Enhanced RhoA signaling stabilizes E-cadherin in migrating epithelial monolayers.

2021 
Epithelia migrate as physically coherent populations of cells. Earlier studies revealed that mechanical stress accumulates in these cellular layers as they move. These stresses are characteristically tensile in nature and have often been inferred to arise when moving cells pull upon the cell-cell adhesions that hold them together. We now report that epithelial tension at adherens junctions between migrating cells also reflects an increase in RhoA-mediated junctional contractility. We find that active RhoA levels were stimulated by p114 RhoGEF at the junctions between migrating MCF-7 monolayers, and this is accompanied by increased levels of actomyosin and mechanical tension. By applying a strategy to restore active RhoA specifically at adherens junctions by manipulating its scaffold, anillin, we found that this junctional RhoA signal was necessary to stabilize junctional E-cadherin during epithelial migration. We suggest that stabilization of E-cadherin by RhoA serves to increase cell-cell adhesion against the mechanical stresses of migration.
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