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Published 14 February 2005. doi:10.1083/jcb1684iti1
The Rockefeller University Press, 0021-9525 $8.00
JCB, Volume 168, Number 4, 520-520
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In This Issue

Lamellae lead the way


The localization of Arp2/3 (white) in lamellipodia (top) is disrupted by tropomyosin (bottom).

Open any cell biology text and it is clear that lamellipodia, the ruffled edges of motile cells, initiate movement. So it may come as a surprise that Gupton et al. can disrupt this domain without blocking cell movement (page 619). In fact, cells move faster without lamellipodia. The driving force for movement appears to come from the lamella, the structure that lies just proximal to the lamellipodium.

Previously, the team examined the lamella and lamellipodia using quantitative fluorescent speckle microscopy (qFSM), a technique that allows for deconvolution of images of physically overlapping cell domains. The domains have distinct molecular components, filament–assembly kinetics, and motion. Moreover, although the lamellipodia moved forward and backward repeatedly in the axis of cell movement, the team saw hints that cells made forward progress only when the lamella moved forward.

To find out if lamellipodia are required for movement, the team injected skeletal muscle tropomyosin into epithelial cells in a wound-healing model. Tropomyosin normally resides in lamellae and is excluded from lamellipodia. Increasing the amount of tropomyosin pushed it into lamellipodia and disrupted resident molecules, including Arp2/3 and ADF/cofilin, which are concentrated in lamellipodia but not in lamellae. Video qFSM showed that excess tropomyosin disrupted actin treadmilling, which is a critical component of lamellipodial function. By contrast, retrograde actin flow in the lamella was not blocked under these conditions. Cells with elevated tropomyosin had more persistent leading edge movement, less retraction, and doubled their migration speed relative to untreated cells.

Adhesion proteins accumulate at the junction between the lamellipodia and the lamella in untreated cells. In treated cells the contraction of the lamella's actin filaments appeared to be sufficient to pull the rear of the cell toward these adhesion junctions while the leading edge was pushed forward.

Gupton et al. hypothesize that lamellipodia are involved in rapid response to extracellular cues and setting up directionality. If that's true, then cells treated with tropomyosin would be less responsive to a chemotactic gradient. The cells used in the current wound model have only one direction in which to go, which could be why they move normally without lamellipodia. {iti_end}



Rabiya S. Tuma

rabiya{at}nasw.org


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Related Article

Cell migration without a lamellipodium: translation of actin dynamics into cell movement mediated by tropomyosin
Stephanie L. Gupton, Karen L. Anderson, Thomas P. Kole, Robert S. Fischer, Aaron Ponti, Sarah E. Hitchcock-DeGregori, Gaudenz Danuser, Velia M. Fowler, Denis Wirtz, Dorit Hanein, and Clare M. Waterman-Storer
J. Cell Biol. 2005 168: 619-631. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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