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      Rac and Cdc42 play distinct roles in regulating PI(3,4,5)P 3 and polarity during neutrophil chemotaxis

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          Abstract

          Neutrophils exposed to chemoattractants polarize and accumulate polymerized actin at the leading edge. In neutrophil-like HL-60 cells, this asymmetry depends on a positive feedback loop in which accumulation of a membrane lipid, phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PI[3,4,5]P 3), leads to activation of Rac and/or Cdc42, and vice versa. We now report that Rac and Cdc42 play distinct roles in regulating this asymmetry. In the absence of chemoattractant, expression of constitutively active Rac stimulates accumulation at the plasma membrane of actin polymers and of GFP-tagged fluorescent probes for PI(3,4,5)P 3 (the PH domain of Akt) and activated Rac (the p21-binding domain of p21-activated kinase). Dominant negative Rac inhibits chemoattractant-stimulated accumulation of actin polymers and membrane translocation of both fluorescent probes and attainment of morphologic polarity. Expression of constitutively active Cdc42 or of two different protein inhibitors of Cdc42 fails to mimic effects of the Rac mutants on actin or PI(3,4,5)P 3. Instead, Cdc42 inhibitors prevent cells from maintaining a persistent leading edge and frequently induce formation of multiple, short lived leading edges containing actin polymers, PI(3,4,5)P 3, and activated Rac. We conclude that Rac plays a dominant role in the PI(3,4,5)P 3-dependent positive feedback loop required for forming a leading edge, whereas location and stability of the leading edge are regulated by Cdc42.

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          Most cited references34

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          Rho GTPases Control Polarity, Protrusion, and Adhesion during Cell Movement

          Cell movement is essential during embryogenesis to establish tissue patterns and to drive morphogenetic pathways and in the adult for tissue repair and to direct cells to sites of infection. Animal cells move by crawling and the driving force is derived primarily from the coordinated assembly and disassembly of actin filaments. The small GTPases, Rho, Rac, and Cdc42, regulate the organization of actin filaments and we have analyzed their contributions to the movement of primary embryo fibroblasts in an in vitro wound healing assay. Rac is essential for the protrusion of lamellipodia and for forward movement. Cdc42 is required to maintain cell polarity, which includes the localization of lamellipodial activity to the leading edge and the reorientation of the Golgi apparatus in the direction of movement. Rho is required to maintain cell adhesion during movement, but stress fibers and focal adhesions are not required. Finally, Ras regulates focal adhesion and stress fiber turnover and this is essential for cell movement. We conclude that the signal transduction pathways controlled by the four small GTPases, Rho, Rac, Cdc42, and Ras, cooperate to promote cell movement.
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            A brain serine/threonine protein kinase activated by Cdc42 and Rac1.

            A new brain serine/threonine protein kinase may be a target for the p21ras-related proteins Cdc42 and Rac1. The kinase sequence is related to that of the yeast protein STE20, implicated in pheromone-response pathways. The kinase complexes specifically with activated (GTP-bound) p21, inhibiting p21 GTPase activity and leading to kinase autophosphorylation and activation. Autophosphorylated kinase has a decreased affinity for Cdc42/Rac, freeing the p21 for further stimulatory activities or downregulation by GTPase-activating proteins. This bimolecular interaction provides a model for studying p21 regulation of mammalian phosphorylation signalling pathways.
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              Localized Rac activation dynamics visualized in living cells.

              Signaling proteins are thought to be tightly regulated spatially and temporally in order to generate specific and localized effects. For Rac and other small guanosine triphosphatases, binding to guanosine triphosphate leads to interaction with downstream targets and regulates subcellular localization. A method called FLAIR (fluorescence activation indicator for Rho proteins) was developed to quantify the spatio-temporal dynamics of the Rac1 nucleotide state in living cells. FLAIR revealed precise spatial control of growth factor-induced Rac activation, in membrane ruffles and in a gradient of activation at the leading edge of motile cells. FLAIR exemplifies a generally applicable approach for examining spatio-temporal control of protein activity.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Cell Biol
                The Journal of Cell Biology
                The Rockefeller University Press
                0021-9525
                1540-8140
                3 February 2003
                : 160
                : 3
                : 375-385
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology and Department of Medicine and the Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143
                [2 ]Institute of Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Freiburg, D-79104 Freiburg, Germany
                [3 ]Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322
                Author notes

                Address correspondence to Henry R. Bourne, S-1212, Box 0450, University of California School of Medicine, 513 Parnassus Ave., San Francisco, CA 94143. Tel.: (415) 476-8161. Fax: (415) 476-5292. E-mail: bourne@ 123456cmp.ucsf.edu

                Article
                200208179
                10.1083/jcb.200208179
                2172671
                12551955
                c32d23e3-71d9-4533-b0c7-a51241d6dc4f
                Copyright © 2003, The Rockefeller University Press
                History
                : 30 August 2002
                : 18 December 2002
                : 18 December 2002
                Categories
                Article

                Cell biology
                actin; pi 3-kinase; chemoattractant; pseudopod; positive feedback
                Cell biology
                actin; pi 3-kinase; chemoattractant; pseudopod; positive feedback

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