Article |
Address correspondence to James G. Evans, Whitehead Institute, 9 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, MA 02142. Tel.: (617) 324-0300. Fax: (617) 258-7226. E-mail: jgevans{at}wi.mit.edu
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Abstract |
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Key Words: fluorescence microscopy; adhesion; microtubules; actin; kymography
* Abbreviations used in this paper: 2-, 3-, and 4-D, two, three, and four dimensional; IRM, interference reflection microscopy; PCP, podosome cluster precursor.
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Introduction |
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The macrophage is a model cell for studying the structure and dynamics of short-lived adhesions. Macrophages, like other monocyte-derived and RSV- or Src-transformed cells, adhere to the substratum through short-lived punctate adhesions called podosomes that are biochemically and structurally similar to focal complexes (Marchisio et al., 1987; Babb et al., 1997; Correia et al., 1999; Mizutani et al., 2002). Podosomes and focal complexes contain not only the same major cytoskeletal and membrane proteins including actin, integrins, vinculin, and talin (Geiger et al., 1984; Marchisio et al., 1988; Zamir et al., 2000), but also contain common signaling and scaffolding proteins including Ena/VASP (Reinhard et al., 1992), FAK/Pyk2, and paxillin (Volberg et al., 1995; Pfaff and Jurdic, 2001). Mutation of the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (Volkman et al., 2002) disrupts podosomes and impairs motility and function of monocyte-derived cells (Linder et al., 1999). Podosomes and focal complexes also turn over quickly in the leading lamella, suggesting a mechanism for coupling assembly with disassembly. Implicated in the assembly of cell adhesions are not only integrin receptors and actin, but also microtubules (Babb et al., 1997; Elbaum et al., 1999; Kaverina et al., 1999; Linder et al., 2000). Microtubules affect adhesion and the direction of cell movement by modulating the stability of cell adhesions and other actin-rich structures through Rho GTPases (Elbaum et al., 1999; Kaverina et al., 1999).
Although focal adhesions at the ends of stress fibers assemble de novo from clusters of integrin receptors (Smilenov et al., 1999), a fundamental question remains how focal complexes and podosomes assemble. To understand how cell adhesions continually assemble at the front of a cell, we GFP-tagged two major structural proteins of podosomes, ß-actin and L-fimbrin, and perturbed their assembly with microtubule inhibitors. Quantitative four-dimensional (4-D)* microscopy of the leading edge of IC-21 macrophages revealed that podosomes, like the dendritic actin network in the leading lamella, assemble by a pattern of polarized growth and branching. Although some podosomes arise de novo, at the leading edge the majority assemble from older podosomes or, more dramatically, fragment en masse from a larger podosome, the podosome cluster precursor (PCP). Based on the differential effects of microtubule inhibitors on podosome turnover, we suggest that the PCP is an important intermediate that generates new adhesions at the front of a cell.
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Results and discussion |
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Podosome dynamics: measurement of lifetime and actin turnover
Analysis of a single podosome cluster implicated growth and fragmentation as a mechanism for the generation of new podosomes. To study the assembly mechanism in more detail, we developed algorithms for measuring key parameters of podosome dynamics; the lifetime and fission frequency of all podosomes in an imaged volume (x, y, t) of the cell. Because it is implicated in organizing actin in podosomes (Babb et al., 1997), we also analyzed the dynamics of the actin cross-linking protein fimbrin. Analysis of time-lapse movies (Fig. 3 A) showed that ß-actinECFP and L-fimbrinEYFP colocalized to the core of each podosome. In kymographs, fimbrin revealed a pattern of dynamics that was coincident in space and time to that of actin (Fig. 3 B). Kymograph traces from actin and fimbrin showed both short-lived and longer-lived branching structures. We were unable to detect any temporal difference in actin and fimbrin localization during assembly or turnover of podosomes. These observations suggest that actin and fimbrin are closely coupled dynamically in podosomes.
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In contrast to the anteriorly polarized formation of podosome clusters at the leading edge, simple podosomes are distributed throughout the leading lamella (Fig. 4 B). Interestingly, their short lifetime is similar to the mean lifetime of a daughter podosome (Fig. 4 H). This similarity suggests that podosome lifetime may be preset and only extended by other factors such as growth, fission, or fusion.
Because podosomes lie close to the dendritic actin network of the leading lamella, we investigated whether podosome lifetime was coupled to turnover of the actin subunit pool. We photobleached selected areas of the lamella and performed FRAP analysis. Fluorescence recovered completely in photobleached podosomes within 2 min and a half-time of 20 s (Fig. 4, C and D), consistent with kymograph-based measurements of podosome lifetime and confirming the high rate of actin turnover in these structures (Ochoa et al., 2000). FRAP appeared uniform across the photobleached region, showing no preference for a subpopulation of podosomes based on size or location. Disruption of actin turnover by either sequestration of monomers using latrunculin A or stabilization of filaments using jasplakinolide had the expected result of inhibiting FRAP (Fig. 4 C; Ochoa et al., 2000). These results suggest that actin constantly turns over at similar rates in both simple and branched podosomes.
Regulation of podosome assembly by microtubules
Fragmentation and fusion of podosomes are novel mechanisms for assembly of adhesions. Because microtubules have been implicated in the assembly of cell adhesions and the actin cytoskeleton (Babb et al., 1997; Elbaum et al., 1999; Kaverina et al., 1999; Linder et al., 1999), we investigated whether microtubules influenced podosome assembly dynamics. In a preliminary work, we confirmed that podosomes contain a core of bundled actin filaments oriented perpendicularly to the substratum by EM (Trotter, 1981), and documented the close proximity of podosomes with microtubules (Fig. 4 E). All podosomes had an associated microtubule; either many podosomes distributed along the length of a single microtubule or a podosome intersected by several microtubules. When microtubules were stabilized with paclitaxel or destabilized with demecolcine, persistent cell motility ceased but podosomes remained intact (Fig. S1). The stability of podosomes was not caused by a decrease in the rate of actin turnover, as FRAP after paclitaxel and demecolcine treatment was identical to that in untreated cells (Fig. 4 C). Because several reports have suggested that microtubule interactions may increase the stability of short-lived adhesions (Kaverina et al., 1999; Linder et al., 2000), we analyzed kymographs of microtubule-perturbed cells and found a clear qualitative difference in the stability of branched podosomes, but no effect on simple podosomes (Fig. 4, F and G). Demecolcine shortened branched podosome lifetime, but when microtubules were stabilized with paclitaxel, the total lifetime of branched podosomes increased. Kymograph quantitation (Fig. 4 H) revealed that the mean lifetime of daughter podosomes was either decreased or increased by 25% when microtubules were perturbed with demecolcine or paclitaxel, respectively. The small changes in longevity of individual daughter podosomes were additive over time, leading to an
50% change in the mean lifetime of branched podosomes. Podosome assembly and turnover continued despite a lack of persistent leading edge extension, demonstrated by an absence of lateral progression in kymographs from demecolcine- and paclitaxel-treated cells (Fig. 4, F and G).
Because the lifetime of branched podosomes is dependent on the fusion and fission between podosomes, we investigated the effects of microtubule stability on the interactions between adjacent podosomes (Fig. 4 H). After microtubule destabilization, a twofold increase in the rates of fusion and fission events was measured. However, when microtubules were stabilized, the fusion rates decreased but the fission rates remained unchanged from controls. Changes in branching rates after microtubule disruption suggests that fusion and fission of podosomes are not random events occurring steadily over time. On the contrary, these observations suggest an active mechanism involving microtubules in the physical separation and aggregation of podosomes.
A model for polarized assembly of podosomes at the leading edge
Our analysis of podosome assembly and turnover reveals a growth and fragmentation pattern of cell adhesion assembly that positions new adhesions at the very front of the cell. Podosomes are similar to the short-lived precursors of focal adhesions, focal complexes which, like actin-rich membrane ruffles at the leading edge, are maintained by Rac activity associated with the presence of dynamic microtubules (Rottner et al., 1999; Waterman-Storer et al., 1999). Time-lapse analyses show that focal complexes assemble at the leading edge (Rottner et al., 1999), "maturing" into larger elongated stationary focal adhesions in response to elevated Rho activity until being disassembled in a perinuclear culling zone as the cell moves forward (Smilenov et al., 1999). Podosomes in moving macrophages are also confined to the periphery of the leading edge, but are disassembled outside of this zone. We speculate that in order to escape disassembly of the actin bundles, fusion and fission events enable podosomes to "step away" from the disassembly zone and toward the Rac-dependent dendritic actin network at the leading edge. The direction of podosome stepping may be influenced by physical interaction with microtubules involving Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein and its effector Cdc42 interacting protein-4 (Linder et al., 2000). In growth cones and the leading lamella, microtubules "steer" the direction of cell motility by influencing the stability of the actin cytoskeleton and cell adhesions (Tanaka and Kirschner, 1995; Buck and Zheng, 2002; Zhou et al., 2002). Although the exact molecular mechanism regulating fusion and fission of adhesions remains elusive, our results indicate that microtubules not only influence adhesion longevity, but also influence the mobility and interaction of cell adhesions.
To provide a framework for understanding podosome dynamics, we have developed a model for the assembly and turnover of podosomes (Fig. 5). At the leading edge, podosomes assemble de novo and are stabilized in a microtubule-dependent manner leading to fusion with a neighboring podosome, fission into daughter podosomes, or more dramatically, growth into a PCP and fission into a podosome cluster (Fig. 4). Not only is the PCP a novel adhesion-related structure, but repeated fusion and fission of podosomes is also a novel mode of behavior for nonmembrane-bound supramolecular structures. These processes supply new podosomes at the leading edge of the cell as it advances. The significance of this non-de novo assembly mechanism may be the ability of podosomes to transfer tension from an existing site to a nascent site, thus pulling the lamella forward as the leading edge extends.
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Materials and methods |
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Light and electron microscopy
IC-21 macrophages were maintained at 37°C using a heated microscope stage (Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.) and an objective heater (Bioptechs). Fluorescence was measured using a confocal microscope (LSM510 META; Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.). To limit photobleaching, the 25-mW argon laser was used at 0.23% and maximum scan speed. For ECFP/EYFP imaging, also using the confocal microscope (LSM510 META; Carl Zeiss MicroImaging, Inc.), a 560LP filter was used to eliminate ECFP bleed-through. For two-dimensional (2-D) time-lapse experiments, images were collected with 80100 nm sampling and 2.5-s intervals for FRAP analyses, or 15-s intervals for tracking experiments. Photobleaching was achieved by scanning a subregion 40 times with 458-nm, 488-nm, 514-nm, 543-nm, and 633-nm laser lines at maximum power, lasting 3 s. 4-D data were collected at 90 nm XY and 100 nm Z intervals (voxel volume of 0.81 aL) over an axial distance of 45 µm with 30-s intervals between each stack. Cells were fixed and stained as described previously (Correia et al., 1999). Anti-cd11c (DakoCytomation) was used at 1:50. Confocal IRM used the 633-nm laser with a 628638 nm emission filter (Izzard and Lochner, 1976).
For EM, a modification of the method described by Svitkina and Borisy (1998) was used. Cells were rinsed briefly in PEM-light buffer (80 mM Pipes, pH 7.1, 5 mM EGTA, pH 7.1, and 2 mM MgCl2) and extracted for 5 min at 26°C in PEM buffer (100 mM Pipes, pH 7.1, 2 mM EGTA, pH 7.1, and 2 mM MgCl2) with 1% Triton X-100 (Pierce Chemical Co.), 4 µM phalloidin (Molecular Probes, Inc.), and 10 µg/ml paclitaxel (Sigma-Aldrich). Extracted cells were rinsed in detergent-free buffer and fixed before critical-point drying and rotary shadowing with 13 nm platinum. For transmission images of carbon-coated platinum replicas, a microscope was used (model EM410; Philips).
Image processing and analysis
Images were deconvolved using Huygens2 (Scientific Volume Imaging). FRAP analyses used Huygens2 and Origin® software version 6.1 (OriginLab Corporation). Podosome tracking and half-life analyses were performed using NeuronTracer (Bitplane), Imaris3 (Bitplane), and Origin® software version 6.1. Perl scripts assembled and grouped object data from NeuronTracer and Huygens2. IRM images were Gaussian filtered at twice the sampling frequency to reduce noise before colocalization using Imaris3. 4-D data were rendered and volumes were calculated using Imaris3. Statistical analyses used Excel (Microsoft) and Origin® software version 6.1. Videos were generated using HyperCamTM (Hyperionics) and Flash 5 (Macromedia). Figures were assembled using Adobe Illustrator®.
Online supplemental material
Fig. S1 shows transmission EM images of detergent-extracted macrophages after cytoskeletal disruption, and immunogold staining for fimbrin in podosomes. Video 1 contains time-lapse microscopy using phase optics showing IC-21 macrophage motility. Video 2 contains 4-D microscopy showing the formation and turnover of podosomes at the leading edge of an IC-21 macrophage expressing ß-actinEYFP. Video 3 shows an isosurface reconstruction of a PCP at the leading edge of an IC-21 macrophage expressing ß-actin-EYFP. Video 4 shows 3-D tracking of podosomes at the leading edge of an IC-21 macrophage expressing ß-actinEYFP. Video 5 shows kymograph tracking of barbed ends during simulated polymerization of a branched actin filament network. Online supplemental material available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200212037/DC1.
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Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (GM57418).
Submitted: 4 December 2002
Revised: 31 March 2003
Accepted: 1 April 2003
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