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JCS ePress
online publication date 6 Feb 2007
doi: 10.1242/jcs.03383
Research Article
EHD1 regulates
1 integrin endosomal transport: effects on focal adhesions, cell spreading and migration
Marko Jovic,
Naava Naslavsky,
Debora Rapaport,
Mia Horowitz,
and
Steve Caplan*
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: scaplan{at}unmc.edu)
1 integrins bind to the extracellular matrix and stimulate signaling pathways leading to crucial cellular functions, including proliferation, apoptosis, cell spreading and migration. Consequently, control of
1 integrin function depends upon its subcellular localization, and recent studies have begun to unravel the complex regulatory mechanisms involved in integrin trafficking. We report that the C-terminal Eps15-homology (EH) domain-containing protein EHD1 plays an important role in regulating
1 integrin transport. Initially, we demonstrated that RNAi-knockdown of Ehd1 results in impaired recycling of
1 integrins and their accumulation in a transferrin-containing endocytic recycling compartment. Mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cells derived from EHD1-knockout mice (Ehd1-/- MEF) exhibited lower overall levels of
1 integrins on the plasma membrane, but higher cell-surface-expressed activated
1 integrins, and larger, more prominent focal adhesions resulting from slower kinetics of focal adhesion disassembly. In addition, both migration and cell spreading on fibronectin were impaired in Ehd1-/- MEF cells, and these defects could be similarly induced by EHD1-RNAi treatment of normal Ehd1+/+ MEF cells. They could also be rescued by transfection of wild-type EHD1 into Ehd1-/- MEF cells. Our data support a role for EHD1 in
1 integrin recycling, and demonstrate a requirement for EHD1 in integrin-mediated downstream functions.

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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007