Mitotic Membrane Turnover Coordinates Differential Induction of the Heart Progenitor Lineage

0301 basic medicine Integrins Embryo, Nonmammalian Myocardium Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental Heart Transfection Ciona intestinalis Fibroblast Growth Factors Cell and Developmental Biology 03 medical and health sciences Cell Adhesion Animals Cell Lineage Biology Cell Division Developmental Biology Signal Transduction
DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2015.07.001 Publication Date: 2015-08-20T17:15:56Z
ABSTRACT
In response to microenvironmental cues, embryonic cells form adhesive signaling compartments that influence survival and patterning. Dividing cells detach from the surrounding matrix and initiate extensive membrane remodeling, but the in vivo impact of mitosis on adhesion-dependent signaling remains poorly characterized. We investigate in vivo signaling dynamics using the invertebrate chordate, Ciona intestinalis. In Ciona, matrix adhesion polarizes fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-dependent heart progenitor induction. Here, we show that adhesion inhibits mitotic FGF receptor internalization, leading to receptor enrichment along adherent membranes. Targeted disruption of matrix adhesion promotes uniform FGF receptor internalization and degradation while enhanced adhesion suppresses degradation. Chimeric analysis indicates that integrin β chain-specific impacts on induction are dictated by distinct internalization motifs. We also found that matrix adhesion impacts receptor enrichment through Caveolin-rich membrane domains. These results redefine the relationship between cell division and adhesive signaling, revealing how mitotic membrane turnover orchestrates adhesion-dependent signal polarization.
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