Abstract

Spatial regulation of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) is required for chemotaxis in fibroblasts; however, the mechanism(s) by which PKA regulates the cell migration machinery remain largely unknown. Here we report that one function of PKA during platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-induced chemotaxis was to promote membrane ruffling by regulating phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PIP(3)) dynamics. Inhibition of PKA activity dramatically altered membrane dynamics and attenuated formation of peripheral membrane ruffles in response to PDGF. PKA inhibition also significantly decreased the number and size of PIP(3)-rich membrane ruffles in response to uniform stimulation and to gradients of PDGF. This ruffling defect was quantified using a newly developed method, based on computer vision edge-detection algorithms. PKA inhibition caused a marked attenuation in the bulk accumulation of PIP(3) following PDGF stimulation, without effects on PI3-kinase (PI3K) activity. The deficits in PIP(3) dynamics correlated with a significant inhibition of growth factor-induced membrane recruitment of endogenous Akt and Rac activation in PKA-inhibited cells. Simultaneous inhibition of PKA and Rac had an additive inhibitory effect on growth factor-induced ruffling dynamics. Conversely, the expression of a constitutively active Rac allele was able to rescue the defect in membrane ruffling and restore the localization of a fluorescent PIP(3) marker to membrane ruffles in PKA-inhibited cells, even in the absence of PI3K activity. These data demonstrate that, like Rac, PKA contributes to PIP(3) and membrane dynamics independently of direct regulation of PI3K activity and suggest that modulation of PIP(3)/3-phosphatidylinositol (3-PI) lipids represents a major target for PKA in the regulation of PDGF-induced chemotactic events.

Highlights

  • Rac activation and membrane ruffling are common consequences of chemotactic stimulation in many cells, including the induction of cell migration of fibroblasts by peptide growth factors via receptor tyrosine kinases

  • protein kinase (PKA) is activated in response to growth factors [26, 27], and this activity is required for growth factor-mediated cell migration, in part through the regulation of Rac activity

  • Membrane Ruffle Dynamics— previous studies definitively demonstrated a role for PKA in overall cell migration, they did not provide any clues as to the morphological deficits elicited by inhibition of PKA

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Summary

Introduction

Rac activation and membrane ruffling are common consequences of chemotactic stimulation in many cells, including the induction of cell migration of fibroblasts by peptide growth factors via receptor tyrosine kinases. As observed earlier in response to global PDGF stimulation, cells in which PKA was inhibited pharmacologically (by H89) or genetically (by expression of mCherry-PKI) displayed a lack of dynamic membrane ruffling when subjected to a PDGF gradient (Fig. 4, B and D, upper panels; supplemental Movies 5C and 6C, respectively).

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