4.7 Article

Polarized Rac-dependent protrusions drive epithelial intercalation in the embryonic epidermis of C. elegans

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 142, Issue 20, Pages 3549-3560

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.127597

Keywords

Cell intercalation; Trio; Morphogenesis; Rac GTPase; CARMIL; LRRC16A

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [IOB 1426555]
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [GM058038, GM085309]
  3. NIH [GM07133]

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Cell intercalation is a fundamental, coordinated cell rearrangement process that shapes tissues throughout animal development. Studies of intercalation within epithelia have focused almost exclusively on the localized constriction of specific apical junctions. Another widely deployed yet poorly understood alternative mechanism of epithelial intercalation relies on basolateral protrusive activity. Using the dorsal embryonic epidermis of Caenorhabditis elegans, we have investigated this alternative mechanism using high-resolution live cell microscopy and genetic analysis. We find that as dorsal epidermal cells migrate past one another they produce F-actin-rich protrusions polarized at their extending (medial) edges. These protrusions are controlled by the C. elegans Rac and RhoG orthologs CED-10 and MIG-2, which function redundantly to polarize actin polymerization upstream of the WAVE complex and WASP, respectively. We also identify UNC-73, the C. elegans ortholog of Trio, as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) upstream of both CED-10 and MIG-2. Further, we identify a novel polarizing cue, CRML-1, which is the ortholog of human capping Arp2/3 myosin I linker (CARMIL), that localizes to the nonprotrusive lateral edges of dorsal cells. CRML-1 genetically suppresses UNC-73 function and, indirectly, actin polymerization. This network identifies a novel, molecularly conserved cassette that regulates epithelial intercalation via basolateral protrusive activity.

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