Abstract

We have previously identified the scaffold protein liprin-α1 as an important regulator of integrin-mediated cell motility and tumor cell invasion. Liprin-α1 may interact with different proteins, and the functional significance of these interactions in the regulation of cell motility is poorly known. Here we have addressed the involvement of the liprin-α1 partner GIT1 in liprin-α1-mediated effects on cell spreading and migration. GIT1 depletion inhibited spreading by affecting the lamellipodia, and prevented liprin-α1-enhanced spreading. Conversely inhibition of the formation of the liprin-α1-GIT complex by expression of liprin-ΔCC3 could still enhance spreading, although to a lesser extent compared to full length liprin-α1. No cumulative effects were observed after depletion of both liprin-α1 and GIT1, suggesting that the two proteins belong to the same signaling network in the regulation of cell spreading. Our data suggest that liprin-α1 may compete with paxillin for binding to GIT1, while binding of βPIX to GIT1 was unaffected by the presence of liprin-α1. Interestingly, GIT and liprin-α1 reciprocally regulated their subcellular localization, since liprin-α1 overexpression, but not the GIT binding-defective liprin-ΔCC3 mutant, affected the localization of endogenous GIT at peripheral and mature central focal adhesions, while the expression of a truncated, active form of GIT1 enhanced the localization of endogenous liprin-α1 at the edge of spreading cells. Moreover, GIT1 was required for liprin-α1-enhanced haptotatic migration, although the direct interaction between liprin-α1 and GIT1 was not needed. Our findings show that the functional interaction between liprin-α1 and GIT1 cooperate in the regulation of integrin-dependent cell spreading and motility on extracellular matrix. These findings and the possible competition of liprin-α1 with paxillin for binding to GIT1 suggest that alternative binding of GIT1 to either liprin-α1 or paxillin plays distinct roles in different phases of the protrusive activity in the cell.

Highlights

  • Cell migration requires complex molecular events that need to be finely regulated in time and space [1]

  • Our findings show that the functional interaction between liprin-a1 and GIT1 cooperate in the regulation of integrin-dependent cell spreading and motility on extracellular matrix

  • During cell spreading and migration on extracellular matrix, continuous reorganization of FAs and actin dynamics at the cell front are necessary for effective protrusion [33]

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Summary

Introduction

Cell migration requires complex molecular events that need to be finely regulated in time and space [1]. GIT1 (G protein-coupled receptor kinase-interacting protein 1) and GIT2/PKL form a family of multi-domain ArfGAP proteins with scaffolding activity, which are implicated in the regulation of cell adhesion and migration on extracellular matrix [2]. They interact via an SHD (Spa homology domain) with the components of the PIX (p21activated kinase-interacting exchange factor) family of guanine nucleotide exchanging factors for Rac and Cdc GTPases [3,4,5]. GIT proteins are involved in different pathways that regulate cell motility. GIT1 is involved in EGF-dependent vascular smooth muscle cell migration [12], while the second member of the family, GIT2 is a key player for chemotactic directionality in stimulated neutrophils [13], and is required for PDGF-dependent directional cell migration and cell polarity, but not for random migration [14]

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