Selective Uncoupling of P120ctn from E-Cadherin Disrupts Strong Adhesion

Author:

Thoreson Molly A.1,Anastasiadis Panos Z.1,Daniel Juliet M.1,Ireton Reneé C.1,Wheelock Margaret J.2,Johnson Keith R.2,Hummingbird Diana K.1,Reynolds Albert B.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell Biology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-2175

2. Department of Biology, University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio 43606

Abstract

p120ctn is a catenin whose direct binding to the juxtamembrane domain of classical cadherins suggests a role in regulating cell–cell adhesion. The juxtamembrane domain has been implicated in a variety of roles including cadherin clustering, cell motility, and neuronal outgrowth, raising the possibility that p120 mediates these activities. We have generated minimal mutations in this region that uncouple the E-cadherin–p120 interaction, but do not affect interactions with other catenins. By stable transfection into E-cadherin–deficient cell lines, we show that cadherins are both necessary and sufficient for recruitment of p120 to junctions. Detergent-free subcellular fractionation studies indicated that, in contrast to previous reports, the stoichiometry of the interaction is extremely high. Unlike α- and β-catenins, p120 was metabolically stable in cadherin-deficient cells, and was present at high levels in the cytoplasm. Analysis of cells expressing E-cadherin mutant constructs indicated that p120 is required for the E-cadherin–mediated transition from weak to strong adhesion. In aggregation assays, cells expressing p120-uncoupled E-cadherin formed only weak cell aggregates, which immediately dispersed into single cells upon pipetting. As an apparent consequence, the actin cytoskeleton failed to insert properly into peripheral E-cadherin plaques, resulting in the inability to form a continuous circumferential ring around cell colonies. Our data suggest that p120 directly or indirectly regulates the E-cadherin–mediated transition to tight cell–cell adhesion, possibly blocking subsequent events necessary for reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton and compaction.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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