Myosin II activity regulates vinculin recruitment to focal adhesions through FAK-mediated paxillin phosphorylation

Thumbnail Image
Date
2010-01-01
Authors
Pasapera, Ana
Schneider, Ian
Rericha, Erin
Schlaepfer, David
Waterman, Clare
Major Professor
Advisor
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Authors
Person
Schneider, Ian
Associate Professor
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Is Version Of
Versions
Series
Department
Chemical and Biological Engineering
Abstract

Focal adhesions (FAs) are mechanosensitive adhesion and signaling complexes that grow and change composition in response to myosin II-mediated cytoskeletal tension in a process known as FA maturation. To understand tension-mediated FA maturation, we sought to identify proteins that are recruited to FAs in a myosin II-dependent manner and to examine the mechanism for their myosin II-sensitive FA association. We find that FA recruitment of both the cytoskeletal adapter protein vinculin and the tyrosine kinase FA kinase (FAK) are myosin II and extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness dependent. Myosin II activity promotes FAK/Src-mediated phosphorylation of paxillin on tyrosines 31 and 118 and vinculin association with paxillin. We show that phosphomimic mutations of paxillin can specifically induce the recruitment of vinculin to adhesions independent of myosin II activity. These results reveal an important role for paxillin in adhesion mechanosensing via myosin II-mediated FAK phosphorylation of paxillin that promotes vinculin FA recruitment to reinforce the cytoskeletal ECM linkage and drive FA maturation.

Comments

This is an article from Journal of Cell Biology, 188 (2010): 877, doi: 10.1083/jcb.200906012. Posted with permission

Description
Keywords
Citation
DOI
Copyright
Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2010
Collections