Abstract

The keratin intermediate filament cytoskeleton protects epithelial cells against various types of stress and is involved in fundamental cellular processes such as signaling, differentiation and organelle trafficking. These functions rely on the cell type-specific arrangement and plasticity of the keratin system. It has been suggested that these properties are regulated by a complex cycle of assembly and disassembly. The exact mechanisms responsible for the underlying molecular processes, however, have not been clarified. Accumulating evidence implicates the cytolinker plectin in various aspects of the keratin cycle, i.e., by acting as a stabilizing anchor at hemidesmosomal adhesion sites and the nucleus, by affecting keratin bundling and branching and by linkage of keratins to actin filament and microtubule dynamics. In the present study we tested these hypotheses. To this end, plectin was downregulated by shRNA in vulvar carcinoma-derived A431 cells. As expected, integrin β4- and BPAG-1-positive hemidesmosomal structures were strongly reduced and cytosolic actin stress fibers were increased. In addition, integrins α3 and β1 were reduced. The experiments furthermore showed that loss of plectin led to a reduction in keratin filament branch length but did not alter overall mechanical properties as assessed by indentation analyses using atomic force microscopy and by displacement analyses of cytoplasmic superparamagnetic beads using magnetic tweezers. An increase in keratin movement was observed in plectin-depleted cells as was the case in control cells lacking hemidesmosome-like structures. Yet, keratin turnover was not significantly affected. We conclude that plectin alone is not needed for keratin assembly and disassembly and that other mechanisms exist to guarantee proper keratin cycling under steady state conditions in cultured single cells.

Highlights

  • Keratins are main components of the epithelial cytoskeleton which are anchored to desmosomes at cell-cell junctions and to hemidesmosomes at the cell-extracellular matrix interface [1, 2]

  • The effect of plectin downregulation by shRNA was first tested by transient transduction of vulvar carcinoma-derived A431 cells (Fig 1)

  • Plectin was clearly detectable in non-transduced cells, where it co-localized in part with keratin filaments and integrin β4-clusters

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Summary

Introduction

Keratins are main components of the epithelial cytoskeleton which are anchored to desmosomes at cell-cell junctions and to hemidesmosomes at the cell-extracellular matrix interface [1, 2]. The keratin cytoskeleton has been shown to be subject to a continuous cycle of assembly and disassembly [6, 8] In cultured cells, this keratin cycle is characterized by nucleation of keratin particles in the cell periphery, followed by elongation and end-on integration of filamentous particles into the peripheral network. This keratin cycle is characterized by nucleation of keratin particles in the cell periphery, followed by elongation and end-on integration of filamentous particles into the peripheral network These processes are coupled to actindependent inward transport, which continues as the filaments within the network mature into thicker bundles. Based on its binding capacity for actin filaments and keratins [24, 25], plectin could link inward transport of keratins to actin retrograde flow in a piggyback-fashion in the cell periphery

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