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Modulation of cell motility by spatial repositioning of enzymatic ATP/ADP exchange capacity.

van Horssen R, Janssen E, Peters W, van de Pasch L, Lindert MM, van Dommelen MM, Linssen PC, Hagen TL, Fransen JA, Wieringa B

J Biol Chem. 2009 Jan 16; 284(3):1620-7

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Michael Bubb, University of Florida, FL, USA. F1000 Cell Biology

20 Feb 2009 | Technical Advance

The observation in this article that focal adhesion-localized adenylate kinase-1 (AK1) results in more directed cell motility than non-localized kinase in cells deficient in AK1 and creatine kinase-B implies that ATP supply is a limiting factor in these cells.

Induced translocation of AK1 using FKBP-FRB results in a well-controlled experiment in which the only pertinent variable is AK1 localization. This is particularly important because occupation of the EVH1 binding site by transfected protein may compete with other endogenous ligands, resulting in motility changes independent of effects on ADP/ATP. Even an EVH1-YFP control may be inadequate because of different steric effects. In the induced system, the occupation of binding sites, the expression of proteins, and the whole-cell enzymatic activity are all unchanged after rapalog induction. It would have been useful to know if the transfected cells have ATP-generating capacity at levels comparable to wild-type cells. If the transfected cells are producing only a tiny fraction of the normal extent of activity, then "ATP/ADP compartmentalization" may be moot in wild-type cells.

Competing interests: None declared

Bubb M: "The observation in this article that focal adhesion-localized adenylate kinase-1 (AK1) results in..." Evaluation of: [van Horssen R et al. Modulation of cell motility by spatial repositioning of enzymatic ATP/ADP exchange capacity. J Biol Chem. 2009 Jan 16; 284(3):1620-7; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M806974200]. Faculty of 1000, 20 Feb 2009. F1000.com/1148866#eval605951

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Bubb M: 2009. F1000.com/1148866#eval605951

Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [van Horssen R et al. Modulation of cell motility by spatial repositioning of enzymatic ATP/ADP exchange capacity. J Biol Chem. 2009 Jan 16; 284(3):1620-7; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M806974200]. Faculty of 1000, 20 Feb 2009. F1000.com/1148866

Short form
Faculty of 1000: 2009. F1000.com/1148866

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ATP is the "principal energy currency" in metabolism and the most versatile small molecular regulator of cellular activities. Although already much is known about the role of ATP in fundamental processes of living systems, data about its compartmentalization are rather scarce, and we still have only very limited understanding of whether patterns in the distribution of intracellular ATP concentration ("ATP inhomogeneity") do exist and have a regulatory role. Here we report on the analysis of coupling of local ATP supply to regulation of actomyosin behavior, a widespread and dynamic process with conspicuous high ATP dependence, which is central to cell shape changes and cell motility. As an experimental model, we use embryonic fibroblasts from knock-out mice without major ATP-ADP exchange enzymes, in which we (re)introduce the ATP/ADP exchange enzyme adenylate kinase-1 (AK1) and deliberately manipulate its spatial positioning by coupling to different artificial location tags. By transfection-complementation of AK1 variants and comparison with yellow fluorescent protein controls, we found that motility and spreading were enhanced in cells with AK1 with a focal contact guidance tag. Intermediary enhancement was observed in cells with membrane-targeted or cytosolic AK1. Use of a heterodimer-inducing approach for transient translocation of AK1 to focal contacts under conditions of constant global AK1 activity in the cell corroborated these results. Based on our findings with these model systems, we propose that local ATP supply in the cell periphery and "on site" fuelling of the actomyosin machinery, when maintained via enzymes involved in phosphoryl transfer, are codetermining factors in the control of cell motility.

DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M806974200

PMID: 19008233

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