Organization of desmosomal plaque proteins in cells growing at low calcium concentrations.
Open Access
- 31 August 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 107 (3) , 1049-1063
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.107.3.1049
Abstract
Desmosomes are not formed in epithelial cell cultures growing in media with low (less than or equal to 0.1 mM) concentrations of Ca2+ (LCM) but appear rapidly upon shift to media of normal calcium concentrations (NCM). Previous authors using immunolocalization of desmoplakin, a marker protein for the desmosomal plaque, in LCM-grown cells have interpreted positively stained, dense, cytoplasmic aggregates on intermediate filaments (IF) bundles as preformed plaque units which upon NCM shift would move to the plasma membrane and contribute to desmosome formation. Studying various cell cultures, including primary mouse keratinocytes and human A-431 cells, we show that most, probably all, desmoplakin-positive aggregates in LCM-grown cells are associated with membranous structures, mostly vesicles, and also contain other desmosomal markers, including desmoglein, a transmembrane glycoprotein. We interpret such vesicles as residual desmosome-derived domains endocytosed upon cell dissociation. Only keratinocytes grown for long times (2-4 wk) in LCM are practically free from such vesicles. In addition, we demonstrate that certain cells such as A-431 cells, when passaged in LCM and in the absence of stable junctions, are able to continually assemble "half-desmosomes" on the plasma membrane which in turn can be endocytosed as plaque-bearing vesicles. We also show that in LCM the synthesis of several desmosomal proteins (desmoplakins I and II, plakoglobin, desmoglein, "band 6 protein") continues and that most of the plaque protein, desmoplakin, is diffusely spread over the cytoplasm, apparently in a soluble monodisperse form of approximately 9S. From our results we propose that the plaque proteins occur in small, discrete, diffusible entities in the cytoplasm, in concentrations that are relatively high in LCM and low in NCM, from which they assemble directly, i.e., without intermediate precursor aggregates on IFs in the cytoplasm, on certain plasma membrane domains in a Ca2+ dependent process.This publication has 61 references indexed in Scilit:
- Kinetics of desmosome assembly in Madin-Darby canine kidney epithelial cells: temporal and spatial regulation of desmoplakin organization and stabilization upon cell-cell contact. II. Morphological analysis.The Journal of cell biology, 1988
- Calcium-induced assembly of adherens junctions in keratinocytes.The Journal of cell biology, 1987
- Tumor promoter-induced disruption of junctional complexes in cultured epithelial cells is followed by the inhibition of cytokeratin and desmoplakin synthesisExperimental Cell Research, 1986
- Organization of cytokeratin bundles by desmosomes in rat mammary cells.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- Intermediate filaments and the initiation of desmosome assembly.The Journal of cell biology, 1985
- Differentiation specific functions in cultured and transplanted mouse keratinocytes:Differentiation, 1984
- Biochemical and immunological characterization of desmoplakins I and II, the major polypeptides of the desmosomal plaqueJournal of Molecular Biology, 1983
- Antibodies to High Molecular Weight Polypeptides of Desmosomes: Specific Localization of a Class of Junctional Proteins in Cells and TissuesDifferentiation, 1981
- ISOLATION OF EPIDERMAL DESMOSOMESThe Journal of cell biology, 1974
- DIFFERENTIATION OF THE JUNCTIONAL COMPLEX OF SURFACE CELLS IN THE DEVELOPING FUNDULUS BLASTODERMThe Journal of cell biology, 1971