4.5 Article

Lgr4 and Lgr5 drive the formation of long actin-rich cytoneme-like membrane protrusions

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 128, Issue 6, Pages 1230-1240

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.166322

Keywords

Lgr5; GPCR; Cytoneme; Stem cell

Categories

Funding

  1. Susan G. Komen foundation [KG080627]
  2. National Cancer Institute (NCI) Clinical Oncology Research Career Development Program [NCI 5K12-CA100639-10]
  3. Duke Cancer Center Stewart Trust
  4. Duke Cancer Center Cancer and the Environment
  5. NCI [IMAT R21CA173245]
  6. National Institute on Drug Abuse [P30 5P30DA029925-05]

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Embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis require precise information exchange between cells and their microenvironment to coordinate cell behavior. A specialized class of ultra-long actin-rich filopodia, termed cytonemes, provides one mechanism for this spatiotemporal regulation of extracellular cues. We provide here a mechanism whereby the stem-cell marker Lgr5, and its family member Lgr4, promote the formation of cytonemes. Lgr4- and Lgr5-induced cytonemes exceed lengths of 80 mm, are generated through stabilization of nascent filopodia from an underlying lamellipodial-like network and functionally provide a pipeline for the transit of signaling effectors. As proof-of-principle, we demonstrate that Lgr5-induced cytonemes act as conduits for cell signaling by demonstrating that the actin motor and filopodial cargo carrier protein myosin X (Myo10) and the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling effector beta-arrestin-2 (Arrb2) transit into cytonemes. This work delineates a biological function for Lgr4 and Lgr5 and provides the rationale to fully investigate Lgr4 and Lgr5 function and cytonemes in mammalian stem cell and cancer stem cell behavior.

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