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Publication : The cell polarity protein mInsc regulates neutrophil chemotaxis via a noncanonical G protein signaling pathway.

First Author  Kamakura S Year  2013
Journal  Dev Cell Volume  26
Issue  3 Pages  292-302
PubMed ID  23891662 Mgi Jnum  J:359733
Mgi Id  MGI:6839559 Doi  10.1016/j.devcel.2013.06.008
Citation  Kamakura S, et al. (2013) The cell polarity protein mInsc regulates neutrophil chemotaxis via a noncanonical G protein signaling pathway. Dev Cell 26(3):292-302
abstractText  Successful chemotaxis requires not only increased motility but also sustained directionality. Here, we show that, during neutrophil chemotaxis via receptors coupled with the Gi family of heterotrimeric G proteins, directional movement is regulated by mInsc, a mammalian protein distantly related to the Drosophila polarity-organizer Inscuteable. The GDP-bound, Gbetagamma-free Galphai subunit accumulates at the front of chemotaxing neutrophils to recruit mInsc-complexed with the Par3-aPKC evolutionarily conserved polarity complex-via LGN/AGS3 that simultaneously binds to Galphai-GDP and mInsc. Both mInsc-deficient and aPKC-blocked neutrophils exhibit a normal motile activity but migrate in an undirected manner. mInsc deficiency prevents neutrophils from efficiently stabilizing pseudopods at the leading edge; the stability is restored by wild-type mInsc, but not by a mutant protein defective in binding to LGN/AGS3. Thus, mInsc controls directional migration via noncanonical G protein signaling, in which Gbetagamma-free Galphai-GDP, a product from Galphai-GTP released after receptor activation, plays a central role.
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