogenous VE-cadherin. Remarkably, neither wild-type- nor Y658E VE-cadherin was retained at cell-cell contacts because of p120-catenin preferential binding to N-cadherin, resulting in the targeting of N-cadherin to cell-cell junctions and the exclusion of VE-cadherin. However, Y658F VE-cadherin was able to bind p120-catenin and to localize at adherence junctions displacing N-cadherin. This resulted in an enhanced barrier function and a complete abrogation of Rac1 activation and lamellipodia formation, thereby inhibiting cell migration. These findings demonstrate that VE-cadherin, through the regulation of Y658 phosphorylation, competes for junctional localization with N-cadherin and controls vascular permeability and endothelial cell migration.