S100A11 promotes focal adhesion disassembly via myosin II-driven contractility and Piezo1-mediated Ca2+ entry

Author:

Mohammed Tareg Omer1ORCID,Lin You-Rong1ORCID,Akter Lucky1,Weissenbruch Kai2,Ngo Kien Xuan1ORCID,Zhang Yanjun1,Kodera Noriyuki1ORCID,Bastmeyer Martin23ORCID,Miyanari Yusuke14,Taoka Azuma15ORCID,Franz Clemens M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. WPI Nano Life Science Institute, Kanazawa University 1 , Kanazawa , 920-1192, Japan

2. Zoological Institute, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology 2 Cell and Neurobiology , , 76131, Karlsruhe , Germany

3. Institute for Biological and Chemical Systems – Biological Information Processing, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology 3 , 76344, Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen , Germany

4. Cancer Research Institute, Kanazawa University 4 , Kanazawa , 920-1162, Japan

5. Institute of Science and Engineering, Kanazawa University 5 , Kanazawa , 920-1162, Japan

Abstract

ABSTRACT S100A11 is a small Ca2+-activatable protein known to localize along stress fibers (SFs). Analyzing S100A11 localization in HeLa and U2OS cells further revealed S100A11 enrichment at focal adhesions (FAs). Strikingly, S100A11 levels at FAs increased sharply, yet transiently, just before FA disassembly. Elevating intracellular Ca2+ levels with ionomycin stimulated both S100A11 recruitment and subsequent FA disassembly. However, pre-incubation with the non-muscle myosin II (NMII) inhibitor blebbistatin or with an inhibitor of the stretch-activatable Ca2+ channel Piezo1 suppressed S100A11 recruitment, implicating S100A11 in an actomyosin-driven FA recruitment mechanism involving Piezo1-dependent Ca2+ influx. Applying external forces on peripheral FAs likewise recruited S100A11 to FAs even if NMII activity was inhibited, corroborating the mechanosensitive recruitment mechanism of S100A11. However, extracellular Ca2+ and Piezo1 function were indispensable, indicating that NMII contraction forces act upstream of Piezo1-mediated Ca2+ influx, in turn leading to S100A11 activation and FA recruitment. S100A11-knockout cells display enlarged FAs and had delayed FA disassembly during cell membrane retraction, consistent with impaired FA turnover in these cells. Our results thus demonstrate a novel function for S100A11 in promoting actomyosin contractility-driven FA disassembly.

Funder

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Japan-Taiwan Exchange Association

Cannon Foundation

Ohsumi Frontier Science Foundation

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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