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Vimentin intermediate filaments control actin stress fiber assembly through GEF-H1 and RhoA.

J. Cell. Sci.2017 Mar 01;130(5):892-902. Epub 2017 Jan 17
Yaming Jiu 1 , Johan Peränen 2 , Niccole Schaible 3 , Fang Cheng 4 , John E Eriksson 4 , Ramaswamy Krishnan 3 , Pekka Lappalainen 1
Yaming Jiu 1 , Johan Peränen 2 , Niccole Schaible 3 , Fang Cheng 4 , John E Eriksson 4 , Ramaswamy Krishnan 3 , Pekka Lappalainen 1
+ et al

[No authors listed]

Author information
  • 1 Institute of Biotechnology, P.O. Box 56, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00014, Finland yaming.jiu@helsinki.fi pekka.lappalainen@helsinki.fi.
  • 2 Faculty of Medicine, P.O. Box 63, University of Helsinki, Helsinki 00014, Finland.
  • 3 Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
  • 4 Turku Centre for Biotechnology, University of Turku and Åbo Akademi University, POB 123, FI-20521 Turku, Finland.

摘要


The actin and intermediate filament cytoskeletons contribute to numerous cellular processes, including morphogenesis, cytokinesis and migration. These two cytoskeletal systems associate with each other, but the underlying mechanisms of this interaction are incompletely understood. Here, we show that inactivation of vimentin leads to increased actin stress fiber assembly and contractility, and consequent elevation of myosin light chain phosphorylation and stabilization of tropomyosin-4.2 (see Geeves et al., 2015). The vimentin-knockout phenotypes can be rescued by re-expression of wild-type vimentin, but not by the non-filamentous 'unit length form' vimentin, demonstrating that intact vimentin intermediate filaments are required to facilitate the effects on the actin cytoskeleton. Finally, we provide evidence that the effects of vimentin on stress fibers are mediated by activation of RhoA through its guanine nucleotide exchange factor GEF-H1 (also known as ARHGEF2). Vimentin depletion induces phosphorylation of the microtubule-associated GEF-H1 on Ser886, and thereby promotes RhoA activity and actin stress fiber assembly. Taken together, these data reveal a new mechanism by which intermediate filaments regulate contractile actomyosin bundles, and may explain why elevated vimentin expression levels correlate with increased migration and invasion of cancer cells.

KEYWORDS: Actin, GEF-H1, Intermediate filament, RhoA, Stress fiber, Vimentin