|
||
© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2000//209 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 149, Number 1,
, 2000 209-222
Original Article |
The Function of Plakophilin 1 in Desmosome Assembly and Actin Filament Organization
mechthild.hatzfeld{at}medizin.uni-halle.de
Plakophilin 1, a member of the armadillo multigene family, is a protein with dual localization in the nucleus and in desmosomes. To elucidate its role in desmosome assembly and regulation, we have analyzed its localization and binding partners in vivo. When overexpressed in HaCaT keratinocytes, plakophilin 1 localized to the nucleus and to desmosomes, and dramatically enhanced the recruitment of desmosomal proteins to the plasma membrane. This effect was mediated by plakophilin 1's head domain, which interacted with desmoglein 1, desmoplakin, and keratins in the yeast two-hybrid system. Overexpression of the armadillo repeat domain induced a striking dominant negative phenotype with the formation of filopodia and long cellular protrusions, where plakophilin 1 colocalized with actin filaments. This phenotype was strictly dependent on a conserved motif in the center of the armadillo repeat domain. Our results demonstrate that plakophilin 1 contains two functionally distinct domains: the head domain, which could play a role in organizing the desmosomal plaque in suprabasal cells, and the armadillo repeat domain, which might be involved in regulating the dynamics of the actin cytoskeleton.
Key Words: keratinocytes desmoglein armadillo cell adhesion cell motility
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The intracellular domains of the desmosomal cadherins associate with a number of plaque proteins that establish the link to the intermediate filament system (Troyanovsky et al. 1993, Troyanovsky et al. 1994a, Troyanovsky et al. 1996; Mathur et al. 1994; Chitaev et al. 1996; Kowalczyk et al. 1996; Witcher et al. 1996). Plakoglobin and desmoplakin are essential components of the plaque. Plakoglobin associates with both types of desmosomal cadherins and binds to several Dsg and Dsc isoforms (Mathur et al. 1994; Troyanovsky et al. 1994a,Troyanovsky et al. 1994b, Troyanovsky et al. 1996; Chitaev et al. 1996; Wahl et al. 1996; Witcher et al. 1996). The binding of plakoglobin to E-cadherin is a prerequisite for desmosome formation, and its COOH terminus is involved in regulating desmosome size (Ruiz et al. 1996; Lewis et al. 1997; Palka and Green 1997). Moreover, a signaling role in the Wnt pathway, which is similar to that of β-catenin and the Drosophila homologue armadillo, has been reported (Karnovsky and Klymkowsky 1995; Rubenstein et al. 1997). Direct interactions between desmosomal cadherins and desmoplakin have been reported only in vitro (Smith and Fuchs 1998), and it appears that plakoglobin is necessary to link these proteins in vivo (Kowalczyk et al. 1996, Kowalczyk et al. 1997). Desmoplakin binds to intermediate filaments through its COOH-terminal domain and connects desmosomes to the cytoskeleton (Stappenbeck et al. 1993, Stappenbeck et al. 1994; Kouklis et al. 1994; Bornslaeger et al. 1996; Meng et al. 1997). Thus, intermediate filaments seem to be linked to the plasma membrane through a linear sequence of interactions between keratins, desmoplakin, plakoglobin, and the cytoplasmic tail of cadherins.
Additional components of the desmosomal plaque are plakophilins 1, 2, and 3, and p0071 (Hatzfeld et al. 1994; Heid et al. 1994; Hatzfeld and Nachtsheim 1996; Mertens et al. 1996; Bonne et al. 1999; Schmidt et al. 1999). These proteins contain a central domain that consists of a series of 45 amino acid repeats (arm repeats), and are members of the p120ctn family of armadillo (arm) -related proteins (Reynolds et al. 1994; Hatzfeld and Nachtsheim 1996; Daniel and Reynolds 1997). Plakophilin 1 is a major component of desmosomes from stratified and complex epithelia, and it is predominantly expressed in the suprabasal layers (Kapprell et al. 1988). It binds to keratins in vitro (Kapprell et al. 1988; Hatzfeld et al. 1994; Smith and Fuchs 1998), but the significance of this interaction in vivo has not yet been established. More recently, plakophilin 1 has been described as a widespread nuclear protein that is also expressed in nondesmosome-bearing cells, where it accumulated in the nucleoplasm (Schmidt et al. 1997; Klymkowsky 1999). The function of plakophilin 1 in the nucleus remains unknown so far. An essential role in desmosome organization and stability has been suggested recently on the basis of a genetic skin disease. Patients lacking plakophilin 1 suffer from a skin fragility syndrome. Desmosomes in their skin are small and poorly formed with widening of keratinocyte intercellular spaces and perturbed desmosome/keratin filament interactions (McGrath et al. 1997). Desmoplakin was found predominantly cytoplasmic in these patients, suggesting a role for plakophilin 1 in organizing suprabasal desmosomes. These findings point to an essential role of plakophilin 1 in establishing stable cell contacts, desmosomal plaque size, and organization. In a recent paper, a direct interaction between the desmoplakin NH2 terminus and plakophilin 1 and a role of plakophilin 1 in recruiting desmoplakin to the membrane was described (Kowalczyk et al. 1999). It was proposed that this interaction may be important for clustering of desmosomal components through lateral interactions.
To learn more about the function of plakophilin 1, we have analyzed its function in desmosome assembly in more detail. Wild-type plakophilin 1 recruited endogenous desmosomal proteins into the plaque when overexpressed in keratinocytes. This function was mediated by its head domain, and we show that this domain interacts with Dsg1, desmoplakin, and keratins. In contrast, the arm repeat domain had a dominant negative phenotype: it promoted formation of filopodia and long cellular protrusions, where it colocalized with actin filaments. Deletion of a conserved motif in the center of the arm domain abolished the ability of plakophilin 1 to modulate cellular morphology and to associate with actin. Our data suggest that plakophilin 1 is involved in regulation of desmosome assembly as well as dynamics of the actin cytoskeleton.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Prokaryotic expression was performed in the pRSET A vector, which includes an NH2-terminal His tag (Invitrogen Corp.). Expression in eukaryotic cells was performed with the following vectors: pCMV5 (with NH2-terminal T7 tag; Andersson et al. 1989), pCMVscript (without tag; Stratagene), pOPRSV (without tag; Stratagene), and pEGFP (with NH2-terminal GFP tag; CLONTECH Laboratories). Vectors for the expression of GAL4 fusion proteins in yeast were the pBD and pAD vectors (Stratagene) and the pAS2-1 and pGAD424 vectors (CLONTECH Laboratories). Fig. 1 a gives an overview of the plakophilin 1 constructs used in this study. The intracellular domains of human Dsg1, Dsg2, and Dsg3, and Dsc1a, 1b, Dsc2a, 2b, and Dsc3a, 3b were amplified by reverse transcriptase–PCR from HaCaT cell RNA and cloned into the pGAD424 vector. Dsg1 domains IA (amino acids 568–643), CS (amino acids 644–764), and the Dsg-specific domain (Dsg; amino acids 765–1,049) were amplified by PCR and cloned into the pGAD424 vector. Human keratins 8, 18, 6, and 17 and their individual domains in pAD and pBD have been described elsewhere (Schnabel et al. 1998). The complete coding sequence of human β-actin was amplified by PCR from HeLa cell RNA and cloned into pGAD424.
|
Two-Hybrid Assays
Plasmids were transformed into the yeast strain YRG2 (Stratagene) by electroporation. Double transformants were grown on plates lacking leucine and tryptophane. Expression of the His reporter gene was analyzed on plates lacking histidine in addition to leucine and tryptophane. lacZ reporter gene expression was analyzed in the colony lift filter assay and quantitated using the ONPG (o-nitrophenyl-β-D-galactopyranoside) substrate as described in the yeast protocols handbook (CLONTECH Laboratories).
Recombinant Protein Purification and Antibody Production
The plakophilin 1 head and arm repeat domains in pRSET were expressed in BL21 DE3 bacteria and purified under denaturing conditions on Ni-NTA resin (Qiagen). The purified protein fragments were used for immunization of rabbits.
Cell Lines, Wound Healing Assay, and Transfections
HeLa and HaCaT (Boukamp et al. 1988) cells were routinely cultured in DME supplemented with 10% FBS. Normal human epidermal keratinocytes cells and keratinocyte medium were obtained from Promocell. Wound healing assays were performed with HaCaT cells grown to confluency, and a wound was inserted by scraping. Cells were analyzed 24 h after wounding. For transient transfection experiments, cells were plated 12–16 h before transfection. Cells were transfected either by the calcium phosphate precipitation method (5prime
3prime, Inc.) or using the DOSPER liposomal transfection reagent (Roche Biochemicals). Cells were fixed and processed for immunofluorescence analysis after 20–44 h.
Antibodies and Immunofluorescence Microscopy
Cells grown on coverslips were rinsed in PBS and fixed in methanol at –20°C for 10 min, followed either by acetone treatment for 1 min or by treatment in 0.2% Triton X-100 in PBS for 20 min. Alternatively, cells were fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde in PBS freshly prepared from paraformaldehyde and permeabilized in 0.2% Triton in PBS. Cells were washed in PBS and incubated with 1% BSA in PBS before antibody application.
Plakophilin 1 and its fragments were detected by the polyclonal rabbit sera against the head and repeat domains. Alternatively, plakophilin 1 head and repeat domains, which were expressed in the pCMV5 vector, were detected with a T7 mAb (Novagen, Inc.). For double labeling the following antibodies were used: antidesmoplakin 1 and 2, DP1&2 2.15 or DP1&2 mix (2.15 + 2.17 + 2.20); anti-Dsg1 + 2 DG3.10, anti-Dsc3 Dsc3 U114 were obtained from Progen. Antiplakoglobin and anti–Pan-cadherin were from Sigma Chemical Co.; the keratin antibody RCK107 was from Dr. F. Ramaekers (University Hospital, Rotterdam, The Netherlands).
Secondary antibodies were donkey anti–rabbit or anti–mouse coupled to Cy2 or Cy3 (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, Inc., through Dianova) or Alexa 488 goat anti–mouse or goat anti–rabbit IgG (Molecular Probes, Inc.). Actin filaments were visualized by incubation with FITC- or TRITC-labeled phalloidin (Sigma Chemical Co.).
Microscopy was carried out with a Nikon Eclipse E600 microscope with narrow band filters.
Laser Scanning Microscopy
Cells processed for immunofluorescence microscopy were analyzed using a Zeiss LSM 510 laser scanning microscope equipped with a helium-neon and an argon laser and a Plan-Apochromat 63x objective. Excitation wavelengths were 488 nm for Alexa 488 and 543 nm for Cy3. The used detection filters were BP505-530 for Alexa 488 and LP560 for Cy3. Fluorescence was recorded using the multitracking procedure to get complete separation of the fluorescence signals.
Western Blot Analysis
Total protein extracts were prepared by adding SDS sample buffer heated to 100°C to the cell culture dishes. Yeast protein extracts were prepared according to the SDS-urea method in the presence of the complete protease inhibitor cocktail tablets (Roche Diagnostics), as described in the Yeast Protocols Handbook. Samples were separated on 8 or 10% acrylamide gels and transferred to nitrocellulose. Filters were blocked in 5% nonfat dry milk in TBS with 0.05% Tween 20. Primary antibodies were applied for 2 h at room temperature or overnight at 4°C. Filters were washed and incubated with alkaline phosphatase–coupled secondary antibodies, and bound antibodies were visualized either with the CDP-Star chemiluminescence reagent (Tropix) or with NBT/BCIP (Boehringer Ingelheim Bioproducts). In some experiments, the ECL detection system (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) was used.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Rabbit polyclonal antibodies against the plakophilin 1 NH2-terminal domain and the arm repeat domain were generated and tested for their specificity by Western blotting on total cellular extracts. Fig. 1 b shows that both antibodies reacted with a single band of 80 kD, demonstrating that they did not cross-react with related proteins, such as plakophilin 2 (96 kD) and 3 (86 kD), p120ctn (various isoforms of 96–115 kD), or p0071 (130 kD). The majority of the protein was detected in the insoluble protein fraction.
Wild-Type Plakophilin 1 and Its Head Domain Associate with Desmosomes and Enhance Recruitment of Desmosomal Proteins to the Plasma Membrane in HaCaT Cells
Since plakophilin 1 has been described as a protein with dual localization in desmosomes and in the nucleus (Schmidt et al. 1997), we analyzed intracellular targeting of the protein after overexpression. Attempts to obtain clonal cell lines that strongly overexpress plakophilin 1, or its head, or repeat domain, thus far, have been unsuccessful. This may be due to the phenotype that is caused by strong overexpression of plakophilin 1 or its fragments (see below). Therefore, we have used transient transfection studies to analyze the function of plakophilin 1 and its domains in a cellular context. Wild-type plakophilin 1, which was overexpressed in HaCaT keratinocytes, localized predominantly to the nucleus and to cell borders in confluent monolayers (Fig. 2 a), which is in agreement with the intracellular localization of the endogenous protein (Schmidt et al. 1997). The balance between nuclear localization and plasma membrane association appeared similar in transfected and nontransfected cells. Double labeling with desmoplakin antibodies revealed a strong increase of endogenous desmoplakin at the plasma membrane in the transfected cells compared with nontransfected cells (Fig. 2 a').
|
|
|
To analyze the recruitment of desmosomal plaque proteins to the plasma membrane in more detail, we used laser scanning microscopy on HaCaT cells expressing the head domain of plakophilin 1. Whereas plakophilin 1 and E-cadherin staining overlapped only very little (Fig. 4 a), a high degree of overlap was found between plakophilin 1 and desmoplakin staining (Fig. 4 b), demonstrating that the major portion of overexpressed plakophilin 1 head domain does not localize to adherens junctions. These data indicate that plakophilin 1–mediated recruitment of proteins occurs primarily in desmosomes. To investigate the effect of the recruitment on desmosome size and number, we quantitated desmoplakin staining at cell borders by scanning along plasma membrane stretches (Fig. 4b' and b'', arrows). The data are displayed as fluorescence intensity profiles below the corresponding image. The number and size of the peaks within these profiles were significantly higher when recorded along cell borders of two transfected cells (Fig. 4 b'), compared with the cell border between transfected and nontransfected cells (Fig. 4 b''). Assuming that each peak represents a desmosome or a group of desmosomes, these data indicate that plakophilin 1–mediated recruitment of plaque proteins might result in the generation and enlargement of desmosomes.
To determine the region within the plakophilin 1 head domain responsible for desmosome association, several fragments were constructed (Fig. 1 a). Whereas all of them were still able to associate with desmosomes in HaCaT cells (Fig. 5), only the
N1,
N2, and
C1 fragments were capable of significantly enhancing the recruitment of endogenous desmoplakin (Fig. 5) and other desmosomal plaque proteins (data not shown) to the cell membrane. The
C2 fragment did not recruit endogenous desmosomal proteins, although it associated with desmosomes. A major portion of the
N2 and
C2 fragments remained cytoplasmic (Fig. 5). All fragments were still able to enter the nucleus, but nuclear targeting was more efficient with the
N2 and
C2 constructs. These experiments show that at least one region mediating plasma membrane targeting of plakophilin 1 as well as a signal directing nuclear localization is retained in all head deletion constructs.
|
|
C1 (Fig. 6 c),
C2,
N1, and
N2 (not shown) constructs showed almost exclusive nuclear localization with the same effect on desmoplakin distribution as described above. Since wild-type plakophilin 1 decorated actin filaments in transfected HeLa cells, we analyzed plakophilin 1 localization more carefully in nontransfected cells to distinguish whether this was an artifact due to heavy overexpression that disturbed the intracellular sorting mechanisms, or whether it was connected to a novel function of plakophilin 1. In a wound healing experiment with HaCaT cells, colocalization of actin filaments and plakophilin 1 was observed at the tips of cellular protrusions (Fig. 6d and Fig. d'), suggesting a role for plakophilin 1 in regulating actin filament organization. Association with stress fibers was not observed.
The Plakophilin 1 Head Domain Binds to Desmoglein1, Desmoplakin, and Keratins in the Yeast Two-hybrid Assay
Plakophilin 1 has been shown to bind to Dsg1, Dsc1a, and desmoplakin in in vitro overlay assays (Smith and Fuchs 1998), and to Dsg1 and desmoplakin in the two-hybrid system (Kowalczyk et al. 1999). To localize the binding sites of these proteins in plakophilin 1, the cytoplasmic domains of Dsgs1-3 and Dscs1a,b-3a,b and the NH2 terminus of desmoplakin were tested in the yeast two-hybrid system. From all the desmosomal cadherins, only Dsg1 interacted with the plakophilin 1 head domain (Fig. 7 a) and with all head domain deletion constructs (Fig. 7b and Fig. c), although the
N2 and
C2 constructs appeared somewhat less efficient in reporter gene activation, suggesting that the Dsg1 binding site was not completely retained in these constructs. Desmoplakin binding was retained in the
C1 and
C2 fragments (Fig. 7 b), but not in the
N1 and
N2 fragments (Fig. 7 c), demonstrating that desmoplakin binds close to the NH2 terminus of plakophilin 1. These results suggest that desmoplakin and Dsg1 do not compete for the same binding site in the plakophilin 1 head.
|
Since plakophilin 1 has been shown to bind keratins in vitro (Kapprell et al. 1988; Hatzfeld et al. 1994; Smith and Fuchs 1998), we also examined several keratin constructs for their interaction with the plakophilin 1 head domain. As shown in Fig. 7 e, the type I keratins K17 and K18 strongly interacted with the plakophilin 1 head, whereas of the type II keratins tested, only K8 showed a weak interaction. Interaction studies with the head fragments revealed binding of K17 and K18 to the
C1 and
C2 constructs, but not to
N1 and
N2. The K8 binding site appeared to differ since binding was retained in the
N1,
C1, and
C2 constructs, but was lost in the
N2 fragment (not shown).
Interactions between the plakophilin 1 head fragments and desmoplakin and Dsg1 were quantitated by measuring LacZ reporter gene activation with the ONPG substrate. As shown in Fig. 7 g, the desmoplakin–plakophilin 1 and the Dsg1–plakophilin 1 interactions were much stronger with the plakophilin 1 head in the pBD vector compared with the pAS2-1 vector, although this vector allows high protein expression levels as verified by Western blotting with Gal4 and plakophilin 1–specific antibodies (Fig. 8 a). The high protein expression could either interfere with correct folding of plakophilin 1, or the desmoplakin and Dsg1 binding sites are masked by inter- or intramolecular interactions after expression in the pAS vector. Dsg1 interacted most strongly with the
N1 construct, which lacks the desmoplakin binding site. Interaction with the
C1 construct was somewhat weaker. In contrast, the
C2 and
N2 constructs showed considerably reduced reporter gene activation, suggesting that these constructs did not contain the entire Dsg1 binding site. Desmoplakin interacted most strongly with the
C2 construct, which lacks part of the Dsg1 binding site. The interaction was lost with the
N1 and
N2 constructs, indicating that the binding site is in the NH2-terminal region.
|
The armadillo Repeat Domain of Plakophilin 1 Associates with Actin and Induces the Formation of Filopodia and Long Cellular Protrusions
The colocalization of wild-type plakophilin 1 with stress fibers as well as actin-rich structures at the tips of filopodia (Fig. 6) pointed to a possible role of plakophilin 1 in regulating the actin cytoskeleton. Therefore, we expressed the plakophilin 1 arm repeat and the headless domain in HeLa and HaCaT cells and verified expression by Western blotting (Fig. 8 b). Cells with high levels of these plakophilin 1 fragments displayed a highly unusual morphology with formation of filopodia, lamellipodia, or long protrusions (Fig. 9, a–d), which interfered with normal monolayer formation. The transfected cells often sat on top of the other cells. Cells with lower expression levels still displayed a normal cell morphology (Fig. 10, a–e). However, double labeling with desmoplakin antibodies showed that desmoplakin had been internalized, and disintegration of junctions had already begun (Fig. 10e and Fig. e'). The plakophilin 1 arm repeat domain colocalized with actin in lamellipodia (Fig. 10, a, c, and d) and sometimes stress fibers (Fig. 10c and Fig. c'), suggesting a role in regulating actin polymerization and filopodia formation. This phenotype was observed in HeLa and HaCaT cells.
|
|
-catenin (Lu et al. 1999). This suggested that the phenotype is conserved among p120ctn family members, and might depend on the interaction with a common binding partner that is involved in regulating actin filament organization. To characterize this binding site in plakophilin 1, we constructed a deletion mutant that lacks a central pentapeptide motif conserved among all p120ctn family members. The motif (ENCM/VC) is specific for this family and not detected in other arm related proteins. Transfection studies with this mutant construct (plakophilin 1 arm
ENCMC) showed that the mutant had lost its capacity to induce changes in cell morphology and no longer associated with actin filaments in filopodia (Fig. 10f and Fig. f'). Instead, it accumulated in the cytoplasm, sometimes in an aggregated form (Fig. 10 f). To analyze if the interaction between plakophilin 1 and actin is direct, we used the two-hybrid system. These experiments revealed no direct interaction between β-actin and the plakophilin 1 repeat domain (data not shown), suggesting that the interaction either depends on an intact microfilament or is mediated through an actin-associated protein in vivo.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The Head Domain of Plakophilin 1 Mediates Binding to Desmoplakin, Dsg1, and Keratins
Plakophilin 1 is a desmosome-associated protein and has been shown to bind Dsg1, Dsc1a, and desmoplakin in vitro (Smith and Fuchs 1998) and desmoplakin in vivo (Kowalczyk et al. 1999). Using the yeast two-hybrid assay, we have mapped the binding sites of desmosomal proteins and keratins within plakophilin 1. We show that it is the head domain that mediates the interactions between plakophilin 1 and Dsg1, desmoplakin, as well as keratins. Whereas desmoplakin binds close to the NH2 terminus between amino acids 1–70 of the head domain, the Dsg1 binding site is located between amino acids 70 and 213 (Fig. 11). Our data suggest that these two sites do not act independently. Dsg1 bound most strongly to the deletion construct lacking the desmoplakin binding site and vice versa. This could be due to reduced accessibility of the binding sites because of intramolecular interactions, which are similar to those described for vinculin and ERM family members (Winkler et al. 1996; Tsukita et al. 1997), or interactions with other proteins. A similar observation was made for plakoglobin, certain internal fragments of which bound better to E-cadherin than the entire molecule (Chitaev et al. 1996). Alternatively, high expression of plakophilin 1 could interfere with correct folding and thereby prevent the interaction in an unspecified manner.
|
In our two-hybrid assay, we could not confirm the interaction between plakophilin 1 and Dsc1 reported by Smith and Fuchs 1998 using an overlay assay. Since most of the two-hybrid vectors allow only low protein expression we were unable to detect expression of the Dsg, Dsc and keratin fragments by Western blotting. Therefore, we cannot unequivocally rule out the possibility that we might have missed the plakophilin 1–Dsc1 interaction because of a lack of protein expression or a lack of nuclear import of Dsc 1. Alternatively, both proteins could associate in vitro after their denaturation, but not under physiological conditions.
We also detected interactions between plakophilin 1 and keratins. We found a weak binding of K8 and strong binding of K17 and K18, suggesting a preference for type I keratins that had also been proposed on the basis of in vitro overlay assays (Kapprell et al. 1988). In contrast, Smith and Fuchs 1998 have reported that plakophilin 1 binds preferentially to type II keratins. The controversial data may be either due to the analysis of different keratins (K5 and K14 versus K8, K18, K6, and K17) or the use of different assay systems (in vitro overlay versus in vivo assays). Since plakophilin 1 is expressed in suprabasal cells of stratified epithelia, its in vivo interaction partner is probably one of the keratins specifically expressed in differentiated keratinocytes such as K10.
Plakophilin 1 Enhances Recruitment of Desmosomal Proteins to the Plasma Membrane
We have analyzed intracellular targeting of plakophilin 1 after overexpression. We chose two different cell lines for our studies, HaCaT keratinocytes, which express endogenous plakophilin 1 and consequently all its essential interaction partners, and simple epithelial HeLa cells. These cells possess desmosomes and express the ubiquitous desmosomal proteins, but lack certain cell type–specific desmosomal proteins including Dsg1 and 3, Dsc1 and 3, and plakophilin 1 (Schmidt et al. 1994). Moreover, desmosomes are less abundant and smaller in HeLa cells.
In HaCaT cells, overexpressed plakophilin 1 was found in the nucleus as well as plasma membrane associated, in agreement with the intracellular localization of the endogenous protein (Schmidt et al. 1997). Using deletion clones of plakophilin 1, we have determined which domains target plakophilin 1 to desmosomes (Table ). Whereas cell contact association of other arm proteins including β-catenin, plakoglobin, and p120ctn is mediated by their arm repeat domain (Hinck et al. 1994; Mathur et al. 1994; Aghib and McCrea 1995; Daniel and Reynolds 1995; Shibamoto et al. 1995; Aberle et al. 1996; Chitaev et al. 1996; Reynolds et al. 1996; Troyanovsky et al. 1996; Wahl et al. 1996; Witcher et al. 1996), we found that it is the head domain of plakophilin 1 that directs its localization to desmosomes as well as to the nucleus. This is consistent with the localization of the binding sites for desmosomal proteins determined in the two-hybrid system. The nuclear localization was observed in all cell types examined, indicating that the nuclear function is conserved among different cell types. In contrast, desmosome association was restricted to HaCaT cells, suggesting that binding to a cell type–specific desmosomal protein might be essential for targeting, or that regulatory mechanisms prevent the cell contact association of plakophilin 1 in simple epithelial HeLa cells. All the head domain fragments were still able to associate with desmosomes and to enter the nucleus. With the
C1 and
N1 fragments, desmosome association was preferred over the nuclear localization. This may be due to better accessibility of desmosomal binding sites in these constructs (see above).
|
In a recent report, Kowalczyk et al. 1999 showed that the desmoplakin NH2 terminus was recruited to the membrane when overexpressed together with plakophilin 1 in COS cells. We extended these experiments and analyzed the recruitment of various endogenous desmosomal proteins in HaCaT cells overexpressing plakophilin 1. As judged by immunofluorescence recruitment of desmoplakin, Dsg and Dsc were strongly enhanced, and that of plakoglobin was slightly enhanced, suggesting a major role for plakophilin 1 in desmosome assembly. In cells with high plakophilin 1 expression, we observed nuclear localization of other desmosomal proteins including desmoplakin, probably due to coimport mediated by plakophilin 1. This conclusion is supported by the fact that the
N1 and
N2 constructs, which lack the desmoplakin binding site, never coimported desmoplakin into the nucleus (Fig. 5).
There are two ways in which additional desmosomal proteins could be recruited to the plasma membrane. First, plakophilin 1 could bind to endogenous desmosomal proteins, target them to the plasma membrane, and thereby dramatically increase their stability. This is consistent with the finding that desmosomal proteins are usually synthesized in excess, and their cytoplasmic pool is rapidly degraded (Pasdar and Nelson 1988, Pasdar and Nelson 1989). In this model, plakophilin 1 plays a structural role in desmosome assembly. Second, plakophilin 1 might be directly involved in regulating the synthesis of desmosomal proteins in the nucleus. In this model, the induction of desmosomes would depend on a putative signaling function of plakophilin 1. Our experiments do not allow us to distinguish between these two models, since all fragments that were able to induce desmosome formation also revealed nuclear localization and, therefore, might combine the signaling and structural functions. Further, both mechanisms might contribute to the recruitment of endogenous desmosomal proteins. Plasma membrane association of desmoplakin and plakophilin 1 after combined overexpression in COS cells (Kowalczyk et al. 1999) argues for a contribution of the recruitment mechanism.
Using laser scanning microscopy, we demonstrate that plakophilin 1 preferentially associates with and recruits desmosomal proteins, and that the recruitment of desmosomal components might result in the generation and the enlargement of desmosomes. The possibility that expression of plakophilin 1 enhances desmosome formation in keratinocytes is consistent with the observation that desmosomes of suprabasal cells are larger than basal cell desmosomes, and that desmosomes are more numerous in suprabasal cells. Moreover, this finding explains why desmosomes were small and rare in a patient lacking plakophilin 1 (McGrath et al. 1997). Therefore, we propose that plakophilin 1 plays an essential role in regulating desmosome organization and size during keratinocyte differentiation.
The Arm Repeat Domain of Plakophilin 1 Associates with Actin Filaments and Induces Formation of Filopodia
In HeLa cells, overexpressed plakophilin 1 associated with actin filament, suggesting that it might be involved in regulating the actin cytoskeleton. This association was also observed in nontransfected cells, where plakophilin 1 colocalized with actin in normal cells at the tips of plasma membrane protrusions. A similar localization has been described for β-catenin, which interacts with the actin filament bundling protein fascin through its arm repeat domain (Tao et al. 1996). Actin filament association of plakophilin 1 also appeared to be mediated by its arm repeats. When overexpressed at high levels in HeLa and HaCaT cells, the arm repeat domain induced the formation of long cellular protrusions, supporting a possible role in the regulation of cell motility. This phenotype interfered with intercellular adhesion, and transfected cells were separated from the monolayer. Since full-length plakophilin 1 had no such effect, we conclude that desmosome association of the head domain is preferred. A similar phenotype has been described for p120ctn (Reynolds et al. 1996) and
-catenin (Lu et al. 1999) after expressing the full-length protein. In the case of p120ctn, the arm domain was required for this effect (Reynolds et al. 1996), suggesting that this function is conserved in the arm domain of p120ctn family members. We identified a 5–amino acid motif (ENCMC) that is conserved among p120ctn family members. Deletion of this motif in the plakophilin 1 arm repeat domain abolished the ability of the mutant to associate with actin filaments and to induce the phenotype. This suggests that a protein–protein interaction mediated by this motif is responsible for this effect. Since we were unable to detect a direct interaction between the plakophilin 1 arm repeats and actin in the two-hybrid system, the interaction either requires an intact microfilament, as opposed to an actin monomer, or it is mediated by an actin-binding protein.
The phenotype in patients lacking plakophilin 1 suggested an important role for plakophilin 1 in stabilizing intercellular adhesion, although the lack of hair follicles and sweat glands suggests an additional role in certain differentiation processes (McGrath et al. 1997). Our results support the conclusion that plakophilin 1 has an important structural function and explain the role of plakophilin 1 in desmosome assembly at a molecular level. The localization of desmosomal binding sites to the head domain correlates with the finding that this domain recruits endogenous desmosomal proteins to sites of cell contact, whereas the arm repeat domain reduced cell contacts and induced the formation of motility-associated structures. In confluent keratinocytes, localization of plakophilin 1 to desmosomes is preferred over association with adherens junctions and actin filaments. This is consistent with strong intercellular adhesion in these cells. However, in cells that lack contact to adjacent cells, plakophilin 1 localizes to filopodia. Here, it may have a function in inducing junction formation as soon as the tip of the cell contacts an opposing cell. This idea is consistent with the finding that formation of actin-associated cell contacts precedes desmosome formation and is a prerequisite for desmosome formation (Lewis et al. 1994, Lewis et al. 1997). Plakophilin 1 could play a role in recruiting desmosomal proteins from the cytoplasm to the plasma membrane at sites of newly formed cell contacts.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Ha 1791/3-1 and 3-2, Ha 1791/5-1) and the BMBF.
Submitted: 18 August 1999
Revised: 16 February 2000
Accepted: 23 February 2000
Abbreviations used in this paper: arm, armadillo; DP-NTP, desmoplakin NH2-terminal polypeptide; Dsc, desmocollin; Dsg, desmoglein; ONPG, o-nitrophenyl-β-D-galactopyranoside.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Aberle H., Schwartz H. & Kemler R.. Cadherin-catenin complexprotein interactions and their implications for cadherin function, J. Cell Biochem., 61, 1996, 514–523.[Medline]
Aghib D.F. & McCrea P.D.. The E-cadherin complex contains the src substrate p120, Exp. Cell Res., 218, 1995, 359–369.[Medline]
Andersson S., Davis D.L., Dahlback H., Jornvall H. & Russell D.W.. Cloning, structure, and expression of the mitochondrial cytochrome P-450 sterol 26-hydroxylase, a bile acid biosynthetic enzyme, J. Biol. Chem., 264, 1989, 8222–8229.
Auffray C. & Rougeon F.. Purification of mouse immunoglobulin heavy-chain messenger RNAs from total myeloma tumor RNA, Eur. J. Biochem., 107, 1980, 303–314.[Medline]
Bonne S., van Hengel J., Nollet F., Kools P. & van Roy F.. Plakophilin-3, a novel armadillo-like protein present in nuclei and desmosomes of epithelial cells, J. Cell Sci., 112, 1999, 2265–2276.[Abstract]
Bornslaeger E.A., Corcoran C.M., Stappenbeck T.S. & Green K.J.. Breaking the connectiondisplacement of the desmosomal plaque protein desmoplakin from cell–cell interfaces disrupts anchorage of intermediate filament bundles and alters intercellular junction assembly, J. Cell Biol., 134, 1996, 985–1001.
Boukamp P., Petrussevska R.T., Breitkreutz D., Hornung J., Markham A. & Fusenig N.E.. Normal keratinization in a spontaneously immortalized aneuploid human keratinocyte cell line, J. Cell Biol., 106, 1988, 761–771.
Chitaev N.A. & Troyanovsky S.M.. Direct Ca2+-dependent heterophilic interaction between desmosomal cadherins, desmoglein and desmocollin, contributes to cell–cell adhesion, J. Cell Biol., 138, 1997, 193–201.
Chitaev N.A., Leube R.E., Troyanovsky R.B., Eshkind L.G., Franke W.W. & Troyanovsky S.M.. The binding of plakoglobin to desmosomal cadherinspatterns of binding sites and topogenic potential, J. Cell Biol., 133, 1996, 359–369.
Daniel J.M. & Reynolds A.B.. The tyrosine kinase substrate p120cas binds directly to E-cadherin but not to the adenomatous polyposis coli protein or alpha-catenin, Mol. Cell. Biol., 15, 1995, 4819–4824.[Abstract]
Daniel J.M. & Reynolds A.B.. Tyrosine phosphorylation and cadherin/catenin function, Bioessays., 19, 1997, 883–891.[Medline]
Demlehner M.P., Schafer S., Grund C. & Franke W.W.. Continual assembly of half-desmosomal structures in the absence of cell contacts and their frustrated endocytosisa coordinated Sisyphus cycle, J. Cell Biol., 131, 1995, 745–760.
Funayama N., Fagotto F., McCrea P. & Gumbiner B.M.. Embryonic axis induction by the armadillo repeat domain of beta-cateninevidence for intracellular signaling, J. Cell Biol., 128, 1995, 959–968.
Garrod D., Chidgey M. & North A.. Desmosomesdifferentiation, development, dynamics and disease, Curr. Opin. Cell Biol., 8, 1996, 670–678.[Medline]
Hatzfeld M. & Nachtsheim C.. Cloning and characterization of a new armadillo family member, p0071, associated with the junctional plaqueevidence for a subfamily of closely related proteins, J. Cell Sci., 109, 1996, 2767–2778.[Abstract]
Hatzfeld M., Kristjansson G.I., Plessmann U. & Weber K.. Band 6 protein, a major constituent of desmosomes from stratified epithelia, is a novel member of the armadillo multigene family, J. Cell Sci., 107, 1994, 2259–2270.[Abstract]
Heid H.W., Schmidt A., Zimbelmann R., Schafer S., Winter-Simanowski S., Stumpp S., Keith M., Figge U., Schnolzer M. & Franke W.W.. Cell type-specific desmosomal plaque proteins of the plakoglobin familyplakophilin 1 (band 6 protein), Differentiation., 58, 1994, 113–131.[Medline]
Hinck L., Nathke I.S., Papkoff J. & Nelson W.J.. Dynamics of cadherin/catenin complex formationnovel protein interactions and pathways of complex assembly, J. Cell Biol., 125, 1994, 1327–1340.
Kapprell H.P., Owaribe K. & Franke W.W.. Identification of a basic protein of Mr 75,000 as an accessory desmosomal plaque protein in stratified and complex epithelia, J. Cell Biol., 106, 1988, 1679–1691.
Karnovsky A. & Klymkowsky M.W.. Anterior axis duplication in Xenopus induced by the over-expression of the cadherin-binding protein plakoglobin, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 92, 1995, 4522–4526.
Klymkowsky M.W.. Plakophilin, armadillo repeats, and nuclear localization, Microsc. Res. Tech., 45, 1999, 43–54.[Medline]
Koch P.J. & Franke W.W.. Desmosomal cadherinsanother growing multigene family of adhesion molecules, Curr. Opin. Cell Biol., 6, 1994, 682–687.[Medline]
Kouklis P.D., Hutton E. & Fuchs E.. Making a connectiondirect binding between keratin intermediate filaments and desmosomal proteins, J. Cell Biol., 127, 1994, 1049–1060.
Kowalczyk A.P., Borgwardt J.E. & Green K.J.. Analysis of desmosomal cadherin-adhesive function and stoichiometry of desmosomal cadherin-plakoglobin complexes, J. Invest. Dermatol., 107, 1996, 293–300.[Medline]
Kowalczyk A.P., Bornslaeger E.A., Borgwardt J.E., Palka H.L., Dhaliwal A.S., Corcoran C.M., Denning M.F. & Green K.J.. The amino-terminal domain of desmoplakin binds to plakoglobin and clusters desmosomal cadherin–plakoglobin complexes, J. Cell Biol., 139, 1997, 773–784.
Kowalczyk A.P., Hatzfeld M., Bornslaeger E.A., Kopp D.S., Borgwardt J.E., Corcoran C.M., Settler A. & Green K.J.. The head domain of plakophilin-1 binds to desmoplakin and enhances its recruitment to desmosomes. Implications for cutaneous disease, J. Biol. Chem., 274, 1999, 18145–18148.
Lewis J.E., Jensen P.J. & Wheelock M.J.. Cadherin function is required for human keratinocytes to assemble desmosomes and stratify in response to calcium, J. Invest. Dermatol., 102, 1994, 870–877.[Medline]
Lewis J.E., Wahl J.K. III, Sass K.M., Jensen P.J., Johnson K.R. & Wheelock M.J.. Cross-talk between adherens junctions and desmosomes depends on plakoglobin, J. Cell Biol., 136, 1997, 919–934.
Lu Q., Paredes M., Medina M., Zhou J., Cavallo R., Peifer M., Orecchio L. & Kosik K.S..
-Catenin, an adhesive junction-associated protein which promotes cell scattering, J. Cell Biol., 144, 1999, 519–532.
Mathur M., Goodwin L. & Cowin P.. Interactions of the cytoplasmic domain of the desmosomal cadherin Dsg1 with plakoglobin, J. Biol. Chem., 269, 1994, 14075–14080.
McGrath J.A., McMillan J.R., Shemanko C.S., Runswick S.K., Leigh I.M., Lane E.B., Garrod D.R. & Eady R.A.. Mutations in the plakophilin 1 gene result in ectodermal dysplasia/skin fragility syndrome, Nat. Genet., 17, 1997, 240–244.[Medline]
Meng J.J., Bornslaeger E.A., Green K.J., Steinert P.M. & Ip W.. Two-hybrid analysis reveals fundamental differences in direct interactions between desmoplakin and cell type-specific intermediate filaments, J. Biol. Chem., 272, 1997, 21495–21503.
Mertens C., Kuhn C. & Franke W.W.. Plakophilins 2a and 2bconstitutive proteins of dual location in the karyoplasm and the desmosomal plaque, J. Cell Biol., 135, 1996, 1009–1025.
North A.J., Chidgey M.A., Clarke J.P., Bardsley W.G. & Garrod D.R.. Distinct desmocollin isoforms occur in the same desmosomes and show reciprocally graded distributions in bovine nasal epidermis, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 93, 1996, 7701–7705.
Palka H. & Green K.. Roles of plakoglobin end domains in desmosome assembly, J. Cell Sci., 110, 1997, 2359–2371.[Abstract]
Pasdar M. & Nelson W.J.. Kinetics of desmosome assembly in Madin-Darby canine kidney epithelial cellstemporal and spatial regulation of desmoplakin organization and stabilization upon cell–cell contact. I. Biochemical analysis, J. Cell Biol., 106, 1988, 677–685.
Pasdar M. & Nelson W.J.. Regulation of desmosome assembly in epithelial cellskinetics of synthesis, transport, and stabilization of desmoglein I, a major protein of the membrane core domain, J. Cell Biol., 109, 1989, 163–177.
Reynolds A.B., Daniel J., McCrea P.D., Wheelock M.J., Wu J. & Zhang Z.. Identification of a new cateninthe tyrosine kinase substrate p120cas associates with E-cadherin complexes, Mol. Cell. Biol., 14, 1994, 8333–8342.
Reynolds A.B., Daniel J.M., Mo Y.Y., Wu J. & Zhang Z.. The novel catenin p120cas binds classical cadherins and induces an unusual morphological phenotype in NIH3T3 fibroblasts, Exp. Cell Res., 225, 1996, 328–337.[Medline]
Rubenstein A., Merriam J. & Klymkowsky M.W.. Localizing the adhesive and signaling functions of plakoglobin, Dev. Genet., 20, 1997, 91–102.[Medline]
Ruiz P., Brinkmann V., Ledermann B., Behrend M., Grund C., Thalhammer C., Vogel F., Birchmeier C., Gunthert U., Franke W.W. & Birchmeier W.. Targeted mutation of plakoglobin in mice reveals essential functions of desmosomes in the embryonic heart, J. Cell Biol., 135, 1996, 215–225.
Sacco P.A., McGranahan T.M., Wheelock M.J. & Johnson K.R.. Identification of plakoglobin domains required for association with N-cadherin and alpha-catenin, J. Biol. Chem., 270, 1995, 20201–20206.
Schmidt A., Heid H.W., Schafer S., Nuber U.A., Zimbelmann R. & Franke W.W.. Desmosomes and cytoskeletal architecture in epithelial differentiationcell type-specific plaque components and intermediate filament anchorage, Eur. J. Cell Biol., 65, 1994, 229–245.[Medline]
Schmidt A., Langbein L., Rode M., Pratzel S., Zimbelmann R. & Franke W.W.. Plakophilins 1a and 1bwidespread nuclear proteins recruited in specific epithelial cells as desmosomal plaque components, Cell Tissue Res., 290, 1997, 481–499.[Medline]
Schmidt A., Langbein L., Pratzel S., Rode M., Rackwitz H.R. & Franke W.W.. Plakophilin 3—a novel cell-type-specific desmosomal plaque protein, Differentiation., 64, 1999, 291–306.[Medline]
Schnabel J., Weber K. & Hatzfeld M.. Protein-protein interactions between keratin polypeptides expressed in the yeast two-hybrid system, Biochim. Biophys. Acta., 1403, 1998, 158–168.[Medline]
Shibamoto S., Hayakawa M., Takeuchi K., Hori T., Miyazawa K., Kitamura N., Johnson K.R., Wheelock M.J., Matsuyoshi N. & Takeichi M.. Association of p120, a tyrosine kinase substrate, with E- cadherin/catenin complexes, J. Cell Biol., 128, 1995, 949–957.
Smith E.A. & Fuchs E.. Defining the interactions between intermediate filaments and desmosomes, J. Cell Biol., 141, 1998, 1229–1241.
Stappenbeck T.S., Bornslaeger E.A., Corcoran C.M., Luu H.H., Virata M.L. & Green K.J.. Functional analysis of desmoplakin domainsspecification of the interaction with keratin versus vimentin intermediate filament networks, J. Cell Biol., 123, 1993, 691–705.
Stappenbeck T.S., Lamb J.A., Corcoran C.M. & Green K.J.. Phosphorylation of the desmoplakin COOH terminus negatively regulates its interaction with keratin intermediate filament networks, J. Biol. Chem., 269, 1994, 29351–29354.
Tao Y.S., Edwards R.A., Tubb B., Wang S., Bryan J. & McCrea P.D.. β-Catenin associates with the actin-bundling protein fascin in a noncadherin complex, J. Cell Biol., 134, 1996, 1271–1281.
Troyanovsky R.B., Chitaev N.A. & Troyanovsky S.M.. Cadherin binding sites of plakoglobinlocalization, specificity and role in targeting to adhering junctions, J. Cell Sci., 109, 1996, 3069–3078.[Abstract]
Troyanovsky S.M., Eshkind L.G., Troyanovsky R.B., Leube R.E. & Franke W.W.. Contributions of cytoplasmic domains of desmosomal cadherins to desmosome assembly and intermediate filament anchorage, Cell., 72, 1993, 561–574.[Medline]
Troyanovsky S.M., Troyanovsky R.B., Eshkind L.G., Krutovskikh V.A., Leube R.E. & Franke W.W.. Identification of the plakoglobin-binding domain in desmoglein and its role in plaque assembly and intermediate filament anchorage, J. Cell Biol., 127, 1994, 151–160a.
Troyanovsky S.M., Troyanovsky R.B., Eshkind L.G., Leube R.E. & Franke W.W.. Identification of amino acid sequence motifs in desmocollin, a desmosomal glycoprotein, that are required for plakoglobin binding and plaque formation, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA., 91, 1994, 10790–10794b.
Tsukita S., Yonemura S. & Tsukita S.. ERM proteinshead-to-tail regulation of actin-plasma membrane interaction, Trends Biochem. Sci., 22, 1997, 53–58.[Medline]
Wahl J.K., Sacco P.A., McGranahan-Sadler T.M., Sauppe L.M., Wheelock M.J. & Johnson K.R.. Plakoglobin domains that define its association with the desmosomal cadherins and the classical cadherinsidentification of unique and shared domains, J. Cell Sci., 109, 1996, 1143–1154.[Abstract]
Winkler J., Lunsdorf H. & Jockusch B.M.. The ultrastructure of chicken gizzard vinculin as visualized by high-resolution electron microscopy, J. Struct. Biol., 116, 1996, 270–277.[Medline]
Witcher L.L., Collins R., Puttagunta S., Mechanic S.E., Munson M., Gumbiner B. & Cowin P.. Desmosomal cadherin binding domains of plakoglobin, J. Biol. Chem., 271, 1996, 10904–10909.
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|