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Published August 31, 2022 | public
Journal Article

E-cadherin mediates apical membrane initiation site localisation during de novo polarisation of epithelial cavities

Abstract

Individual cells within de novo polarising tubes and cavities must integrate their forming apical domains into a centralised apical membrane initiation site (AMIS). This is necessary to enable organised lumen formation within multi-cellular tissue. Despite the well-documented importance of cell division in localising the AMIS, we have found a division-independent mechanism of AMIS localisation that relies instead on Cadherin-mediated cell–cell adhesion. Our study of de novo polarising mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) cultured in 3D suggests that cell–cell adhesion localises apical proteins such as PAR-6 to a centralised AMIS. Unexpectedly, we also found that mESC clusters lacking functional E-cadherin still formed a lumen-like cavity in the absence of AMIS localisation but did so at a later stage of development via a "closure" mechanism, instead of via hollowing. This work suggests that there are two, interrelated mechanisms of apical polarity localisation: cell adhesion and cell division. Alignment of these mechanisms in space allows for redundancy in the system and ensures the development of a coherent epithelial structure within a growing organ.

Additional Information

We are grateful to Jon Clarke and Ben Steventon for critical reading of the manuscript and other members of the Buckley and Zernicka-Goetz laboratories for scientific discussion, especially Matteo Molè and Marta Shahbazi. Thank you to the Shukry Habib laboratory for kindly gifting the W4 cells and the Lionel Larue laboratory for kindly gifting the Cdh1 KO cells. Thank you to the Cambridge Advanced Imaging Centre and the Ewa Paluch laboratory for help and access to confocal microscopy. This research was financially supported by: CEB—the Wellcome Trust and Royal Society (Sir Henry Dale Fellowship grant no. 208758/Z/17/Z and Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship grant no. DH160086), XL—European Union's Horizon 2020 programme (Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship grant no. 844330), the Issac Newton Trust and Leverhulme Trust (Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship grant no. ECF-2019-175). MZG - The Wellcome Trust (207415/Z/17/Z) and ERC (669198). For the purpose of open access, the authors have applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
December 22, 2023