Diacylglycerol kinase α controls RCP-dependent integrin trafficking to promote invasive migration

0301 basic medicine Diacylglycerol Kinase Membrane Proteins Phosphatidic Acids Transfection Models, Biological Protein Transport 03 medical and health sciences Humans Phosphorylation Research Articles Cells, Cultured Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing Integrin alpha5beta1
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201109112 Publication Date: 2012-01-23T21:17:50Z
ABSTRACT
Inhibition of αvβ3 integrin or expression of oncogenic mutants of p53 promote invasive cell migration by enhancing endosomal recycling of α5β1 integrin under control of the Rab11 effector Rab-coupling protein (RCP). In this paper, we show that diacylglycerol kinase α (DGK-α), which phosphorylates diacylglycerol to phosphatidic acid (PA), was required for RCP to be mobilized to and tethered at the tips of invasive pseudopods and to allow RCP-dependent α5β1 recycling and the resulting invasiveness of tumor cells. Expression of a constitutive-active mutant of DGK-α drove RCP-dependent invasion in the absence of mutant p53 expression or αvβ3 inhibition, and conversely, an RCP mutant lacking the PA-binding C2 domain was not capable of being tethered at pseudopod tips. These data demonstrate that generation of PA downstream of DGK-α is essential to connect expression of mutant p53s or inhibition of αvβ3 to RCP and for this Rab11 effector to drive the trafficking of α5β1 that is required for tumor cell invasion through three-dimensional matrices.
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