WASP restricts active Rac to maintain cells' front-rear polarisation

2019 
Efficient motility requires polarised cells, with anterior pseudopods and a retracting rear. This polarisation requires that the pseudopod catalyst Rac is restricted to the front. Here we show that the Arp2/3 complex regulator WASP is important for maintaining front-rear polarity, using a mechanism that limits where active Rac localises. Dictyostelium cells lacking WASP inappropriately activate Rac and SCAR/WAVE at their rears, leading to reduced cell speed. WASP facilitates the internalisation of clathrin-coated pits, and its Rac-binding CRIB motif is considered essential for its localisation and activity. However, WASP mutants with deleted CRIB domains, or harbouring a new mutation that prevents Rac binding, localise normally, recruit Arp2/3 complex, and drive actin polymerisation. Similarly, Rac inhibitors do not block WASP localisation or activation. Despite this, WASP CRIB mutants cannot restore polarisation of active Rac. Thus, WASP9s interaction with Rac regulates Rac activity and cell polarity, but is dispensable for activating actin polymerization.
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