Tight junction membrane proteins regulate the mechanical resistance of the apical junctional complex PaperPlayer biorxiv cell biology

    • Life Sciences

Link to bioRxiv paper:
http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.08.02.551232v1?rss=1

Authors: Nguyen, T. P., Otani, T., Tsutsumi, M., Fujiwara, S., Nemoto, T., Fujimori, T., Furuse, M.

Abstract:
Epithelia must be able to resist mechanical force to preserve tissue integrity. While intercellular junctions are known to be important for the mechanical resistance of epithelia, the roles of tight junctions (TJs) remain to be established. We previously demonstrated that epithelial cells devoid of the TJ membrane proteins claudins and JAM-A completely lack TJs and exhibit focal breakages of their apical junctions. Here, we demonstrate that apical junctions undergo spontaneous fracture when claudin/JAM-A-deficient cells are exposed to mechanical stress. The junction fracture was accompanied by actin disorganization, and actin polymerization was required for apical junction integrity in the claudin/JAM-A-deficient cells. Further deletion of CAR resulted in the disruption of ZO-1 molecule ordering at cell junctions, accompanied by severe defects in apical junction integrity. These results demonstrate that TJ membrane proteins regulate the mechanical resistance of the apical junctional complex in epithelial cells.

Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info

Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC

Link to bioRxiv paper:
http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.08.02.551232v1?rss=1

Authors: Nguyen, T. P., Otani, T., Tsutsumi, M., Fujiwara, S., Nemoto, T., Fujimori, T., Furuse, M.

Abstract:
Epithelia must be able to resist mechanical force to preserve tissue integrity. While intercellular junctions are known to be important for the mechanical resistance of epithelia, the roles of tight junctions (TJs) remain to be established. We previously demonstrated that epithelial cells devoid of the TJ membrane proteins claudins and JAM-A completely lack TJs and exhibit focal breakages of their apical junctions. Here, we demonstrate that apical junctions undergo spontaneous fracture when claudin/JAM-A-deficient cells are exposed to mechanical stress. The junction fracture was accompanied by actin disorganization, and actin polymerization was required for apical junction integrity in the claudin/JAM-A-deficient cells. Further deletion of CAR resulted in the disruption of ZO-1 molecule ordering at cell junctions, accompanied by severe defects in apical junction integrity. These results demonstrate that TJ membrane proteins regulate the mechanical resistance of the apical junctional complex in epithelial cells.

Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info

Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC