Abstract

Glomerular visceral epithelial cells, also known as podocytes, are critical to both normal kidney function and the development of kidney disease. Podocyte actin cytoskeleton and their highly specialized cell-cell junctions (also called slit diaphragm complexes) play key roles in controlling glomerular filtration. Myosin 1e (myo1e) is an actin-based molecular motor that is expressed in renal glomeruli. Disruption of the Myo1e gene in mice and humans promotes podocyte injury and results in the loss of the integrity of the glomerular filtration barrier. Here, we have used biochemical and microscopic approaches to determine whether myo1e is associated with the slit diaphragm complexes in glomerular podocytes. Myo1e was consistently enriched in the slit diaphragm fraction during subcellular fractionation of renal glomeruli and colocalized with the slit diaphragm markers in mouse kidney. Live cell imaging studies showed that myo1e was recruited to the newly formed cell-cell junctions in cultured podocytes, where it colocalized with the actin filament cables aligned with the nascent contacts. Myo1e-null podocytes expressing FSGS-associated myo1e mutant (A159P) did not efficiently assemble actin cables along new cell-cell junctions. We have mapped domains in myo1e that were critical for its localization to cell-cell junctions and determined that the SH3 domain of myo1e tail interacts with ZO-1, a component of the slit diaphragm complex and tight junctions. These findings suggest that myo1e represents a component of the slit diaphragm complex and may contribute to regulating junctional integrity in kidney podocytes.

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