4.1 Article

Non-Muscle Myosin-IIA Is Critical for Podocyte F-Actin Organization, Contractility, and Attenuation of Cell Motility

Journal

CYTOSKELETON
Volume 73, Issue 8, Pages 377-395

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cm.21313

Keywords

adhesion; contractility; cytoskeleton; motility; myosin; podocyte

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Several glomerular pathologies resulting from podocyte injury are linked to genetic variation involving the MYH9 gene, which encodes the heavy chain of nonmuscle myosin-IIA (NM-IIA). However, the functional role of NM-IIA has not been studied extensively in podocytes. We hypothesized that NM-IIA is critical for maintenance of podocyte structure and mechanical function. To test this hypothesis, we studied murine podocytes in vitro subjected to blebbistatin inhibition of NM-II activity, or RNA interference-mediated, isoform-specific ablation of Myh9 gene and protein (NM-IIA) or its paralog Myh10 gene and protein (NM-IIB). Using quantitative immunofluorescence microscopy, traction force microscopy, and attachment and wound healing assays, we found that NM-IIA ablation altered podocyte actin cytoskeletal structure and focal adhesion distribution, decreased cell attachment and contractility, and increased cell motility. Blebbistatin treatment had similar effects. NM-IIB ablation produced cells that exhibited poor attachment, but cytoskeletal structural organization, contractility and motility were maintained. These findings indicate that NM-IIA is essential for maintenance of podocyte cytoskeletal structure and mechanical function in vitro, and NM-IIB does not replace it in this role when NM-IIA expression is altered. We conclude that critical podocyte functions may be affected by MYH9 mutations or disease-associated haplotypes. (C) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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