4.7 Article

Fyn tyrosine kinase is a downstream mediator of Rho/PRK2 function in keratinocyte cell-cell adhesion

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 156, Issue 1, Pages 137-148

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200105140

Keywords

E-cadherin; beta- and gamma-catenin; p120(ctn); PKN/PRK2; adherens junctions

Categories

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA73796, P01 CA016038, R01 CA073796, CA16038] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIAMS NIH HHS [R01 AR039190, AR39190] Funding Source: Medline

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The Rho GTPase and Fyn tyrosine kinase have been implicated previously in positive control of keratinocyte cell-cell adhesion. Here, we show that Rho and Fyn operate along the same signaling pathway. Endogenous Rho activity increases in differentiating keratinocytes and is required for both Fyn kinase activation and increased tyrosine phosphorylation of beta- and gamma-catenin, which is associated with the establishment of keratinocyte cell-cell adhesion. Conversely, expression of constitutive active Rho is sufficient to promote cell-cell adhesion through a tyrosine kinase- and Fyn-dependent mechanism, trigger Fyn kinase activation, and induce tyrosine phosphorylation of beta- and gamma-catenin and p120(ctn). The positive effects of activated Rho on cell-cell adhesion are not induced by an activated Rho mutant with defective binding to the serine/threonine PRK2/PKN kinases. Endogenous PRK2 kinase activity increases with keratinocyte differentiation, and, like activated Rho, increased PRK2 activity promotes keratinocyte cell-cell adhesion and induces tyrosine phosphorylation of beta- and gamma-catenin and Fyn kinase activation, Thus, these findings reveal a novel role of Fyn as a downstream mediator of Rho in control of keratinocyte cell-cell adhesion and implicate the PRK2 kinase, a direct Rho effector, as a link between Rho and Fyn activation.

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