Endoplasmic Reticulum-plasma Membrane Contact Gradients Direct Cell Migration
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Directed cell migration is driven by the front-back polarization of intracellular signalling. Receptor tyrosine kinases and other inputs activate local signals that trigger membrane protrusions at the front. Equally important is a long-range inhibitory mechanism that suppresses signalling at the back to prevent the formation of multiple fronts. However, the identity of this mechanism is unknown. Here we report that endoplasmic reticulum-plasma membrane (ER-PM) contact sites are polarized in single and collectively migrating cells. The increased density of these ER-PM contacts at the back provides the ER-resident PTP1B phosphatase more access to PM substrates, which confines receptor signalling to the front and directs cell migration. Polarization of the ER-PM contacts is due to microtubule-regulated polarization of the ER, with more RTN4-rich curved ER at the front and more CLIMP63-rich flattened ER at the back. The resulting ER curvature gradient leads to small and unstable ER-PM contacts only at the front. These contacts flow backwards and grow to large and stable contacts at the back to form the front-back ER-PM contact gradient. Together, our study suggests that the structural polarity mediated by ER-PM contact gradients polarizes cell signalling, directs cell migration and prolongs cell migration.
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PMID: 39829924 PMC: 11741313. DOI: 10.1101/2025.01.06.631605.
Jha A, Chandra A, Farahani P, Toettcher J, Haugh J, Waterman C bioRxiv. 2025; .
PMID: 39803565 PMC: 11722407. DOI: 10.1101/2024.12.31.630838.
Imaging and proteomics toolkits for studying organelle contact sites.
Gamuyao R, Chang C Front Cell Dev Biol. 2024; 12:1466915.
PMID: 39381373 PMC: 11458464. DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2024.1466915.