RhoA is dispensable for skin development, but crucial for contraction and directed migration of keratinocytes.
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Authors
Jackson, BenPeyrollier, Karine
Pedersen, Esben
Basse, Astrid
Karlsson, Richard
Wang, Zhipeng
Lefever, Tine
Ochsenbein, Alexandra M
Schmidt, Gudula
Aktories, Klaus
Stanley, Alanna
Quondamatteo, Fabio
Ladwein, Markus
Rottner, Klemens
van Hengel, Jolanda
Brakebusch, Cord
Issue Date
2011-03
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Show full item recordAbstract
RhoA is a small guanosine-5'-triphosphatase (GTPase) suggested to be essential for cytokinesis, stress fiber formation, and epithelial cell-cell contacts. In skin, loss of RhoA was suggested to underlie pemphigus skin blistering. To analyze RhoA function in vivo, we generated mice with a keratinocyte-restricted deletion of the RhoA gene. Despite a severe reduction of cofilin and myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation, these mice showed normal skin development. Primary RhoA-null keratinocytes, however, displayed an increased percentage of multinucleated cells, defective maturation of cell-cell contacts. Furthermore we observed increased cell spreading due to impaired RhoA-ROCK (Rho-associated protein kinase)-MLC phosphatase-MLC-mediated cell contraction, independent of Rac1. Rho-inhibiting toxins further increased multinucleation of RhoA-null cells but had no significant effect on spreading, suggesting that RhoB and RhoC have partially overlapping functions with RhoA. Loss of RhoA decreased directed cell migration in vitro caused by reduced migration speed and directional persistence. These defects were not related to the decreased cell contraction and were independent of ROCK, as ROCK inhibition by Y27632 increased directed migration of both control and RhoA-null keratinocytes. Our data indicate a crucial role for RhoA and contraction in regulating cell spreading and a contraction-independent function of RhoA in keratinocyte migration. In addition, our data show that RhoA is dispensable for skin development.Citation
RhoA is dispensable for skin development, but crucial for contraction and directed migration of keratinocytes. 2011, 22 (5):593-605 Mol. Biol. CellAffiliation
Biomedical Institute, BRIC, University of Copenhagen, 2200 Copenhagen, Denmark.Journal
Molecular biology of the cellPubMed ID
21209320Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1939-4586ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1091/mbc.E09-10-0859
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