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      CLIC4 is regulated by RhoA-mDia2 signaling through Profilin-1 binding to modulate filopodia length

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          Abstract

          CLIC4 is a cytosolic protein implicated in diverse actin-based processes, including integrin trafficking, cell adhesion and tubulogenesis. CLIC4 is rapidly recruited to the plasma membrane by G12/13-coupled receptor agonists and then partly co-localizes with β1 integrins. Receptor-mediated CLIC4 translocation depends on actin polymerization, but the mechanism and functional significance of CLIC4 trafficking are unknown. Here we show that RhoA activation by either LPA or EGF is necessary and sufficient for CLIC4 translocation, with a regulatory role for the RhoA effector mDia2, an inducer of actin polymerization. We find that CLIC4 directly interacts with the G-actin-binding protein Profilin-1 via conserved residues that are required for CLIC4 trafficking and lie in a concave surface. Consistently, silencing of Profilin-1 impaired CLIC4 trafficking induced by either LPA or EGF. CLIC4 knockdown promoted the formation of long integrin-dependent filopodia, a phenotype rescued by wild-type CLIC4 but not by trafficking-incompetent CLIC4(C35A). Our results establish CLIC4 as a Profilin-1-binding protein and suggest that CLIC4 translocation provides a feedback mechanism to modulate mDia2/Profilin-1-driven cortical actin assembly and membrane protrusion.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          February 02 2018
          Article
          10.1101/259259
          fd74d3f8-4940-497d-ad10-90b67fc469cf
          © 2018
          History

          Cell biology,Comparative biology
          Cell biology, Comparative biology

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