α-adducin translocates to the nucleus upon loss of cell-cell adhesions

Chien Lin Chen, Yu Ping Lin, Ying Chu Lai, Hong Chen Chen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Scopus citations

Abstract

The F-actin binding protein adducin plays an important role in plasma membrane stability, cell motility and cell-cell junctions. In this study, we demonstrate that α-adducin is mainly localized in the nucleus of sparsely cultured epithelial cells, whereas it is localized at cell-cell junctions when the cells are grown to confluence. Disruption of cell-cell adhesions induces a nuclear translocation of α-adducin. Conversely, α-adducin is redistributed to the cytoplasm and cell-cell junctions in the process of establishing cell-cell adhesions. We identify that α-adducin contains a bipartite nuclear localization signal (NLS) in its COOH-terminal tail domain and a nuclear export signal in its neck region. The phosphorylation of α-adducin at Ser716 that is immediately adjacent to the NLS appears to antagonize the function of the NLS. Moreover, we show that depletion of α-adducin has adverse effects on cell-cell adhesions and, to our surprise, cell proliferation. The impaired cell proliferation is associated with mitotic defects characterized by disorganized mitotic spindles, aberrant chromosomal congregation/segregation and abnormal centrosomes. Taken together, our results not only reveal the mechanism for α-adducin to shuttle between the cytoplasm and nucleus, but also highlight a potential role for α-adducin in mitosis.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1327-1340
Number of pages14
JournalTraffic
Volume12
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2011

Keywords

  • Adducin
  • Cell-cell junctions
  • Mitosis
  • Nuclear translocation
  • Phosphorylation

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