4.6 Article

AGS3 and Gαi3 Are Concomitantly Upregulated as Part of the Spindle Orientation Complex during Differentiation of Human Neural Progenitor Cells

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 25, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules25215169

Keywords

AGS3; G protein; LGN; neurogenesis; NuMA; Ric-8A

Funding

  1. University Grants Committee of Hong Kong [AoE/M-604/16]
  2. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [16137516, T13-605/18-W]
  3. National Key Basic Research Program of China [2013CB530900]
  4. Innovation and Technology Commission [ITCPD/17-9]
  5. Hong Kong Jockey Club

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Adult neurogenesis is modulated by many G(i)-coupled receptors but the precise mechanism remains elusive. A key step for maintaining the population of neural stem cells in the adult is asymmetric cell division (ACD), a process which entails the formation of two evolutionarily conserved protein complexes that establish the cell polarity and spindle orientation. Since ACD is extremely difficult to monitor in stratified tissues such as the vertebrate brain, we employed human neural progenitor cell lines to examine the regulation of the polarity and spindle orientation complexes during neuronal differentiation. Several components of the spindle orientation complex, but not those of the polarity complex, were upregulated upon differentiation of ENStem-A and ReNcell VM neural progenitor cells. Increased expression of nuclear mitotic apparatus (NuMA), G alpha(i) subunit, and activators of G protein signaling (AGS3 and LGN) coincided with the appearance of a neuronal marker (beta-III tubulin) and the concomitant loss of neural progenitor cell markers (nestin and Sox-2). Co-immunoprecipitation assays demonstrated that both G alpha(i3) and NuMA were associated with AGS3 in differentiated ENStem-A cells. Interestingly, AGS3 appeared to preferentially interact with G alpha(i3) in ENStem-A cells, and this specificity for G alpha(i3) was recapitulated in co-immunoprecipitation experiments using HEK293 cells transiently overexpressing GST-tagged AGS3 and different G alpha(i) subunits. Moreover, the binding of G alpha(i3) to AGS3 was suppressed by GTP gamma S and pertussis toxin. Disruption of AGS3/G alpha(i3) interaction by pertussis toxin indicates that AGS3 may recognize the same site on the G alpha subunit as G protein-coupled receptors. Regulatory mechanisms controlling the formation of spindle orientation complex may provide novel means to manipulate ACD which in turn may have an impact on neurogenesis.

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