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Mechanisms involved in AMPK-mediated deposition of tight junction components to the plasma membrane

Jingshing Wu, Pascal Rowart, François Jouret, Brandon M. Gassaway, Vanathy Rajendran, Jesse Rinehart, Michael J. Caplan

2020American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) activation promotes early stages of epithelial junction assembly. AMPK activation in MDCK renal epithelial cells facilitates localization of the junction-associated proteins aPKCζ and Par3 to the plasma membrane and promotes conversion of Cdc42, a key regulator of epithelial polarization and junction assembly, to its active GTP bound state. Furthermore, Par3 is an important regulator of AMPK-mediated aPKCζ localization. Both aPKCζ and Par3 serve as intermediates in AMPK-mediated junction assembly, with inhibition of aPKCζ activity or Par3 knockdown disrupting AMPK's ability to facilitate zonula occludens (ZO-1) localization. AMPK phosphorylates the adherens junction protein afadin and regulates its interaction with the tight-junction protein zonula occludens-1. Afadin is phosphorylated at two critical sites, S228 (residing within an aPKCζ consensus site) and S1102 (residing within an AMPK consensus site), that are differentially regulated during junction assembly and that exert different effects on the process. Expression of phospho-defective mutants (S228A and S1102A) perturbed ZO-1 localization to the plasma membrane during AMPK-induced junction assembly. Expression of S228A increased the ZO-1/afadin interaction, while S1102A reduced this interaction during extracellular calcium-induced junction assembly. Inhibition of aPKCζ activity also increased the ZO-1/afadin interaction. Taken together, these data suggest that aPKCζ phosphorylation of afadin terminates the ZO-1/afadin interaction and thus permits the later stages of junction assembly.

Topics & Concepts

AMPKCell biologyAdherens junctionTight junctionPhosphorylationProtein kinase ACell polarityChemistryBiologyBiochemistryCadherinCellBarrier Structure and Function StudiesNeurological diseases and metabolismConnexins and lens biology
Mechanisms involved in AMPK-mediated deposition of tight junction components to the plasma membrane | Litcius