Role of Rac in controlling the actin cytoskeleton and chemotaxis in motile cells

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Abstract

We have used to chemotactic ability of Dictyostelium cells to examine the roles of Rho family members, known regulators of the assembly of F-actin, in cell movement. Wild-type cells polarize with a leading edge enriched in F- actin toward a chemoattractant. Overexpression of constitutively active Dictyostelium Rac1B61(L) or disruption of DdRacGAP1, which encodes a Dictyostelium Rac1 GAP, induces membrane ruffles enriched with actin filaments around the perimeter of the cell and increased levels of F-actin in resting cells. Whereas wild-type cells move linearly toward the cAMP source, Rac1B61(L) and Ddracgap1 null cells make many wrong turns and chemotaxis is inefficient, which presumably results from the unregulated activation of F- actin assembly and pseudopod extension. Cells expressing dominant-negative DdRac1B17(N) do not have a well-defined F-actin-rich leading edge and do not protrude pseudopodia, resulting in very poor cell motility. From these studies and assays examining chemoattractant-mediated F-actin assembly, we suggest DdRac1 regulates the basal levels of F-actin assembly, its dynamic reorganization in response to chemoattractants, and cellular polarity during chemotaxis.

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Chung, C. Y., Lee, S., Briscoe, C., Ellsworth, C., & Firtel, R. A. (2000). Role of Rac in controlling the actin cytoskeleton and chemotaxis in motile cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 97(10), 5225–5230. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.97.10.5225

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