Novel role of the muskelin–RanBP9 complex as a nucleocytoplasmic mediator of cell morphology regulation

Author:

Valiyaveettil Manojkumar1,Bentley Amber A.1,Gursahaney Priya1,Hussien Rajaa1,Chakravarti Ritu1,Kureishy Nina2,Prag Soren12,Adams Josephine C.123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell Biology, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH 44195

2. Medical Research Council Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, England, UK

3. Department of Molecular Medicine, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine at Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44195

Abstract

The evolutionarily conserved kelch-repeat protein muskelin was identified as an intracellular mediator of cell spreading. We discovered that its morphological activity is controlled by association with RanBP9/RanBPM, a protein involved in transmembrane signaling and a conserved intracellular protein complex. By subcellular fractionation, endogenous muskelin is present in both the nucleus and the cytosol. Muskelin subcellular localization is coregulated by its C terminus, which provides a cytoplasmic restraint and also controls the interaction of muskelin with RanBP9, and its atypical lissencephaly-1 homology motif, which has a nuclear localization activity which is regulated by the status of the C terminus. Transient or stable short interfering RNA–based knockdown of muskelin resulted in protrusive cell morphologies with enlarged cell perimeters. Morphology was specifically restored by complementary DNAs encoding forms of muskelin with full activity of the C terminus for cytoplasmic localization and RanBP9 binding. Knockdown of RanBP9 resulted in equivalent morphological alterations. These novel findings identify a role for muskelin–RanBP9 complex in pathways that integrate cell morphology regulation and nucleocytoplasmic communication.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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