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Caldesmon mutant defective in Ca(2+)-calmodulin binding interferes with assembly of stress fibers and affects cell morphology, growth and motility

Authors :
Jenny Li-Chun Lin
Rebecca S. Reiter
Jim J.-C. Lin
David R. Soll
Karla J. Daniels
Yan Li
Source :
Journal of cell science. 117(Pt 16)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Despite intensive in vitro studies, little is known about the regulation of caldesmon (CaD) by Ca2+-calmodulin (Ca2+-CaM) in vivo. To investigate this regulation, a mutant was generated of the C-terminal fragment of human fibroblast CaD, termed CaD39-AB, in which two crucial tryptophan residues involved in Ca2+-CaM binding were each replaced with alanine. The mutation abolished most CaD39-AB binding to Ca2+-CaM in vitro but had little effect on in vitro binding to actin filaments and the ability to inhibit actin/tropomyosin-activated heavy meromyosin ATPase. To study the functional consequences of these mutations in vivo, we transfected an expression plasmid carrying CaD39-AB cDNA into Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells and isolated several clones expressing various amounts of CaD39-AB. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that mutant CaD39-AB was distributed diffusely throughout the cytoplasm but also concentrated at membrane ruffle regions. Stable expression of CaD39-AB in CHO cells disrupted assembly of stress fibers and focal adhesions, altered cell morphology, and slowed cell cycle progression. Moreover, CaD39-AB-expressing cells exhibited motility defects in a wound-healing assay, in both velocity and the persistence of translocation, suggesting a role for CaD regulation by Ca2+-CaM in cell migration. Together, these results demonstrate that CaD plays a crucial role in mediating the effects of Ca2+-CaM on the dynamics of the actin cytoskeleton during cell migration.

Details

ISSN :
00219533
Volume :
117
Issue :
Pt 16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of cell science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e8dfd95fc4675e0c7e5dded43b1b1b61