49 research outputs found

    Listeria monocytogenes exploits ERM protein functions to efficiently spread from cell to cell

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    Cell-to-cell spread is a fundamental step in the infection cycle of Listeria monocytogenes that strictly depends on the formation of bacteria-induced protrusions. Since Listeria actin tails in the protrusions are tightly associated with the plasma membrane, we hypothesised that membrane–cytoskeleton linkers would be required for initiating and sustaining their formation and the subsequent cell-to-cell spread. We have found that ezrin, a member of the ezrin, radixin and moesin (ERM) family that functions as a key membrane–cytoskeleton linker, accumulates at Listeria protrusions. The ability of Listeria to induce protrusions and effectively spread between adjacent cells depends on the interaction of ERM proteins with both a membrane component such as CD44 and actin filaments. Interfering with either of these interactions or with ERM proteins phosphorylation not only reduces the number of protrusions but also alters their morphology, resulting in the formation of short and collapsed protrusions. As a consequence, Listeria cell-to-cell spread is severely impaired. Thus, ERM proteins are exploited by Listeria to escape the host immune response and to succeed in the development of the infection

    Defects in whirlin, a PDZ domain molecule involved in stereocilia elongation, cause deafness in the whirler mouse and families with DFNB31

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    The whirler mouse mutant (wi) does not respond to sound stimuli, and detailed ultrastructural analysis of sensory hair cells in the organ of Corti of the inner ear indicates that the whirler gene encodes a protein involved in the elongation and maintenance of stereocilia in both inner hair cells (IHCs) and outer hair cells (OHCs). BAC-mediated transgene correction of the mouse phenotype and mutation analysis identified the causative gene as encoding a novel PDZ protein called whirlin. The gene encoding whirlin also underlies the human autosomal recessive deafness locus DFNB31. In the mouse cochlea, whirlin is expressed in the sensory IHC and OHC stereocilia. Our findings suggest that this novel PDZ domain-containing molecule acts as an organizer of submembranous molecular complexes that control the coordinated actin polymerization and membrane growth of stereocilia

    The TSC1 Tumour Suppressor Hamartin Regulates Cell Adhesion Through ERM Proteins and The GTPase Rho.

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    Loss of the tumour-suppressor gene TSC1 is responsible for hamartoma development in tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), which renders several organs susceptible to benign tumours. Hamartin, the protein encoded by TSC1, contains a coiled-coil domain and is expressed in most adult tissues, although its function is unknown. Here we show that hamartin interacts with the ezrin-radixin-moesin (ERM) family of actin-binding proteins. Inhibition of hamartin function in cells containing focal adhesions results in loss of adhesion to the cell substrate, whereas overexpression of hamartin in cells lacking focal adhesions results in activation of the small GTP-binding protein Rho, assembly of actin stress fibres and formation of focal adhesions. Interaction of endogenous hamartin with ERM-family proteins is required for activation of Rho by serum or by lysophosphatidic acid (LPA). Our data indicate that disruption of adhesion to the cell matrix through loss of hamartin may initiate the development of TSC hamartomas and that a Rho-mediated signalling pathway regulating cell adhesion may constitute a rate-limiting step in tumour formation
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