Austrian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Molecular Biology, Department of Cell Biology, A-5020 Salzburg, Austria
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Abstract |
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By co-injecting fluorescent tubulin and vinculin into fish fibroblasts we have revealed a "cross talk" between microtubules and early sites of substrate contact. This mutuality was first indicated by the targeting of vinculin-rich foci by microtubules during their growth towards the cell periphery. In addition to passing directly over contact sites, the ends of single microtubules could be observed to target several contacts in succession or the same contact repetitively, with intermittent withdrawals. Targeting sometimes involved side-stepping, or the major re-routing of a microtubule, indicative of a guided, rather than a random process. The paths that microtubules followed into contacts were unrelated to the orientation of stress fiber assemblies and targeting occurred also in mouse fibroblasts that lacked a system of intermediate filaments. Further experiments with microtubule inhibitors showed that adhesion foci can: (a) capture microtubules and stabilize them against disassembly by nocodazole; and (b), act as preferred sites of microtubule polymerization, during either early recovery from nocodazole, or brief treatment with taxol. From these and other findings we speculate that microtubules are guided into substrate contact sites and through the motor-dependent delivery of signaling molecules serve to modulate their development. It is further proposed this modulation provides the route whereby microtubules exert their influence on cell shape and polarity.
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Introduction |
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LOCOMOTING metazoan cells rely primarily on the dynamic reorganization of their actin cytoskeleton to
move. But depending on the cell type, the persistence and directionality of movement is more or less dependent on an intact microtubule system. In the presence
of microtubule inhibitors, fibroblasts typically lose the
ability to polarize (Vasiliev and Gelfand, 1976) and leukocytes and macrophages may still move, but undergo random, instead of directional migration in a chemotactic gradient (Mareel and De Mets, 1984
). The rate of spreading
of freshly seeded fibroblasts on a glass substrate is also
markedly reduced when the microtubule system is disassembled and the spreading process, involving lamellipodium protrusion, is uncoordinated around the cell periphery (Ivanova et al., 1976
; De Brabander et al., 1977
).
According to these observations, Vasiliev and Gelfand
(1976)
attributed microtubules with a role in determining
the stable and active (protrusive) regions of the cytoplasm,
and thereby the polarity of a migrating cell. In this role,
microtubules were not seen as providers of structural support, but as cellular highways for relaying components or
signals which modulate the tension of the actin cytoskeleton (Vasiliev and Gelfand, 1976
; De Brabander et al.,
1977
). More direct evidence in support of this view is now
beginning to emerge.
In consequence of the seminal studies of Hall and colleagues (Ridley, 1996; Tapon and Hall, 1997
) signaling
pathways are currently being unveiled that mediate the assembly of the different subcompartments of the actin cytoskeleton. Thus, protrusion of lamellipodia and filopodia
are signaled by the small G proteins rac and cdc42, respectively; and the assembly of stress fibers and focal contacts required for anchorage are signalled by rho. Significantly,
the assembly and activity of both the protrusive and anchorage compartments of the actin cytoskeleton are influenced by microtubules, suggesting that they may well
modulate these same signaling pathways. In this connection, drug-mediated microtubule disruption stimulates the
growth of stress fibers and focal contacts (Lloyd et al., 1977
), an effect that is particularly dramatic in starved cells (Bershadsky et. al. 1996; Enomoto, 1996
), and which correlates with the activation of rho (Enomoto, 1996
).
In the same vein, the decreased rate of spreading of cells
in the presence of microtubule inhibitors correlates with
slower rates of lamellipodia protrusion (Bershadsky et al.,
1991), which is dependent on rac. A similar effect is seen
in non-inhibited cells microinjected with a function-blocking kinesin antibody (Rodionov et al., 1993
), suggesting
perhaps that components transported by molecular motors may modulate or be involved in rac signaling. Notably, the translocation of fibroblasts and neuronal growth cones is also blocked by low concentrations of microtubule
inhibitors that do not destroy microtubules, but only inhibit their growth dynamics (Liao et al., 1995
; Tanaka et al.,
1995
). And an increase in the dynamic turnover of microtubules is seen in epithelial cells exposed to scatter factor
(Wadsworth and Battaro, 1996), which induces ruffling activity via the activation of rac (Ridley et al., 1995
). So the
dynamic turnover of microtubules appears to be essential
for them to perform at least some of their modulatory roles.
In a previous study from this laboratory (Rinnerthaler
et al., 1988) a frequent association was noted between vinculin-containing contact sites at the base of fibroblast
lamellipodia and the ends of microtubules that radiated
towards the cell periphery. This finding was taken to suggest the involvement of microtubules in the regulation of
contact site formation, thus providing a possible link between the microtubule and actin systems. But was this
colocalization fortuitous, or do microtubules directly target contact sites? And if so, how can this targeting activity
of microtubule ends into early contacts be reconciled with
the amplification in contact number and size seen on microtubule disassembly? With the aim of answering some of
these questions, we have investigated the interrelationship
between microtubules and contact sites in living cells co-injected with fluorescent tubulin and vinculin. From these
and additional experiments we show not only that microtubules directly and temporarily target contact sites, but
that contact sites can capture microtubules, stabilize them
against depolymerization and have the potential to nucleate microtubule assembly. The possible function of microtubule targeting in contact genesis and the involvement of
molecular motors is discussed.
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Materials and Methods |
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Cells
Three standard fibroblast cell lines were used in this study. Mouse embryo fibroblasts (Swiss 3T3) and rat embryo fibroblasts (REF-52) were maintained in DME with either 10% FBS (3T3) or 10% fetal calf serum (REF-52) at 37°C in the presence of 5% CO2. Goldfish fin fibroblasts (line CAR; American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD [No. CCL71]) were maintained in basal Eagle medium with HBSS and non-essential amino acids, and with 15% fetal calf serum at 25°C. Goldfish cells were plated onto coverslips coated with human serum fibronectin (Boehringer Mannheim GmbH, Vienna, Austria); for some experiments with REF-52 cells, both fibronectin and poly-L-lysine (p1274; Sigma Chemical Co., Vienna, Austria) coating was used. For poly-L-lysine coating, coverslips were incubated on a drop of aqueous 100 µg/ml poly-L-lysine for 30 min at room temperature, rinsed with water, and then dried. Fibronectin was coated onto poly-L-lysine-treated coverslips by incubation on a drop of 50 µg/ml fibronectin in PBS at 4°C overnight; after rinsing in PBS these coverslips were used without drying. 3T3 and REF-52 cells were otherwise grown on uncoated coverslips.
For investigations of focal complexes, a porcine fetal testicular cell line
(CRL 1746; American Type Culture Collection) was used. The vimentin
knockout cell line was obtained as a subclone of SV-40 transformed fibroblasts derived originally by Holwell et al. (1997) from a vimentin knockout mouse (Colucci-Guyon et al., 1994
) and generously donated by P. Traub (Max-Planck Institute, Heidelberg, Germany). These cells were
plated onto coverslips coated with 50 µg/ml human fibronectin (Boehringer Mannheim GmbH) to enhance spreading.
Microtubule Antagonists
Nocodazole (Sigma Chemical Co.) was added to culture medium from a 5 mg/ml stock solution in DMSO. Tests of the relative stability of microtubules were performed using doses of 1.5 µg/ml for 10-20 min or 2.5 µg/ml for 5-10 min. Complete depolymerization of microtubules was achieved using a concentration of 2.5 µg/ml for 3 h. In one series of microtubule nucleation experiments, a low concentration (0.05 µm) of taxol (paclitaxel; Sigma Chemical Co.) was added for 1 h to the culture medium. Taxol was stored as an 8.54 mg/ml (10 mM) stock solution in DMSO.
Microscopy of Living Cells
Cells were observed at 37°C (3T3, Ref-52) or room temperature (CAR) on an inverted microscope (Axiovert 135TV; Carl Zeiss, Vienna, Austria) equipped for epifluorescence and phase-contrast microscopy, using 40×/ NA 1.3 Plan-Neofluar or 100×/NA 1.4 Plan-Apochomat objectives, and up to 2.5 optovar intermediate magnification. Data were acquired and stored as 16-bit digital sequences using a back-illuminated, cooled CCD camera (Princeton Research Instruments, Inc., Princeton, NY) driven by IPLabs software (both from Visitron Systems, Eichenau, Germany).
Immunofluorescence
Cells were fixed for 15 min in a mixture of 3% paraformaldehyde, 0.2% glutaraldehyde, and 0.1% Triton X-100 in cytoskeleton buffer (CB; 10 mM
MES, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EGTA, 5 mM glucose, 5 mM MgCl2, pH 6.1),
and then rinsed in the same buffer. Free aldehyde groups were blocked by
incubation with 0.5 mg/ml NaBH4 in CB at 0°C for 5 min. The procedures
for antibody labeling, washing, and mounting were essentially as described by Herzog et al. (1994). As primary antibodies, we used the following: mouse monoclonal anti-vinculin IgG clone hVIN-1 (Sigma Chemical Co.); mouse monoclonal anti-paxillin IgG (Transduction Laboratories,
Lexington, KY); mouse monoclonal anti-Tyr-tubulin IgM clone 27C2
kindly provided by J. Wehland (GBF, Braunschweig, Germany); and Cy3
phalloidin kindly provided by H. Faulstich (Max-Planck Institute). Secondary antibodies and reagents were: goat anti-mouse IgG Cy3-conjugated (Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories, Inc., West Grove, PA);
goat anti-mouse Igs biotinylated (DAKO, Wien, Austria); Goat anti- mouse IgM (µ-chain specific) FITC-conjugated (Sigma Chemical Co.); FITC-streptavidin (DAKO); AMCA-avidin D (Vector Labs., Inc., Burlingame, CA). Preparations were observed and data recorded as described for microscopy of living cells.
Microinjection
Ready-made, sterile Femtotips II (Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany) were used for microinjection in conjunction with a Leitz Micromanipulator M (Leitz, Vienna, Austria) and an Eppendorf Microinjector 5242 (Eppendorf). The injection pressure was adjusted to 20-30 hPa in the back pressure mode to give a continuous outflow from the needle.
Proteins for Microinjection
Rhodamine-conjugated rat tubulin was kindly provided by R. Tournebize
and T. Hyman (European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Heidelberg,
Germany) and stored at 70°C in aliquots of 5 µl (~20 mg/ml) in BRB80
buffer (80 mM potassium Pipes, pH 6.8, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA). For
microinjection, aliquots were diluted 1:4 with Tris-acetate injection buffer
(2 mM Tris-acetate, pH 7.0, 50 mM KCl, 0.1 mM DTE), and then used on
the same day. Turkey vinculin, kindly provided by M. Gimona, was conjugated with Cy2 (Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights, IL) or TAMRA
(carboxytetramethylrhodamin; Molecular Probes, Inc., Eugene, OR) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The coupled protein (1 mg/ml)
was stored in Tris acetate injection buffer at
70°C in the presence of sucrose (2 mg sucrose per 1 mg protein) and was dialyzed against injection buffer before use.
Fluorescent proteins were injected separately, first vinculin, followed by tubulin 5-10 min later. Mixing of probes led to a decreased incorporation of vinculin at contact sites. Control experiments showed that microinjected Rh-vinculin localized to all contact sites labeled with antibodies applied to the same cells after fixation. Injected cells could be traced and observed for periods of up to 3 h after injection.
Analysis of Targeting in Advancing Lamellae and of Multiple Targeting
Six cells were chosen in which there was a net advance of the cell front over the recorded period. A rectangle, 4.5-µm wide and extending across the full width of the cell was then overlaid on the first frame of the video just behind and parallel to the cell front and maintained in the same position for the whole sequence. The percentage of contacts in this rectangle targeted by microtubules was then recorded for all frames in the sequence. The time between frames was either 17 (cells 2, 3, 4, and 6) or 22 s (cells 1 and 5). The total number of contacts per rectangle per cell ranged from 18 to 32. For each cell, a pattern of "dummy contacts" was also created by flipping the rectangle of real contacts by 180 degrees around a line perpendicular to the center of its long axis. The analysis was then repeated with this dummy contact pattern.
The analysis of multiple targeting of single contacts was carried out in the thin regions of spread cells and for a time period of 10 min. A dummy contact pattern was created as above and the analysis repeated. Data was collected for a total of 276 real contacts and 267 dummy contacts, in five cells. The two groups were compared using a Mann-Whitney Rank Sum test confirming a statistically significant difference (P < 0.0001). Statistical analysis was carried out using SigmaStat version 2.0 (Jandel Corp., San Rafael, CA).
Analysis of Microtubule Capture and of the Excursion of Microtubule Ends
Capture of microtubules was assayed in cells treated with 1.5 µg/ml nocodazole by measuring the length of those microtubules whose ends could be traced throughout the sequence. Zero time was taken as the time of nocodazole addition and the end point of each microtubule in the last frame of the sequence was registered as a length of 1 pixel. Lengths were traced using IPLabs segment tools and the frame separation was as above. The dynamic excursion of microtubule ends was measured from sequences recorded using an interval of 6 s between frames. All plots were made using KaleidaGraph version 2.3.1 (Synergy Software, Inc., Reading, PA).
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Results |
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Microtubules Target Peripheral, Substrate Contact Sites
Microtubules and vinculin-containing contact sites have characteristic and very different morphologies. It was therefore possible to follow them simultaneously in living goldfish fibroblasts when both were labeled with a rhodamine conjugate. Experiments were also performed with rhodamine tubulin and Cy-2 vinculin with essentially the same result; however, the spatial interrelationships could then only be ascertained after image superposition and correction for any shifts resulting from filter changes. The video sequences shown are hence those taken in a single fluorescence channel, for which direct and immediate correlations could be made.
In line with earlier studies (Sammak and Borisy, 1988)
we observed that peripheral microtubules grew radially towards expanding, lamella regions of the cell periphery. For
cells co-injected with fluorescent vinculin a striking correlation was seen between the paths followed by microtubules and the position of newly formed contact sites (Fig.
1). In this example of a moving cell front, all microtubules
passed through or terminated in vinculin containing contact sites (highlighted with neighboring asterisks). The microtubule marked by an arrowhead successively targeted
four contact sites during its extension to the cell periphery.
To do this, a sidestep was necessary at time 1 min 8 s. Another microtubule at the top of the figure, retracted from
its contact target (marked by the upper asterisk at 4'15'' in
Fig. 1) at 5 min 23 s, targeted it again at 6 min 31 s, and
then retracted once more at 8 min 30 s.
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A quantitative analysis of this targeting activity in the advancing lamella regions of six cells is shown in Fig. 2. The way the analysis was carried out is illustrated in Fig. 2 B (see also Materials and Methods). Briefly, the percentage of contacts targeted by microtubules was determined for a given set of contacts confined within a rectangle overlaid just behind the cell front in the first video frame. The targeting of the set of real contacts was compared with that of an equivalent set of dummy contacts created by flipping the real contact pattern 180 degrees (Fig. 2 B). As shown (Fig. 2 A), at least 75% of the real contacts were targeted during the video sequence (7-20 min) as compared with a score of ~25% for the dummy contacts. These data and the following data indicated that targeting was a directed and not a random process.
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Repetitive Targeting, Multi-directional Targeting, and Re-routing
The specificity of the targeting interactions was underlined by the variety of ways in which microtubules reached contact sites or became diverted from one contact to another. The targeting of two widely separated contacts by the same microtubule was notable in this connection and two examples are shown in Fig. 3, A and B. The same examples include the not uncommon instance of repetitive targeting of the same contact.
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In the first example, one microtubule (Fig. 3 A, marked 2 at 0'44'') targeted one contact (open arrowhead) three times, at 0 min 44 s, 2 min 12 s, and 4 min 24 s, and during this period managed to target also a second contact, 3 µm removed from the first (solid arrowhead). This involved a complicated exercise in shortening (Fig. 3 A, 2'34''), turning, and growth into the second contact (3'40''), followed by shortening (4'02''), and growth again into the first (4'24''). The neighboring microtubules 1 and 3 also targeted the same peripheral contact sites. In the second example (Fig. 3 B), a microtubule targeted two peripheral contacts situated either side of a retracting cell edge. The first contact (Fig. 3 B, solid arrowhead) was targeted at 1 min 25 s, and this was followed by shrinkage to one of the more proximal contact sites that the microtubule had passed through on its way to the cell periphery (asterisk, 2'50''). The microtubule then grew into the second peripheral contact (Fig. 3 B, open arrowhead, 4'49'') in a direction approximately normal to the first, targeting this contact twice (at 4'49'' and 5'57'').
Single contact sites could also be targeted by several microtubules approaching from different directions, indicating again the lack of randomness of the phenomenon. In the example shown in Fig. 3 C, one contact (solid arrowhead) was targeted successively by three microtubules (Fig. 3 C, 1, 2, and 3) whose directions of approach subtended a total angle of around 90 degrees. Fig. 4 shows a quantitative analysis of this multiple targeting activity for individual contacts in the lamella regions of spread cells. The number of times real contacts were targeted was compared with the scores for dummy contacts generated in the same cytoplasmic area, as above. For a total of 270 contacts assayed, the real contacts were targeted up to nine times in the selected time frame of 10 min, as compared with a maximum of three times for the dummy contacts (Fig. 4 A). Further, the number of untargeted dummy contacts was three times higher than the number of real contacts not targeted in the 10-min time frame. The same data, collected in Fig. 4 B, show that real contacts had a probability of being targeted by 1.5 (± 0.09) microtubules and dummy contacts by 0.4 (± 0.04) microtubules.
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Influence of Contact Association on Dynamic Instability
By tracing the excursions of microtubule ends (seven microtubules in four cells) as they approached and passed over vinculin containing sites, we could define three types of behavior (for this analysis a period of 6 s between frames was used over a total time of up to 4 min). In the first case, fluctuations in microtubule length appeared to be unaffected by the proximity of a contact site (11 out of 30 contacts). In the second, targeting was followed by shrinkage of the microtubule, which could be followed by regrowth into the same contact in a repetitive fashion (7 out of 30 contacts). In the third case, microtubules paused in (up to 20 s; 10 out of 30) or remained associated with a contact site (2 out of 30), the latter situation being most commonly observed with large contacts at the cell periphery.
Contact Sites Stabilize Targeting Microtubules Against Depolymerization by Nocodazole
Experiments in which 3T3 cells were treated with nocodazole at limiting concentrations (0.03-0.2 µg/ml, 30 min) or for short times (2.5 µg/ml, 5 min; or 1.5 µg/ml, 10 min) demonstrated that microtubules whose ends colocalized with vinculin-containing contact sites were conferred with additional resistance to depolymerization (Fig. 5, A-D). The type of contact site showing this property was predominantly associated with the ends of stress fibers close to the cell front.
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The stabilization effect was more dramatically apparent in video sequences of fibroblasts co-injected with tubulin and vinculin (Fig. 5 E). The times indicate the period after addition of nocodazole (1.5 µg/ml). Whereas most microtubules in this example shrank rapidly towards the cell body, one (Fig. 5 E, white arrowheads) was stabilized by a contact site over which it had passed (arrow). The tethered, plus end of the microtubule was protected from depolymerization by the contact and eventually the minus end (Fig. 5 E, black arrowhead) shrank towards (time 10'46'') and eventually, into the contact site (not shown). This behavior was quantitated in five different cells for microtubules whose ends could be traced throughout the video sequences. From a total of 47 microtubules analyzed, 18 shrank without pause, 18 were transitorily stabilized, with a pause at a contact of 40-300-s duration before finally shrinking and 11 were stabilized and not released by the end of the sequence, remaining in association with a contact site for up to 12 min.
Contact Sites Can Capture and Stabilize Microtubules
Further examples of nocodazole-treated cells showed that
contact sites can capture shrinking microtubules that were
initially remote from a contact and temporarily prevent
their further depolymerization. One such example (Fig. 6)
shows a sequence of events before () and after (+) addition of nocodazole (1.5 µg/ml). In this series, a microtubule (Fig. 6, arrowhead) oriented along the cell periphery began to shrink and at the same time moved inward, so
that it lay over a contact site (arrow, +1'42''). Shrinking
continued rapidly down to the contact site (Fig. 6,
+2'16''), but then abruptly stopped for a further 3 min. Finally (Fig. 6, +5'23''), the microtubule was released and
shrank rapidly into the main cell body. The same type of
behavior was observed for microtubule fragments that
were spontaneously produced in cells not treated with nocodazole. Such fragments were seen to be captured at a
contact site and were then observed to grow with one end
tethered to the contact (not shown).
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Decreased Stabilization of Microtubules in Cells Lacking Focal Contacts
It has formerly been shown that spreading 3T3 cells require extracellular matrix molecules such as fibronectin, to
form focal contacts: in the absence of matrix and on polylysine, spreading occurs, but no contact foci are detected
(Hotchin and Hall, 1995). The same result is found with
REF 52 fibroblasts. On fibronectin substrates, these cells
form particularly prominent focal adhesions (Chrzanowska-Wodnicka and Burridge, 1996
; Fig. 7 A) whereas on polylysine only a speckled labeling of vinculin, beneath
wide lamellipodia is observed (Fig. 7 E). In these two situations the microtubule distribution is markedly different
(Fig. 7, B and F): on fibronectin, many microtubules lie
parallel to the cell periphery, whereas on polylysine they
are radially distributed. In each case however, microtubules remain individual and are not bundled.
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The relative stability of microtubules under these two substrate conditions was tested by exposure of cells to 1.5 µg/ml nocodazole for 10 min. As shown in Fig. 7 D, these conditions had little effect on the peripheral microtubules of cells grown on fibronectin, but caused the rapid disassembly of those in cells attached to polylysine (compare Fig. 7, F and H).
Nobes and Hall (1995) have described a punctate type
of contact, termed focal complexes, at the periphery of
3T3 cells stimulated with rac that are not associated with
actin stress fiber bundles. Similar complexes are pronounced in cells of a porcine testicular cell line (Fig. 8 A).
These peripheral, focal complexes are targeted by microtubules, but are incompetent (in contrast to focal contacts in the same cell) to prevent depolymerization of microtubules in the presence of nocodazole (Fig. 8 B).
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Microtubule Guidance to Contacts Involves Neither Stress Fiber Bundles Nor Intermediate Filaments
From images of cells triple labeled for vinculin, actin, and tubulin it was evident that the path a microtubule look into a contact site bore no relation to that of the actin filament bundles which terminated in the same site (Fig. 9).
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To assess the possible role of intermediate filaments in
guiding microtubules to contact sites we analyzed an embryo fibroblast cell line derived from a vimentin knockout
mouse (Colucci-Guyon et al., 1994). In these knockout
cells, as well as in vimentin positive controls (not shown),
microtubules were observed to target contact sites (Fig. 8
C) and were also stabilized by contact sites in the presence
of nocodazole (Fig. 8 D). In addition, video sequences of
vimentin-negative cells co-injected with vinculin and tubulin displayed the same dynamic targeting of contact sites as
already described above.
Focal Contacts Can Act as Microtubule Nucleation Sites
Under conditions of forced microtubule assembly (in the presence of taxol) or during recovery from microtubule disassembly by nocodazole, focal adhesions were found to be preferred sites of microtubule nucleation (Fig. 10). Fig. 10, A and B show the periphery of a 3T3 cell that had been exposed to taxol (0.05 µm) for 60 min. The growth of non-centrosomal microtubules was centered around the peripheral termini of stress fiber bundles, corresponding to focal adhesion sites. And following the washout of nocodazole with fresh medium, after complete depolymerization of the microtubule network, the first seeds of microtubule assembly were invariably associated with focal adhesions (Fig. 10, C-E).
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Discussion |
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By following simultaneously the assembly of microtubules and the formation of substrate adhesion sites we have now been able to reveal a dramatic and specific interaction between the two. Since microtubules can side-step to target a contact, or make excursions from one contact to another and back again, as well as target a single contact repetitively, we are not dealing with a stochastic process but one of deliberate nature and intention. This was also confirmed by statistical analysis of contact targeting in moving and spread cells. Whereas most of our observations have been made with fish fibroblasts, targeting also has been observed in fibroblasts from rat, mouse, and chicken (our unpublished observations) indicating that it is a general phenomenon.
In some functional respects, the parallels between focal
adhesions and kinetochores (Mitchison, 1990; Hyman,
1995
) cannot be overlooked: they are each targeted by microtubule plus ends, they can capture microtubules and
have the potential to nucleate microtubule assembly. For
kinetochores, specific microtubule motors resident at
these chromosomal foci have been implicated in capturing and tethering microtubules (Hyman, 1995
). As we have
shown, neither stress fibers nor intermediate filaments
provide the cues for guiding microtubules into contacts
and since contact structures are covered with actin filament arrays, presumably impermeable to microtubules,
components within the contact are unlikely to be involved
in either guidance or capture. A possible way in which microtubules could be guided to contacts is depicted in Fig.
11. In this scheme, one or a few actin filaments that splay
out from early contact sites tether approaching microtubules and orient their growth. There are already ample examples of proteins that can cross-link actin filaments and
microtubules (Gavin, 1997
) and such components, or motors could align a microtubule in parallel with a tethering
actin filament and direct it into the contact site. Shrinkage
of the microtubule away from the tethering filament(s) would allow it to adopt another route, before being tethered once again by filaments from the same or another,
early contact. Further work will be required to establish
the nature of this guidance process.
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A switch from microtubule growth to shrinkage was often connected with the targeting of peripheral contacts or very early contacts, whereas stabilization was observed only in larger, presumably more mature contacts. Stabilization may thus require more prominent focal contact structures or additional components that are specifically associated with them. To explain the stabilization of microtubules at contact sites we suggest that regulatory factors localize to focal adhesions that do not bind to microtubules, but only modify MAPs or other components, already attached to microtubules, to activate their stabilizing activity. These factors could be downstream from rho in the signaling pathway. The microtubule-nucleating activity of focal contacts could be explained in similar terms.
During revision of the present work, a paper by Cook et al.
(1998) appeared, showing that activation of rho causes stabilization of microtubules in starved cells. Our data demonstrate the mechanism of this stabilization; namely, the
activation of rho leads to contact formation and then microtubules can be captured and stabilized at rho-induced
focal contacts. The stabilization of microtubules in cytochalasin-treated starved cells (Cook et al., 1998
) on rho activation is also consistent with the present findings, since under these conditions focal contacts can still form (Nobes
and Hall, 1995
; our unpublished observations).
As already noted (see Introduction) the disassembly of
microtubules in normal (Lloyd et al., 1977) or starved cells
(Bershadsky et al., 1996
; Enomoto, 1996
) leads to the stimulation of contact formation, associated with the activation
of rho (Enomoto, 1996
), tyrosine kinases, and contractility
(Danowski, 1989
; Bershadsky et al., 1996
; Chrzanowska-Wodnicka and Burridge, 1996
). The same stimulation was
not seen when microtubules were stabilized by taxol, but
taxol does induce a rearrangement of contact sites in fibroblasts to one reminiscent of epithelial cells (Pletjushkina et al., 1994
), underlining again a link between microtubule
and contact dynamics. Contact enhancement by microtubule disassembly has been attributed to a tension-controlling effect of microtubules on the actin system (Bershadsky et al., 1996
) and more specifically, to the association
of signal molecules with the microtubule cytoskeleton (Enomoto, 1996
). Enomoto (1996)
has suggested that microtubules bind signaling factors that are released either in
a controlled way under normal conditions, or globally
when microtubules are disrupted. Our findings give reason
to speculate that microtubules may in fact deliver signaling
molecules in a site-directed manner to contact sites, that
act to regulate their maturation.
The idea that microtubules play a role in the organization of the actin cytoskeleton of fibroblasts and hence on
their form and polarity is one that has been continually reiterated (Vasiliev and Gelfand 1976; Bershadsky and Vasiliev, 1986
). More recently, Waterman-Storer and Salmon
(1997)
have confirmed the penetration of microtubules
into the active lamellipodia of motile cells, where they
have been previously localized (Lindberg et al., 1981
; Small and Rinnerthaler, 1985
) and have again emphasized
the dynamic interaction between the microtubule and actin systems. Our present results indicate that the dynamics
of microtubules and contacts appear to be interdependent
phenomena. Thus, the dynamics of individual microtubules could be strongly modified over focal contact sites, seen either as a switch from growth to shrinkage or the stabilization of a microtubule end in the focal contact. This
mutual interdependence of dynamic behavior suggests
that feedback mechanisms may operate during microtubule-focal contact interactions, which could serve to modulate the dosing of molecular regulators. In this respect, the common dependence of both microtubule polymerization and the activation of rho proteins by GTP should not
be overlooked.
In conclusion, our results indicate that it is the anchorage machinery of the cell that serves as the interface between the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons. Microtubules appear to exert their effect on cell form by influencing the lifetime and stability of the contacts that a cell makes with its substrate and we contend that this constitutes the basis of a general underlying mechanism for the determination of cell polarity and guidance. Ongoing efforts are aimed at correlating the contact-targeting activity of microtubules with reorganizations of the actin cytoskeleton and towards establishing whether or not molecular motors in conjunction with signaling molecules play a role in this process.
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Footnotes |
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Received for publication 18 December 1998 and in revised form 18 May 1998.
Address all correspondence to J. Victor Small, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Molecular Biology, Department of Cell Biology, A-5020 Salzburg, Billrothstrasse 11, Austria. Tel.: ++43-662-63961. Fax: ++43-662-63961-40. E-mail: jvsmall{at}edvz.sbg.ac.atThe authors thank Drs T. Hyman and R. Tournebize for generous gifts of rhodamine tubulin and Profs. J. Wehland and H. Faulstich for antibodies and phalloidin, and Prof. P. Traub for the vimentin negative cell line. We also thank Dr. K. Anderson for invaluable help with video microscopy, Dr. M. Gimona for providing the vinculin probes, Ms. M. Schmittner for photography, Ms. B. Mies for assistance, and Ms. E. Eppacher for typing. Acknowledgments are also due to the referees and editors of this work for their constructive criticism of earlier versions.
These studies were supported in part by grants from the Austrian Science Research Council and the Austrian National Bank.
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Note Added in Proof |
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Quick time movies of the video sequences may be downloaded from the following page on the World Wide Web: http://www.imolbio.oeaw.ac.at/jbc.htm
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