Papers

Peer-reviewed
Mar, 2013

Rac1 recruitment to the archipelago structure of the focal adhesion through the fluid membrane as revealed by single-molecule analysis

Cytoskeleton
  • Akihiro C.E. Shibata
  • ,
  • Limin H. Chen
  • ,
  • Rie Nagai
  • ,
  • Fumiyoshi Ishidate
  • ,
  • Rahul Chadda
  • ,
  • Yoshihiro Miwa
  • ,
  • Keiji Naruse
  • ,
  • Yuki M. Shirai
  • ,
  • Takahiro K. Fujiwara
  • ,
  • Akihiro Kusumi

Volume
70
Number
3
First page
161
Last page
177
Language
English
Publishing type
Research paper (scientific journal)
DOI
10.1002/cm.21097

The focal adhesion (FA) is an integrin-based structure built in/on the plasma membrane (PM), linking the extracellular matrix to the actin stress-fibers, working as cell migration scaffolds. Previously, we proposed the archipelago architecture of the FA, in which FA largely consists of fluid membrane, dotted with small islands accumulating FA proteins: membrane molecules enter the inter-island channels in the FA zone rather freely, and the integrins in the FA-protein islands rapidly exchanges with those in the bulk membrane. Here, we examined how Rac1, a small G-protein regulating FA formation, and its activators αPIX and βPIX, are recruited to the FA zones. PIX molecules are recruited from the cytoplasm to the FA zones directly. In contrast, majorities of Rac1 molecules first arrive from the cytoplasm on the general inner PM surface, and then enter the FA zones via lateral diffusion on the PM, which is possible due to rapid Rac1 diffusion even within the FA zones, slowed only by a factor of two to four compared with that outside. The constitutively-active Rac1 mutant exhibited temporary and all-time immobilizations in the FA zone, suggesting that upon PIX-induced Rac1 activation at the FA-protein islands, Rac1 tends to be immobilized at the FA-protein islands. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Link information
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cm.21097
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23341328
ID information
  • DOI : 10.1002/cm.21097
  • ISSN : 1949-3584
  • ISSN : 1949-3592
  • Pubmed ID : 23341328
  • SCOPUS ID : 84875612516

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