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α-Catenin

α-Catenin (alpha-catenin) functions as the primary protein link between cadherins and the actin cytoskeleton.[1] It has been reported that the actin binding proteins vinculin[2] and α-actinin[3] can bind to alpha-catenin. It has been suggested that alpha-catenin does not bind with high affinity to both actin filaments and the E-cadherin-beta-catenin complex at the same time.[4] It has been observed that when α-catenin is not in a molecular complex with β-catenin, it dimerizes and functions to regulate actin filament assembly,[5] possibly by competing with Arp2/3 protein.[6] α-Catenin exhibits significant protein dynamics.[7] However, a protein complex including a cadherin, actin, β-catenin and α-catenin has not been isolated.[citation needed]

catenin (cadherin-associated protein), alpha 1, 102kDa
Model of human aldehyde oxidase after PDB: 1H6G
Identifiers
SymbolCTNNA1
NCBI gene1495
HGNC2509
OMIM116805
RefSeqNM_001903
UniProtP35221
Other data
LocusChr. 5 q31.2
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro
catenin (cadherin-associated protein), alpha 2
Identifiers
SymbolCTNNA2
NCBI gene1496
HGNC2510
OMIM114025
RefSeqNM_004389
UniProtP26232
Other data
LocusChr. 2 p12-p11.1
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro
catenin (cadherin-associated protein), alpha 3
Identifiers
SymbolCTNNA3
NCBI gene29119
HGNC2511
OMIM607667
RefSeqNM_013266
UniProtQ9UI47
Other data
LocusChr. 10 q21
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro

The amino acid sequence of α-catenin has sequence similarity to that of vinculin.[8]

Types edit

Three α-catenin genes are expressed in humans:[citation needed]

  • CTNNA1, alpha-1-catenin (also called alpha-E-catenin)
  • CTNNA2, alpha-2-catenin (also called alpha-N-catenin)
  • CTNNA3, alpha-3-catenin (also called alpha-T-catenin)

History edit

In the 1980s, embryonic carcinoma cells were used to describe a 102kD glycoprotein that potentially interacted with E-cadherin and other cytoskeletal complexes.1-3 It would later be known that this protein was in fact α-catenin. Its direct relationship with cytoskeletal components was not reported until almost a decade later.4 From 1994-1996, the characterization of interaction domains between α-catenin, beta-catenin, and plakoglobin were defined.

In parallel, from the early 1990s to about 2010, α-catenin dysregulation was widely implicated in various cancers ranging from breast, esophageal, Laryngeal, Prostate, Thyroid, Lung, Pancreatic, bladder, and more.5 In lieu of this research, the data suggests that α-catenin plays a more profound role than just stabilizing adhesion-junctions and promoting cell-cell adhesion.

Current understanding of α-catenin's structure and model edit

Simply put, in the cadherin-catenin complex, cadherin molecules are linked through beta-catenin to α-Catenin, which then binds to filamentous actin (F-actin). At the protein domain level, α-catenin has three domains, an N-terminal binding beta-catenin, a middle domain binding vinculin, and a C-terminal binding F-actin.6-8 The C-terminal domain of α-catenin has been reported to be able to bind F-actin either directly or indirectly potentially explaining the plethora of different type of junctions across cells types. 9 Le et al. quantified the stability of the mechanotransduction properties of the α‐catenin/β‐catenin complex and showed that it can be stable for hundreds of seconds, at physiological force ranges.10 Additionally, they showed that phosphorylation of the complex severely reduces this time by up to 10-fold.10

Despite this canonical structure, there is also evidence of α-catenin being found in the cytosol dimerized with itself or bound with Beta-catenin. These data have further supported the notion that α-catenin has other functions outside of junctional complexes.11 Notably, residues 57-146 of α-catenin form the binding site of beta-catenin and due to their 1:1 heterodimer capabilities, studies speculate that this heterodimer competes with homodimerization of α-catenin.12

To date, there are three α-catenins, in mammals, that have been described. αE-catenin primarily found in epithelium and the canonical catenin of the three, αN-catenin found in neural tissues, and αT-catenin found primarily in the heart.13

α-Catenin: Beyond cell adhesion edit

Modulation of actin and tissue organization edit

As a homodimer, α-catenin, binds directly to F-actin.14 Wood et al. show that a chemical induction of homodimerization α-catenin reproduces in vitro its recruitment to the cell periphery.15 They expand further on this notion by showing that this recruitment promotes protrusion of filopodia and accumulates actin at the edges.15 This interaction is largely mediated by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and overall promotes cell adhesion and orientation.15

 
Cartoon of the Cadherin-Catenin Complex

Other studies show that α-catenin can interact with many different actin-binding proteins (α-actinin, ZO-1, afadin) to remodel cytoskeletal structure. This catenin has also been shown to negatively regulate actin polymerization, promote actin bundling, influence filopodia and lamellipodia properties, and control collective cell migration via tensile and traction forces. 16-18

Along the same vein, a study found that in vascular endothelial cells, the fusion of VE-cadherin to α-catenin enhances its interaction with F-actin and this leads to a stronger endothelial barrier blocking inflammatory processes.19 Duong et al. expanded on these findings by reporting that the α1-helix of the actin-binding domain (ABD), exposed in this chimeric fusion protein, is responsible for stabilizing the adherence junctions and creating a stronger bond with actin.20 More importantly the discovered that this epitope is exposed in normal α-catenin when there is thrombin activity hence the constitutive reinforced binding to actin can be found in nonchimeric α-catenin and may play a role in other cell types.20

First insights into extra-junctional roles edit

In 2001, Vasioukhen et al. targeted the ablation of α-catenin in mouse embryonic skin and reported that although cell adhesion was present, the epithelium exhibited a phenotypic mass of hyperproliferative epithelia that was reminiscent of squamous cell carcinoma. 21 Follow up studies, years later, showed that epithelia that lacked α-catenin had a deficiency in the basement membrane that led to invasion of the epithelium that also resembled invasive squamous cell carcinoma. 22

Cell Migration edit

Some of the mechanisms by which RhoGEF on endosomes interact with α-catenin to establish cell polarity and migration have been elucidate via biosensors and depletion assays.23 Vassilev et al. have described the regulation of cell migration by a pathway found on endosomes that is driven in part by α-catenin. This directionality is done so via the restriction of RhoA perinuclearly and modulating Myosin-IIB at these sites.23 Another group found that by depleting N-cadherin and α-catenin, they could disrupt the patterns of migration in mouse enteric neural crest cells in both a collective and independent cell context.24

Implications in cell signaling edit

The work of Vasioukhen and Fuchs also showed that epidermal cells with ablated αE-catenin had increased responsiveness to insulin receptor signaling and elevation of Ras and MAPK signaling as well. 21, 22 In the central nervous system, the ablation of αE-catenin resulted in brain hyperplasia and discovery of an upregulation in sonic hedgehog (shh) signaling. 25

It was found that αE-catenin also played a role in the Hippo pathway as a tumor suppressor by inhibiting the nuclear translocation of YAP1.26 This group found that by deleting αE-catenin in the stem cell niche of the skin, there was an accumulation os SOX 9+ progenitors that hyper proliferate resulting in early onset of squamous cell carcinoma. This entire process was attributed to YAP signaling and the Hippo Pathway.26 Recent research by Pavel et al. describe α-catenin’s involvement in a feedback look mechanism of autophagy negatively regulating the levels of α-catenin, LC3-interacting proteins inhibiting the YAP/TAZ oncogenes, resulting in upregulating of autophagy. 27They further report that this feedback loop maybe tissue context specific as it negatively regulates epithelial cell proliferation in the skin while positively affects those in the liver. 27

In the pancreas, Cailiani et al. found that the deletion of αE-catenin in pancreatic progenitors lead to deficient cell aggregation, constitutive activation of the sonic hedgehog pathway, and reduction in endocrine cell differentiation which resulted in the accumulation of sox9+ progenitors. 28

Transcriptional Modulation edit

α-catenin’s role in transcriptional modulation has been elucidated by multiple studies implicating its association with the T-cell family (Tcf) of transcription factors. In colon cancer cell nuclei, α-catenin was found to accumulate and repress Tcf-dependent transcription.29 Another study reports its accumulation in the nucleus, with beta-catenin, and functioning as a repressor of the WNT pathway. 30 In parallel, choi et al., found a different mechanism by which α-catenin binds beta-catenin to TCF/LEF family DNA-binding proteins and recruits APC into a histone complex to regulate transcription of Wnt target genes. 31

Function in development across species edit

α-catenin is considered a conserved protein across eukaryotes. In Drosophila, a mutation in α-catenin disrupts the beta-catenin homologue, armadillo, from binding to it ultimately leading to dysregulation of cell adhesion.32 In nematodes, C. elegans to be specific, homologues of α-catenin, beta-catenin, and cadherins (HMR-1,HMP-1,HMP-2 respectively) have been reported to form adhesion junctions. 33

Evolutionary aspects of α-catenin edit

 
Shows the evolutionary tree from metazoan with the presence of cadherins and catenins in each phylum

Dictyostelium discoideum, a slime mold, has been shown to have both beta-catenin and α-catenin homologues named Aardvark and Ddα-catenin respectively.34 Additionally, they display similar interactions of binding with each other as has been observed in eukaryotes. However, their functionality seemed to be geared more towards maintaining cell polarity rather than cell adhesion.34 Dickinson et al. further report that because this metazoan lacks cadherins, and the catenin homologues function to preserve cell polarity, it is likely that catenins evolved independently from cadherins.34

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cooper, Geoffrey M. (2000). "Figure 11.14: Model of attachment of actin filaments to catenin-cadherin complexes". The Cell: A Molecular Approach (2nd ed.). Sinauer Associates. ISBN 978-0-87893-219-1.
  2. ^ Watabe-Uchida M, Uchida N, Imamura Y, et al. (August 1998). "alpha-Catenin-vinculin interaction functions to organize the apical junctional complex in epithelial cells". J. Cell Biol. 142 (3): 847–57. doi:10.1083/jcb.142.3.847. hdl:1854/LU-151543. PMC 2148175. PMID 9700171.
  3. ^ Knudsen KA, Soler AP, Johnson KR, Wheelock MJ (July 1995). "Interaction of alpha-actinin with the cadherin/catenin cell-cell adhesion complex via α-catenin". J. Cell Biol. 130 (1): 67–77. doi:10.1083/jcb.130.1.67. PMC 2120515. PMID 7790378.
  4. ^ Yamada S, Pokutta S, Drees F, Weis WI, Nelson WJ (December 2005). "Deconstructing the cadherin-catenin-actin complex". Cell. 123 (5): 889–901. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2005.09.020. PMC 3368712. PMID 16325582.
  5. ^ Nicholl ID, Matsui T, Weiss TM, Stanley CB, Heller WT, Martel A, Farago B, Callaway DJ, Bu Z (Aug 21, 2018). "Alpha-catenin structure and nanoscale dynamics in solution and in complex with F-actin". Biophysical Journal. 115 (4): 642–654. Bibcode:2018BpJ...115..642N. doi:10.1016/j.bpj.2018.07.005. PMC 6104293. PMID 30037495.
  6. ^ Drees F, Pokutta S, Yamada S, Nelson WJ, Weis WI (December 2005). "Alpha-catenin is a molecular switch that binds E-cadherin-beta-catenin and regulates actin-filament assembly". Cell. 123 (5): 903–15. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2005.09.021. PMC 3369825. PMID 16325583.
  7. ^ Farago B, Nicholl ID, Wang S, Cheng X, Callaway DJ, Bu Z (March 30, 2021). "Activated nanoscale actin-binding domain motion in the catenin-cadherin complex revealed by neutron spin echo spectroscopy". Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 118 (13): e2025012118. Bibcode:2021PNAS..11825012F. doi:10.1073/pnas.2025012118. PMC 8020631. PMID 33753508.
  8. ^ Nagafuchi A, Takeichi M, Tsukita S (May 1991). "The 102 kd cadherin-associated protein: similarity to vinculin and posttranscriptional regulation of expression". Cell. 65 (5): 849–57. doi:10.1016/0092-8674(91)90392-C. PMID 1904011. S2CID 38622586.

External links edit

References for History Onwards edit

1.         Vestweber D, Kemler R. Rabbit antiserum against a purified surface glycoprotein decompacts mouse preimplantation embryos and reacts with specific adult tissues. Exp Cell Res. 1984;152(1):169-78.

2.         Vestweber D, Kemler R. Some structural and functional aspects of the cell adhesion molecule uvomorulin. Cell Differ. 1984;15(2-4):269-73.

3.         Kemler R, Ozawa M. Uvomorulin-catenin complex: cytoplasmic anchorage of a Ca2+-dependent cell adhesion molecule. Bioessays. 1989;11(4):88-91.

4.         Rimm DL, Koslov ER, Kebriaei P, Cianci CD, Morrow JS. Alpha 1(E)-catenin is an actin-binding and -bundling protein mediating the attachment of F-actin to the membrane adhesion complex. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1995;92(19):8813-7.

5.         Benjamin JM, Nelson WJ. Bench to bedside and back again: molecular mechanisms of alpha-catenin function and roles in tumorigenesis. Semin Cancer Biol. 2008;18(1):53-64.

6.         Ishiyama N, Tanaka N, Abe K, Yang YJ, Abbas YM, Umitsu M, et al. An autoinhibited structure of alpha-catenin and its implications for vinculin recruitment to adherens junctions. J Biol Chem. 2013;288(22):15913-25.

7.         Watabe-Uchida M, Uchida N, Imamura Y, Nagafuchi A, Fujimoto K, Uemura T, et al. alpha-Catenin-vinculin interaction functions to organize the apical junctional complex in epithelial cells. J Cell Biol. 1998;142(3):847-57.

8.         Weiss EE, Kroemker M, Rudiger AH, Jockusch BM, Rudiger M. Vinculin is part of the cadherin-catenin junctional complex: complex formation between alpha-catenin and vinculin. J Cell Biol. 1998;141(3):755-64.

9.         Takeichi M. Dynamic contacts: rearranging adherens junctions to drive epithelial remodelling. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology. 2014;15(6):397-410.

10.       Le S, Yu M, Yan J. Phosphorylation Reduces the Mechanical Stability of the alpha-Catenin/ beta-Catenin Complex. Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2019;58(51):18663-9.

11.       Takeichi M. Multiple functions of α-catenin beyond cell adhesion regulation. Current Opinion in Cell Biology. 2018;54:24-9.

12.       Pokutta S, Drees F, Yamada S, Nelson WJ, Weis WI. Biochemical and structural analysis of alpha-catenin in cell-cell contacts. Biochem Soc Trans. 2008;36(Pt 2):141-7.

13.       Perez-Moreno M, Fuchs E. Catenins: keeping cells from getting their signals crossed. Dev Cell. 2006;11(5):601-12.

14.       Drees F, Pokutta S, Yamada S, Nelson WJ, Weis WI. Alpha-catenin is a molecular switch that binds E-cadherin-beta-catenin and regulates actin-filament assembly. Cell. 2005;123(5):903-15.

15.       Wood MN, Ishiyama N, Singaram I, Chung CM, Flozak AS, Yemelyanov A, et al. alpha-Catenin homodimers are recruited to phosphoinositide-activated membranes to promote adhesion. J Cell Biol. 2017;216(11):3767-83.

16.       Boutillon A, Escot S, Elouin A, Jahn D, González-Tirado S, Starruß J, et al. Guidance by followers ensures long-range coordination of cell migration through α-catenin mechanoperception. Developmental Cell. 2022;57(12):1529-44.e5.

17.       Kobielak A, Pasolli HA, Fuchs E. Mammalian formin-1 participates in adherens junctions and polymerization of linear actin cables. Nat Cell Biol. 2004;6(1):21-30.

18.       Itoh M, Nagafuchi A, Moroi S, Tsukita S. Involvement of ZO-1 in cadherin-based cell adhesion through its direct binding to alpha catenin and actin filaments. J Cell Biol. 1997;138(1):181-92.

19.       Schulte D, Kuppers V, Dartsch N, Broermann A, Li H, Zarbock A, et al. Stabilizing the VE-cadherin-catenin complex blocks leukocyte extravasation and vascular permeability. EMBO J. 2011;30(20):4157-70.

20.       Duong CN, Bruckner R, Schmitt M, Nottebaum AF, Braun LJ, Meyer Zu Brickwedde M, et al. Force-induced changes of alpha-catenin conformation stabilize vascular junctions independently of vinculin. J Cell Sci. 2021;134(24).

21.       Vasioukhin V, Bauer C, Degenstein L, Wise B, Fuchs E. Hyperproliferation and defects in epithelial polarity upon conditional ablation of alpha-catenin in skin. Cell. 2001;104(4):605-17.

22.       Kobielak A, Fuchs E. Links between alpha-catenin, NF-kappaB, and squamous cell carcinoma in skin. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006;103(7):2322-7.

23.       Vassilev V, Platek A, Hiver S, Enomoto H, Takeichi M. Catenins Steer Cell Migration via Stabilization of Front-Rear Polarity. Dev Cell. 2017;43(4):463-79 e5.

24.       Szabo A, Mayor R. Modelling collective cell migration of neural crest. Curr Opin Cell Biol. 2016;42:22-8.

25.       Lien WH, Klezovitch O, Fernandez TE, Delrow J, Vasioukhin V. alphaE-catenin controls cerebral cortical size by regulating the hedgehog signaling pathway. Science. 2006;311(5767):1609-12.

26.       Silvis MR, Kreger BT, Lien WH, Klezovitch O, Rudakova GM, Camargo FD, et al. alpha-catenin is a tumor suppressor that controls cell accumulation by regulating the localization and activity of the transcriptional coactivator Yap1. Sci Signal. 2011;4(174):ra33.

27.       Pavel M, Park SJ, Frake RA, Son SM, Manni MM, Bento CF, et al. alpha-Catenin levels determine direction of YAP/TAZ response to autophagy perturbation. Nat Commun. 2021;12(1):1703.

28.       Jimenez-Caliani AJ, Pillich R, Yang W, Diaferia GR, Meda P, Crisa L, et al. alphaE-Catenin Is a Positive Regulator of Pancreatic Islet Cell Lineage Differentiation. Cell Rep. 2017;20(6):1295-306.

29.       Giannini AL, Vivanco M, Kypta RM. alpha-catenin inhibits beta-catenin signaling by preventing formation of a beta-catenin*T-cell factor*DNA complex. J Biol Chem. 2000;275(29):21883-8.

30.       Daugherty RL, Serebryannyy L, Yemelyanov A, Flozak AS, Yu HJ, Kosak ST, et al. alpha-Catenin is an inhibitor of transcription. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014;111(14):5260-5.

31.       Choi SH, Estaras C, Moresco JJ, Yates JR, 3rd, Jones KA. alpha-Catenin interacts with APC to regulate beta-catenin proteolysis and transcriptional repression of Wnt target genes. Genes Dev. 2013;27(22):2473-88.

32.       Orsulic S, Peifer M. An in vivo structure-function study of armadillo, the beta-catenin homologue, reveals both separate and overlapping regions of the protein required for cell adhesion and for wingless signaling. J Cell Biol. 1996;134(5):1283-300.

33.       Simske JS, Koppen M, Sims P, Hodgkin J, Yonkof A, Hardin J. The cell junction protein VAB-9 regulates adhesion and epidermal morphology in C. elegans. Nat Cell Biol. 2003;5(7):619-25.

34.       Dickinson DJ, Nelson WJ, Weis WI. A polarized epithelium organized by beta- and alpha-catenin predates cadherin and metazoan origins. Science. 2011;331(6022):1336-9.

catenin, alpha, catenin, functions, primary, protein, link, between, cadherins, actin, cytoskeleton, been, reported, that, actin, binding, proteins, vinculin, actinin, bind, alpha, catenin, been, suggested, that, alpha, catenin, does, bind, with, high, affinit. a Catenin alpha catenin functions as the primary protein link between cadherins and the actin cytoskeleton 1 It has been reported that the actin binding proteins vinculin 2 and a actinin 3 can bind to alpha catenin It has been suggested that alpha catenin does not bind with high affinity to both actin filaments and the E cadherin beta catenin complex at the same time 4 It has been observed that when a catenin is not in a molecular complex with b catenin it dimerizes and functions to regulate actin filament assembly 5 possibly by competing with Arp2 3 protein 6 a Catenin exhibits significant protein dynamics 7 However a protein complex including a cadherin actin b catenin and a catenin has not been isolated citation needed catenin cadherin associated protein alpha 1 102kDaModel of human aldehyde oxidase after PDB 1H6G IdentifiersSymbolCTNNA1NCBI gene1495HGNC2509OMIM116805RefSeqNM 001903UniProtP35221Other dataLocusChr 5 q31 2Search forStructuresSwiss modelDomainsInterPro catenin cadherin associated protein alpha 2IdentifiersSymbolCTNNA2NCBI gene1496HGNC2510OMIM114025RefSeqNM 004389UniProtP26232Other dataLocusChr 2 p12 p11 1Search forStructuresSwiss modelDomainsInterPro catenin cadherin associated protein alpha 3IdentifiersSymbolCTNNA3NCBI gene29119HGNC2511OMIM607667RefSeqNM 013266UniProtQ9UI47Other dataLocusChr 10 q21Search forStructuresSwiss modelDomainsInterPro The amino acid sequence of a catenin has sequence similarity to that of vinculin 8 Contents 1 Types 2 History 3 Current understanding of a catenin s structure and model 4 a Catenin Beyond cell adhesion 4 1 Modulation of actin and tissue organization 4 2 First insights into extra junctional roles 4 3 Cell Migration 4 4 Implications in cell signaling 4 5 Transcriptional Modulation 5 Function in development across species 6 Evolutionary aspects of a catenin 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 10 References for History OnwardsTypes editThree a catenin genes are expressed in humans citation needed CTNNA1 alpha 1 catenin also called alpha E catenin CTNNA2 alpha 2 catenin also called alpha N catenin CTNNA3 alpha 3 catenin also called alpha T catenin History editIn the 1980s embryonic carcinoma cells were used to describe a 102kD glycoprotein that potentially interacted with E cadherin and other cytoskeletal complexes 1 3 It would later be known that this protein was in fact a catenin Its direct relationship with cytoskeletal components was not reported until almost a decade later 4 From 1994 1996 the characterization of interaction domains between a catenin beta catenin and plakoglobin were defined In parallel from the early 1990s to about 2010 a catenin dysregulation was widely implicated in various cancers ranging from breast esophageal Laryngeal Prostate Thyroid Lung Pancreatic bladder and more 5 In lieu of this research the data suggests that a catenin plays a more profound role than just stabilizing adhesion junctions and promoting cell cell adhesion Current understanding of a catenin s structure and model editSimply put in the cadherin catenin complex cadherin molecules are linked through beta catenin to a Catenin which then binds to filamentous actin F actin At the protein domain level a catenin has three domains an N terminal binding beta catenin a middle domain binding vinculin and a C terminal binding F actin 6 8 The C terminal domain of a catenin has been reported to be able to bind F actin either directly or indirectly potentially explaining the plethora of different type of junctions across cells types 9 Le et al quantified the stability of the mechanotransduction properties of the a catenin b catenin complex and showed that it can be stable for hundreds of seconds at physiological force ranges 10 Additionally they showed that phosphorylation of the complex severely reduces this time by up to 10 fold 10Despite this canonical structure there is also evidence of a catenin being found in the cytosol dimerized with itself or bound with Beta catenin These data have further supported the notion that a catenin has other functions outside of junctional complexes 11 Notably residues 57 146 of a catenin form the binding site of beta catenin and due to their 1 1 heterodimer capabilities studies speculate that this heterodimer competes with homodimerization of a catenin 12To date there are three a catenins in mammals that have been described aE catenin primarily found in epithelium and the canonical catenin of the three aN catenin found in neural tissues and aT catenin found primarily in the heart 13a Catenin Beyond cell adhesion editModulation of actin and tissue organization edit As a homodimer a catenin binds directly to F actin 14 Wood et al show that a chemical induction of homodimerization a catenin reproduces in vitro its recruitment to the cell periphery 15 They expand further on this notion by showing that this recruitment promotes protrusion of filopodia and accumulates actin at the edges 15 This interaction is largely mediated by phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase and overall promotes cell adhesion and orientation 15 nbsp Cartoon of the Cadherin Catenin Complex Other studies show that a catenin can interact with many different actin binding proteins a actinin ZO 1 afadin to remodel cytoskeletal structure This catenin has also been shown to negatively regulate actin polymerization promote actin bundling influence filopodia and lamellipodia properties and control collective cell migration via tensile and traction forces 16 18Along the same vein a study found that in vascular endothelial cells the fusion of VE cadherin to a catenin enhances its interaction with F actin and this leads to a stronger endothelial barrier blocking inflammatory processes 19 Duong et al expanded on these findings by reporting that the a1 helix of the actin binding domain ABD exposed in this chimeric fusion protein is responsible for stabilizing the adherence junctions and creating a stronger bond with actin 20 More importantly the discovered that this epitope is exposed in normal a catenin when there is thrombin activity hence the constitutive reinforced binding to actin can be found in nonchimeric a catenin and may play a role in other cell types 20 First insights into extra junctional roles edit In 2001 Vasioukhen et al targeted the ablation of a catenin in mouse embryonic skin and reported that although cell adhesion was present the epithelium exhibited a phenotypic mass of hyperproliferative epithelia that was reminiscent of squamous cell carcinoma 21 Follow up studies years later showed that epithelia that lacked a catenin had a deficiency in the basement membrane that led to invasion of the epithelium that also resembled invasive squamous cell carcinoma 22 Cell Migration edit Some of the mechanisms by which RhoGEF on endosomes interact with a catenin to establish cell polarity and migration have been elucidate via biosensors and depletion assays 23 Vassilev et al have described the regulation of cell migration by a pathway found on endosomes that is driven in part by a catenin This directionality is done so via the restriction of RhoA perinuclearly and modulating Myosin IIB at these sites 23 Another group found that by depleting N cadherin and a catenin they could disrupt the patterns of migration in mouse enteric neural crest cells in both a collective and independent cell context 24 Implications in cell signaling edit The work of Vasioukhen and Fuchs also showed that epidermal cells with ablated aE catenin had increased responsiveness to insulin receptor signaling and elevation of Ras and MAPK signaling as well 21 22 In the central nervous system the ablation of aE catenin resulted in brain hyperplasia and discovery of an upregulation in sonic hedgehog shh signaling 25It was found that aE catenin also played a role in the Hippo pathway as a tumor suppressor by inhibiting the nuclear translocation of YAP1 26 This group found that by deleting aE catenin in the stem cell niche of the skin there was an accumulation os SOX 9 progenitors that hyper proliferate resulting in early onset of squamous cell carcinoma This entire process was attributed to YAP signaling and the Hippo Pathway 26 Recent research by Pavel et al describe a catenin s involvement in a feedback look mechanism of autophagy negatively regulating the levels of a catenin LC3 interacting proteins inhibiting the YAP TAZ oncogenes resulting in upregulating of autophagy 27They further report that this feedback loop maybe tissue context specific as it negatively regulates epithelial cell proliferation in the skin while positively affects those in the liver 27In the pancreas Cailiani et al found that the deletion of aE catenin in pancreatic progenitors lead to deficient cell aggregation constitutive activation of the sonic hedgehog pathway and reduction in endocrine cell differentiation which resulted in the accumulation of sox9 progenitors 28 Transcriptional Modulation edit a catenin s role in transcriptional modulation has been elucidated by multiple studies implicating its association with the T cell family Tcf of transcription factors In colon cancer cell nuclei a catenin was found to accumulate and repress Tcf dependent transcription 29 Another study reports its accumulation in the nucleus with beta catenin and functioning as a repressor of the WNT pathway 30 In parallel choi et al found a different mechanism by which a catenin binds beta catenin to TCF LEF family DNA binding proteins and recruits APC into a histone complex to regulate transcription of Wnt target genes 31Function in development across species edita catenin is considered a conserved protein across eukaryotes In Drosophila a mutation in a catenin disrupts the beta catenin homologue armadillo from binding to it ultimately leading to dysregulation of cell adhesion 32 In nematodes C elegans to be specific homologues of a catenin beta catenin and cadherins HMR 1 HMP 1 HMP 2 respectively have been reported to form adhesion junctions 33Evolutionary aspects of a catenin edit nbsp Shows the evolutionary tree from metazoan with the presence of cadherins and catenins in each phylum Dictyostelium discoideum a slime mold has been shown to have both beta catenin and a catenin homologues named Aardvark and Dda catenin respectively 34 Additionally they display similar interactions of binding with each other as has been observed in eukaryotes However their functionality seemed to be geared more towards maintaining cell polarity rather than cell adhesion 34 Dickinson et al further report that because this metazoan lacks cadherins and the catenin homologues function to preserve cell polarity it is likely that catenins evolved independently from cadherins 34See also editCatenin Catenin beta 1References edit Cooper Geoffrey M 2000 Figure 11 14 Model of attachment of actin filaments to catenin cadherin complexes The Cell A Molecular Approach 2nd ed Sinauer Associates ISBN 978 0 87893 219 1 Watabe Uchida M Uchida N Imamura Y et al August 1998 alpha Catenin vinculin interaction functions to organize the apical junctional complex in epithelial cells J Cell Biol 142 3 847 57 doi 10 1083 jcb 142 3 847 hdl 1854 LU 151543 PMC 2148175 PMID 9700171 Knudsen KA Soler AP Johnson KR Wheelock MJ July 1995 Interaction of alpha actinin with the cadherin catenin cell cell adhesion complex via a catenin J Cell Biol 130 1 67 77 doi 10 1083 jcb 130 1 67 PMC 2120515 PMID 7790378 Yamada S Pokutta S Drees F Weis WI Nelson WJ December 2005 Deconstructing the cadherin catenin actin complex Cell 123 5 889 901 doi 10 1016 j cell 2005 09 020 PMC 3368712 PMID 16325582 Nicholl ID Matsui T Weiss TM Stanley CB Heller WT Martel A Farago B Callaway DJ Bu Z Aug 21 2018 Alpha catenin structure and nanoscale dynamics in solution and in complex with F actin Biophysical Journal 115 4 642 654 Bibcode 2018BpJ 115 642N doi 10 1016 j bpj 2018 07 005 PMC 6104293 PMID 30037495 Drees F Pokutta S Yamada S Nelson WJ Weis WI December 2005 Alpha catenin is a molecular switch that binds E cadherin beta catenin and regulates actin filament assembly Cell 123 5 903 15 doi 10 1016 j cell 2005 09 021 PMC 3369825 PMID 16325583 Farago B Nicholl ID Wang S Cheng X Callaway DJ Bu Z March 30 2021 Activated nanoscale actin binding domain motion in the catenin cadherin complex revealed by neutron spin echo spectroscopy Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 118 13 e2025012118 Bibcode 2021PNAS 11825012F doi 10 1073 pnas 2025012118 PMC 8020631 PMID 33753508 Nagafuchi A Takeichi M Tsukita S May 1991 The 102 kd cadherin associated protein similarity to vinculin and posttranscriptional regulation of expression Cell 65 5 849 57 doi 10 1016 0092 8674 91 90392 C PMID 1904011 S2CID 38622586 External links editalpha Catenin at the U S National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings MeSH References for History Onwards edit1 Vestweber D Kemler R Rabbit antiserum against a purified surface glycoprotein decompacts mouse preimplantation embryos and reacts with specific adult tissues Exp Cell Res 1984 152 1 169 78 2 Vestweber D Kemler R Some structural and functional aspects of the cell adhesion molecule uvomorulin Cell Differ 1984 15 2 4 269 73 3 Kemler R Ozawa M Uvomorulin catenin complex cytoplasmic anchorage of a Ca2 dependent cell adhesion molecule Bioessays 1989 11 4 88 91 4 Rimm DL Koslov ER Kebriaei P Cianci CD Morrow JS Alpha 1 E catenin is an actin binding and bundling protein mediating the attachment of F actin to the membrane adhesion complex Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1995 92 19 8813 7 5 Benjamin JM Nelson WJ Bench to bedside and back again molecular mechanisms of alpha catenin function and roles in tumorigenesis Semin Cancer Biol 2008 18 1 53 64 6 Ishiyama N Tanaka N Abe K Yang YJ Abbas YM Umitsu M et al An autoinhibited structure of alpha catenin and its implications for vinculin recruitment to adherens junctions J Biol Chem 2013 288 22 15913 25 7 Watabe Uchida M Uchida N Imamura Y Nagafuchi A Fujimoto K Uemura T et al alpha Catenin vinculin interaction functions to organize the apical junctional complex in epithelial cells J Cell Biol 1998 142 3 847 57 8 Weiss EE Kroemker M Rudiger AH Jockusch BM Rudiger M Vinculin is part of the cadherin catenin junctional complex complex formation between alpha catenin and vinculin J Cell Biol 1998 141 3 755 64 9 Takeichi M Dynamic contacts rearranging adherens junctions to drive epithelial remodelling Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2014 15 6 397 410 10 Le S Yu M Yan J Phosphorylation Reduces the Mechanical Stability of the alpha Catenin beta Catenin Complex Angew Chem Int Ed Engl 2019 58 51 18663 9 11 Takeichi M Multiple functions of a catenin beyond cell adhesion regulation Current Opinion in Cell Biology 2018 54 24 9 12 Pokutta S Drees F Yamada S Nelson WJ Weis WI Biochemical and structural analysis of alpha catenin in cell cell contacts Biochem Soc Trans 2008 36 Pt 2 141 7 13 Perez Moreno M Fuchs E Catenins keeping cells from getting their signals crossed Dev Cell 2006 11 5 601 12 14 Drees F Pokutta S Yamada S Nelson WJ Weis WI Alpha catenin is a molecular switch that binds E cadherin beta catenin and regulates actin filament assembly Cell 2005 123 5 903 15 15 Wood MN Ishiyama N Singaram I Chung CM Flozak AS Yemelyanov A et al alpha Catenin homodimers are recruited to phosphoinositide activated membranes to promote adhesion J Cell Biol 2017 216 11 3767 83 16 Boutillon A Escot S Elouin A Jahn D Gonzalez Tirado S Starruss J et al Guidance by followers ensures long range coordination of cell migration through a catenin mechanoperception Developmental Cell 2022 57 12 1529 44 e5 17 Kobielak A Pasolli HA Fuchs E Mammalian formin 1 participates in adherens junctions and polymerization of linear actin cables Nat Cell Biol 2004 6 1 21 30 18 Itoh M Nagafuchi A Moroi S Tsukita S Involvement of ZO 1 in cadherin based cell adhesion through its direct binding to alpha catenin and actin filaments J Cell Biol 1997 138 1 181 92 19 Schulte D Kuppers V Dartsch N Broermann A Li H Zarbock A et al Stabilizing the VE cadherin catenin complex blocks leukocyte extravasation and vascular permeability EMBO J 2011 30 20 4157 70 20 Duong CN Bruckner R Schmitt M Nottebaum AF Braun LJ Meyer Zu Brickwedde M et al Force induced changes of alpha catenin conformation stabilize vascular junctions independently of vinculin J Cell Sci 2021 134 24 21 Vasioukhin V Bauer C Degenstein L Wise B Fuchs E Hyperproliferation and defects in epithelial polarity upon conditional ablation of alpha catenin in skin Cell 2001 104 4 605 17 22 Kobielak A Fuchs E Links between alpha catenin NF kappaB and squamous cell carcinoma in skin Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2006 103 7 2322 7 23 Vassilev V Platek A Hiver S Enomoto H Takeichi M Catenins Steer Cell Migration via Stabilization of Front Rear Polarity Dev Cell 2017 43 4 463 79 e5 24 Szabo A Mayor R Modelling collective cell migration of neural crest Curr Opin Cell Biol 2016 42 22 8 25 Lien WH Klezovitch O Fernandez TE Delrow J Vasioukhin V alphaE catenin controls cerebral cortical size by regulating the hedgehog signaling pathway Science 2006 311 5767 1609 12 26 Silvis MR Kreger BT Lien WH Klezovitch O Rudakova GM Camargo FD et al alpha catenin is a tumor suppressor that controls cell accumulation by regulating the localization and activity of the transcriptional coactivator Yap1 Sci Signal 2011 4 174 ra33 27 Pavel M Park SJ Frake RA Son SM Manni MM Bento CF et al alpha Catenin levels determine direction of YAP TAZ response to autophagy perturbation Nat Commun 2021 12 1 1703 28 Jimenez Caliani AJ Pillich R Yang W Diaferia GR Meda P Crisa L et al alphaE Catenin Is a Positive Regulator of Pancreatic Islet Cell Lineage Differentiation Cell Rep 2017 20 6 1295 306 29 Giannini AL Vivanco M Kypta RM alpha catenin inhibits beta catenin signaling by preventing formation of a beta catenin T cell factor DNA complex J Biol Chem 2000 275 29 21883 8 30 Daugherty RL Serebryannyy L Yemelyanov A Flozak AS Yu HJ Kosak ST et al alpha Catenin is an inhibitor of transcription Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2014 111 14 5260 5 31 Choi SH Estaras C Moresco JJ Yates JR 3rd Jones KA alpha Catenin interacts with APC to regulate beta catenin proteolysis and transcriptional repression of Wnt target genes Genes Dev 2013 27 22 2473 88 32 Orsulic S Peifer M An in vivo structure function study of armadillo the beta catenin homologue reveals both separate and overlapping regions of the protein required for cell adhesion and for wingless signaling J Cell Biol 1996 134 5 1283 300 33 Simske JS Koppen M Sims P Hodgkin J Yonkof A Hardin J The cell junction protein VAB 9 regulates adhesion and epidermal morphology in C elegans Nat Cell Biol 2003 5 7 619 25 34 Dickinson DJ Nelson WJ Weis WI A polarized epithelium organized by beta and alpha catenin predates cadherin and metazoan origins Science 2011 331 6022 1336 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Catenin amp oldid 1193553637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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