4.6 Article

POPX2 phosphatase regulates cell polarity and centrosome placement

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 13, Issue 15, Pages 2459-2468

Publisher

LANDES BIOSCIENCE
DOI: 10.4161/cc.29421

Keywords

centrosome; calcium/calmodulin kinase; dynein light intermediate chain 2; Kinesin-2 motor; N-cadherin; Par3; POPX2 phosphatase

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Funding

  1. MOE, Ministry of Education Singapore
  2. National Research Foundation, Singapore

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Proper centrosome positioning is critical for many cellular functions, such as cell migration and maintenance of polarity. During wound healing, fibroblasts orient their centrosomes such that they face the wound edge. The centrosome orientation determines the direction of cells' migration so that they can close the wound effectively. In this study, we investigated the regulation of centrosome polarization and have identified the phosphatase POPX2 as an important regulator of centrosome orientation. We found that POPX2 inhibits centrosome centration, but not rearward nuclear movement, by regulating multiple proteins that function in centrosome positioning. High POPX2 levels result in reduced motility of the kinesin-2 motor, which, in turn, inhibits the transport of N-cadherin to the cell periphery and cell junctions. Loss of N-cadherin localization to the cell membrane affects the localization of focal adhesions and perturbs CDC42-Par6/PKC zeta signaling. In addition, overexpression of POPX2 also results in a loss of Par3 localization to the cell periphery and reduced levels of LIC2 (dynein light intermediate chain 2), leading to defects in microtubule tethering and dynamics at cell-cell contacts. Therefore, POPX2 functions as a regulator of signaling pathways to modulate the positioning of centrosome in fibroblast during wound healing.

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