P311-induced myofibroblasts exhibit ameboid-like migration through RalA activation

J Shi, KR Badri, R Choudhury, L Schuger - Experimental cell research, 2006 - Elsevier
J Shi, KR Badri, R Choudhury, L Schuger
Experimental cell research, 2006Elsevier
We previously showed that P311, an intracellular protein involved in cell migration, is found
in human wound myofibroblast precursors (proto-myofibroblasts) and myofibroblasts.
Furthermore, by binding to the TGF-β1 latency associated protein (LAP), P311 induced NIH
3T3 cells to transform into non-fibrogenic myofibroblasts characterized by lack of TGF-β1
production. Here we demonstrate that P311-induced myofibroblasts migrate in an ameboid
rather than a mesenchymal pattern. Ameboid migration is characterized by lack of focal …
We previously showed that P311, an intracellular protein involved in cell migration, is found in human wound myofibroblast precursors (proto-myofibroblasts) and myofibroblasts. Furthermore, by binding to the TGF-β1 latency associated protein (LAP), P311 induced NIH 3T3 cells to transform into non-fibrogenic myofibroblasts characterized by lack of TGF-β1 production. Here we demonstrate that P311-induced myofibroblasts migrate in an ameboid rather than a mesenchymal pattern. Ameboid migration is characterized by lack of focal adhesions and stress fibers, absence of integrins and MMPs clustering/activation and changes in small GTPases activity, all leading to increased cell motility. P311-induced ameboid migration depended on activation of the GTPase RalA and was reverted to mesenchymal-type migration by RalA RNA interference. Ameboid migration was conserved in cells plated on fibrin, the initial wound matrix, but was switched back to mesenchymal-type migration by collagen I, the main ECM component in late stages of wound healing. TGF-β1, the major stimulus of collagen production during wound repair, also reversed the ameboid phenotype to mesenchymal. Our studies therefore suggest that, by inducing RalA activity, P311 promotes a motile proto-myofibroblast and myofibroblast phenotype specifically adapted to rapidly populate the initial wound matrix.
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