Litcius/Paper detail

The <i>zonula adherens matura</i> redefines the apical junction of intestinal epithelia

Pierre Mangeol, Dominique Massey‐Harroche, Michaël Sebbagh, Fabrice Richard, André Le Bivic, Pierre‐François Lenne

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cell–cell apical junctions of epithelia consist of multiprotein complexes that organize as belts regulating cell–cell adhesion, permeability, and mechanical tension: the tight junction ( zonula occludens ), the zonula adherens ( ZA ), and the macula adherens . The prevailing dogma is that at the ZA , E-cadherin and catenins are lined with F-actin bundles that support and transmit mechanical tension between cells. Using super-resolution microscopy on human intestinal biopsies and Caco-2 cells, we show that two distinct multiprotein belts are basal of the tight junctions as the intestinal epithelia mature. The most apical is populated with nectins/afadin and lined with F-actin; the second is populated with E-cad/catenins. We name this dual-belt architecture the zonula adherens matura . We find that the apical contraction apparatus and the dual-belt organization rely on afadin expression. Our study provides a revised description of epithelial cell–cell junctions and identifies a module regulating the mechanics of epithelia.

Topics & Concepts

Adherens junctionCell biologyTight junctionCadherinCateninCell junctionApical cellBiologyActinChemistryCellWnt signaling pathwayBiochemistrySignal transductionBarrier Structure and Function StudiesCellular Mechanics and InteractionsHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZ