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The scaffolding protein ZO-1 coordinates actomyosin and epithelial apical specializations in vitro and in vivo.


ABSTRACT: Polarized epithelia assemble into sheets that compartmentalize organs and generate tissue barriers by integrating apical surfaces into a single, unified structure. This tissue organization is shared across organs, species, and developmental stages. The processes that regulate development and maintenance of apical epithelial surfaces are, however, undefined. Here, using an intestinal epithelial-specific knockout (KO) mouse and cultured epithelial cells, we show that the tight junction scaffolding protein zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1) is essential for development of unified apical surfaces in vivo and in vitro We found that U5 and GuK domains of ZO-1 are necessary for proper apical surface assembly, including organization of microvilli and cortical F-actin; however, direct interactions with F-actin through the ZO-1 actin-binding region (ABR) are not required. ZO-1 lacking the PDZ1 domain, which binds claudins, rescued apical structure in ZO-1-deficient epithelia, but not in cells lacking both ZO-1 and ZO-2, suggesting that heterodimerization with ZO-2 restores PDZ1-dependent ZO-1 interactions that are vital to apical surface organization. Pharmacologic F-actin disruption, myosin II motor inhibition, or dynamin inactivation restored apical epithelial structure in vitro and in vivo, indicating that ZO-1 directs epithelial organization by regulating actomyosin contraction and membrane traffic. We conclude that multiple ZO-1-mediated interactions contribute to coordination of epithelial actomyosin function and genesis of unified apical surfaces.

SUBMITTER: Odenwald MA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6231134 | biostudies-literature | 2018 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The scaffolding protein ZO-1 coordinates actomyosin and epithelial apical specializations <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i>.

Odenwald Matthew A MA   Choi Wangsun W   Kuo Wei-Ting WT   Singh Gurminder G   Sailer Anne A   Wang Yitang Y   Shen Le L   Fanning Alan S AS   Turner Jerrold R JR  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20180921 45


Polarized epithelia assemble into sheets that compartmentalize organs and generate tissue barriers by integrating apical surfaces into a single, unified structure. This tissue organization is shared across organs, species, and developmental stages. The processes that regulate development and maintenance of apical epithelial surfaces are, however, undefined. Here, using an intestinal epithelial-specific knockout (KO) mouse and cultured epithelial cells, we show that the tight junction scaffolding  ...[more]

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