Reciprocal integrin/integrin antagonism through kindlin-2 and Rho GTPases regulates cell cohesion and collective migration

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Authors

Van der Bijl, Ivo
Nawaz, Kalim
Kazlauskaite, Ugne
Van Stalborch, Anne-Marieke
Tol, Simon
Jimenez Orgaz, Ana
Van den Bout, Jan Iman
Reinhard, Nathalie R.
Sonnenberg, Arnoud
Margadant, Coert

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

Collective cell behaviour during embryogenesis and tissue repair requires the coordination of intercellular junctions, cytoskeleton-dependent shape changes controlled by Rho GTPases, and integrin-dependent cell-matrix adhesion. Many different integrins are simultaneously expressed during wound healing, embryonic development, and sprouting angiogenesis, suggesting that there is extensive integrin/integrin cross-talk to regulate cell behaviour. Here, we show that fibronectin-binding β1 and β3 integrins do not act synergistically, but rather antagonize each other during collective cell processes in neuro-epithelial cells, placental trophoblasts, and endothelial cells. Reciprocal β1/β3 antagonism controls RhoA activity in a kindlin-2-dependent manner, balancing cell spreading, contractility, and intercellular adhesion. In this way, reciprocal β1/β3 antagonism controls cell cohesion and cellular plasticity to switch between extreme and opposing states, including epithelial versus mesenchymal-like phenotypes and collective versus individual cell migration. We propose that integrin/integrin antagonism is a universal mechanism to effectuate social cellular interactions, important for tissue morphogenesis, endothelial barrier function, trophoblast invasion, and sprouting angiogenesis.

Description

Supplementary Movie 1. Scratch assay for GEβ1, GEβ3, and GEβ1/β3 cells. The indicated cell lines were grown to confluency, serum-starved overnight, and scratched with a pipette tip. Scratch closure was stimulated with 10% FCS, and cells were imaged by time-lapse video microscopy. Image intervals; 10 min, imaging time 16 h.
Supplementary Movie 2. Single-cell migration assay for GEβ1, GEβ3, and GEβ1/β3 cells on FN. The indicated cell lines were sparsely seeded on FN and monitored by time-lapse video microscopy. Image intervals; 10 min, imaging time 15 h.
Supplementary Movie 3. Scratch assay for cells expressing β1 or β3 mutants. The indicated cell lines were grown to confluency, serum-starved overnight, and scratched with a pipette tip. Scratch closure was stimulated with 10% FCS, cells were imaged by time-lapse video microscopy. Image intervals; 10 min, imaging time 15 h.
Supplementary Movie 4. Single-cell migration assay for cells expressing β1 or β3 mutants on FN. The indicated cell lines were sparsely seeded on FN (5 μg/ml) and monitored by time-lapse video microscopy. Image intervals; 10 min, imaging time 15 h.
Supplementary Movie 5. Single-cell migration assay for cells expressing β1 together with β3 mutants on FN. The indicated cell lines were sparsely seeded on FN (5 μg/ml) and monitored by time-lapse video microscopy. Image intervals; 10 min, imaging time 15 h.

Keywords

Collective cell migration, Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, Fibronectin, Inhibition of integrin function, Kindlin-2, Rho GTPases

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Citation

Van der Bijl, I., Nawaz, K., Kazlauskaite, U. et al. 2020, 'Reciprocal integrin/integrin antagonism through kindlin-2 and Rho GTPases regulates cell cohesion and collective migration', Matrix Biology, vol. 93, pp. 60-78.