4.5 Article

Supervillin couples myosin-dependent contractility to podosomes and enables their turnover

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 125, Issue 9, Pages 2300-2314

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.100032

Keywords

Actin; Cell polarization; Myosin IIA; Podosomes; Supervillin

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [LI925/2-1]
  2. European Union [FP7/2007-2013, FP7-237946 (T3Net)]
  3. National Institutes of Health [GM033048]

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Podosomes are actin-rich adhesion and invasion structures. Especially in macrophages, podosomes exist in two subpopulations, large precursors at the cell periphery and smaller podosomes (successors) in the cell interior. To date, the mechanisms that differentially regulate these subpopulations are largely unknown. Here, we show that the membrane-associated protein supervillin localizes preferentially to successor podosomes and becomes enriched at precursors immediately before their dissolution. Consistently, podosome numbers are inversely correlated with supervillin protein levels. Using deletion constructs, we find that the myosin II regulatory N-terminus of supervillin [SV(1-174)] is crucial for these effects. Phosphorylated myosin light chain (pMLC) localizes at supervillin-positive podosomes, and time-lapse analyses show that enrichment of GFP-supervillin at podosomes coincides with their coupling to contractile myosin-IIA-positive cables. We also show that supervillin binds only to activated myosin IIA, and a dysregulated N-terminal construct [SV(1-830)] enhances pMLC levels at podosomes. Thus, preferential recruitment of supervillin to podosome subpopulations might both require and induce actomyosin contractility. Using siRNA and pharmacological inhibition, we demonstrate that supervillin and myosin IIA cooperate to regulate podosome lifetime, podosomal matrix degradation and cell polarization. In sum, we show here that podosome subpopulations differ in their molecular composition and identify supervillin, in cooperation with myosin IIA, as a crucial factor in the regulation of podosome turnover and function.

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