Laminin-based cell adhesion anchors microtubule plus ends to the epithelial cell basal cortex through LL5α/β

Author:

Hotta Azusa1,Kawakatsu Tomomi1,Nakatani Tomoya1,Sato Toshitaka2,Matsui Chiyuki1,Sukezane Taiko1,Akagi Tsuyoshi1,Hamaji Tomoko13,Grigoriev Ilya4,Akhmanova Anna4,Takai Yoshimi5,Mimori-Kiyosue Yuko13

Affiliation:

1. KAN Research Institute, Inc., Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0047, Japan

2. Tsukuba Research Laboratories, Eisai Co. Ltd., Ibaraki 300-2635, Japan

3. RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0047, Japan

4. Department of Cell Biology, Erasmus Medical Center, 3000 CA Rotterdam, Netherlands

5. Division of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0017, Japan

Abstract

LL5β has been identified as a microtubule-anchoring factor that attaches EB1/CLIP-associating protein (CLASP)–bound microtubule plus ends to the cell cortex. In this study, we show that LL5β and its homologue LL5α (LL5s) colocalize with autocrine laminin-5 and its receptors, integrins α3β1 and α6β4, at the basal side of fully polarized epithelial sheets. Depletion of both laminin receptor integrins abolishes the cortical localization of LL5s, whereas LL5 depletion reduces the amount of integrin α3 at the basal cell cortex. Activation of integrin α3 is sufficient to initiate LL5 accumulation at the cell cortex. LL5s form a complex with the cytoplasmic tails of these integrins, but their interaction might be indirect. Analysis of the three-dimensional distribution of microtubule growth by visualizing EB1-GFP in epithelial sheets in combination with RNA interference reveals that LL5s are required to maintain the density of growing microtubules selectively at the basal cortex. These findings reveal that signaling from laminin–integrin associations attaches microtubule plus ends to the epithelial basal cell cortex.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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