Plectin-mediated cytoskeletal crosstalk controls cell tension and cohesion in epithelial sheets

Author:

Prechova Magdalena1ORCID,Adamova Zuzana12ORCID,Schweizer Anna-Lena3ORCID,Maninova Miloslava1,Bauer Andreas4,Kah Delf4ORCID,Meier-Menches Samuel M.5,Wiche Gerhard6ORCID,Fabry Ben4ORCID,Gregor Martin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Integrative Biology, Institute of Molecular Genetics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic

2. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic

3. Department of Quantitative Cell Biology, Institute of Molecular Cell Biology, University of Münster, Münster, Germany

4. Department of Physics, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany

5. Department of Analytical Chemistry, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

6. Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Max Perutz Labs, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

Abstract

The coordinated interplay of cytoskeletal networks critically determines tissue biomechanics and structural integrity. Here, we show that plectin, a major intermediate filament-based cytolinker protein, orchestrates cortical cytoskeletal networks in epithelial sheets to support intercellular junctions. By combining CRISPR/Cas9-based gene editing and pharmacological inhibition, we demonstrate that in an F-actin–dependent context, plectin is essential for the formation of the circumferential keratin rim, organization of radial keratin spokes, and desmosomal patterning. In the absence of plectin-mediated cytoskeletal cross-linking, the aberrant keratin–desmosome (DSM)–network feeds back to the actin cytoskeleton, which results in elevated actomyosin contractility. Also, by complementing a predictive mechanical model with Förster resonance energy transfer–based tension sensors, we provide evidence that in the absence of cytoskeletal cross-linking, major intercellular junctions (adherens junctions and DSMs) are under intrinsically generated tensile stress. Defective cytoarchitecture and tensional disequilibrium result in reduced intercellular cohesion, associated with general destabilization of plectin-deficient sheets upon mechanical stress.

Funder

Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic

Grant Agency of the Czech Republic

Czech Academy of Sciences

Grant Agency of Charles University

COST Action

MEYS

Operational Program Prague–Competitiveness

German Research Council

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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