4.7 Article

Local phosphocycling mediated by LOK/SLK restricts ezrin function to the apical aspect of epithelial cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 199, Issue 6, Pages 969-984

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201207047

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM-036652, 5T32GM007273]

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In this paper, we describe how a dynamic regulatory process is necessary to restrict microvilli to the apical aspect of polarized epithelial cells. We found that local phosphocycling regulation of ezrin, a critical plasma membrane-cytoskeletal linker of microvilli, was required to restrict its function to the apical membrane. Proteomic approaches and ribonucleic acid interference knockdown identified lymphocyte-oriented kinase (LOK) and SLK as the relevant kinases. Using drug-resistant LOK and SLK variants showed that these kinases were sufficient to restrict ezrin function to the apical domain. Both kinases were enriched in microvilli and locally activated there. Unregulated kinase activity caused ezrin mislocalization toward the basolateral domain, whereas expression of the kinase regulatory regions of LOK or SLK resulted in local inhibition of ezrin phosphorylation by the endogenous kinases. Thus, the domain-specific presence of microvilli is a dynamic process requiring a localized kinase driving the phosphocycling of ezrin to continually bias its function to the apical membrane.

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