
PLEKHG4B enables actin cytoskeletal remodeling during epithelial cell-cell junction formation
Author(s) -
Komaki Ninomiya,
Kai Ohta,
Kazunari Yamashita,
Kensaku Mizuno,
Kazumasa Ohashi
Publication year - 2020
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.249078
Subject(s) - rhoa , microbiology and biotechnology , gene knockdown , biology , actin , myosin , adherens junction , cell migration , cdc42 , cytoskeleton , cell , guanine nucleotide exchange factor , actin cytoskeleton , cadherin , signal transduction , apoptosis , biochemistry
Cell-cell junction formation requires actin cytoskeletal remodeling. Here we show that PLEKHG4B, a Rho-guanine nucleotide exchange factor (Rho-GEF), plays a crucial role in epithelial cell-cell junction formation. Knockdown of PLEKHG4B decreased Cdc42 activity and tended to increase RhoA activity in A549 cells. A549 monolayer cells showed 'closed junctions' with closely packed actin bundles along the cell-cell contacts, but PLEKHG4B knockdown suppressed closed junction formation and exhibited 'open junctions' with split actin bundles located away from the cell-cell boundary. In calcium-switch assays, PLEKHG4B knockdown delayed the conversion of open junctions to closed junctions and β-catenin accumulation at cell-cell junctions. Further, PLEKHG4B knockdown abrogated the reduction in myosin activity normally seen in the later stage of junction formation. The aberrant myosin activation and impairments in closed junction formation in PLEKHG4B-knockdown cells were reverted by ROCK inhibition or LARG/PDZ-RhoGEF knockdown. These results suggest that PLEKHG4B enables actin remodeling during epithelial cell-cell junction maturation, probably by reducing myosin activity in the later stage of junction formation, through suppressing LARG/PDZ-RhoGEF and RhoA-ROCK activities. We also showed that annexin-A2 participates in PLEKHG4B localization to cell-cell junctions.