Polarity reveals intrinsic cell chirality
Open Access
- 29 May 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (22) , 9296-9300
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0703153104
Abstract
Like blood neutrophils, dHL60 cells respond to a uniform concentration of attractant by polarizing in apparently random directions. How each cell chooses its own direction is unknown. We now find that an arrow drawn from the center of the nucleus of an unpolarized cell to its centrosome strongly predicts the subsequent direction of attractant-induced polarity: Of 60 cells that polarized in response to uniform f-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP), 42 polarized to the left of this arrow, 6 polarized to the right, and 12 polarized directly toward or away from the centrosome. To investigate this directional bias we perturbed a regulatory pathway, downstream of Cdc42 and partitioning-defective 6 (Par6), which controls centrosome orientation relative to polarity of other cells. Dominant negative Par6 mutants block polarity altogether, as previously shown for disrupting Cdc42 activity. Cells remain able to polarize, but without directional bias, if their microtubules are disrupted with nocodazole, or they express mutant proteins that interfere with activities of PKCzeta or dynein. Expressing constitutively active glycogen synthase kinase 3beta (GSK3beta) causes cells to polarize preferentially to the right. Distributions of most of these polarity regulators localize to the centrosome but show no left-right asymmetry before polarization. Together, these findings suggest that an intrinsically chiral structure, perhaps the centrosome, serves as a template for directing polarity in the absence of spatial cues. Such a template could help to determine left-right asymmetry and planar polarity in development.Keywords
This publication has 76 references indexed in Scilit:
- Active retrotransposition by a synthetic L1 element in miceProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- To stabilize neutrophil polarity, PIP3 and Cdc42 augment RhoA activity at the back as well as signals at the frontThe Journal of cell biology, 2006
- Flies without CentriolesCell, 2006
- Both the Establishment and the Maintenance of Neuronal Polarity Require Active MechanismsCell, 2005
- The human L1 promoter: Variable transcription initiation sites and a major impact of upstream flanking sequence on promoter activityGenome Research, 2004
- LINE-mediated retrotransposition of marked Alu sequencesNature Genetics, 2003
- Ty1 Defect in Proteolysis at High TemperatureJournal of Virology, 2002
- Centrosome structure and microbubule nucleation in animal cellsBiology of the Cell, 1999
- Unequal homologous recombination between LINE-1 elements as a mutational mechanism in human genetic disease 1 1Edited by J. KarnJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- Cell polarity: an examination of its behavioral expression and its consequences for polymorphonuclear leukocyte chemotaxis.The Journal of cell biology, 1981