posted on 2014-01-09, 00:00authored bySara Solinet, Kazi Mahmud, Shannon F. Stewman, Khaled Ben El Kadhi, Barbara Decelle, Lama Talje, Ao Ma, Benjamin H. Kwok, Sébastien Carreno
Ezrin, Radixin, and Moesin (ERM) proteins play important roles in many cellular processes including cell division. Recent studies have highlighted the implications of their metastatic potential in cancers. ERM's role in these processes is largely attributed to their ability to link actin filaments to the plasma membrane. In this paper, we show that the ERM protein Moesin directly binds to microtubules in vitro and stabilizes microtubules at the cell cortex in vivo. We identified two evolutionarily conserved residues in the FERM (4.1 protein and ERM) domains of ERMs that mediated the association with microtubules. This ERM-microtubule interaction was required for regulating spindle organization in metaphase and cell shape transformation after anaphase onset but was dispensable for bridging actin filaments to the metaphase cortex. These findings provide a molecular framework for understanding the complex functional interplay between the microtubule and actin cytoskeletons mediated by ERM proteins in mitosis and have broad implications in both physiological and pathological processes that require ERMs.
Funding
K. Ben El Kadhi is a recipient of a Fonds de Recherche du Québec
en Santé (FRQS) fellowship. S. Solinet and A. Ma are supported by a National
Institutes of Health grant (R01GM086536 to A. Ma); B.H. Kwok is
supported by a FRQS Junior 1 award and a Canadian Institutes of Health
Research (CIHR) New Investigator Award. S. Carreno holds a CIHR New
Investigator Award. This work was supported by grants from the CIHR
(MOP-89877 to S. Carreno and MOP-97928 to B.H. Kwok) and from the
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (S. Carreno).
IRIC is supported in part by the Canadian Center of Excellence in Commercialization
and Research, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, and
by the FRQS.