β1-Integrin Orients Epithelial Polarity via Rac1 and Laminin

Author:

Yu Wei1,Datta Anirban1,Leroy Pascale1,O'Brien Lucy Erin1,Mak Grace2,Jou Tzuu-Shuh3,Matlin Karl S.2,Mostov Keith E.1,Zegers Mirjam M.P.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Anatomy and Biochemistry and Biophysics, School of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143

2. Epithelial Pathobiology, Department of Surgery, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45267-0581

3. Department of Internal Medicine, National Taiwan University Hospital and National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taipei, 100 Taiwan

Abstract

Epithelial cells polarize and orient polarity in response to cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion. Although there has been much recent progress in understanding the general polarizing machinery of epithelia, it is largely unclear how this machinery is controlled by the extracellular environment. To explore the signals from cell-matrix interactions that control orientation of cell polarity, we have used three-dimensional culture systems in which Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells form polarized, lumen-containing structures. We show that interaction of collagen I with apical β1-integrins after collagen overlay of a polarized MDCK monolayer induces activation of Rac1, which is required for collagen overlay-induced tubulocyst formation. Cysts, comprised of a monolayer enclosing a central lumen, form after embedding single cells in collagen. In those cultures, addition of a β1-integrin function-blocking antibody to the collagen matrix gives rise to cysts that have defects in the organization of laminin into the basement membrane and have inverted polarity. Normal polarity is restored by either expression of activated Rac1, or the inclusion of excess laminin-1 (LN-1). Together, our results suggest a signaling pathway in which the activation of β1-integrins orients the apical pole of polarized cysts via a mechanism that requires Rac1 activation and laminin organization into the basement membrane.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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