Title: Cell Adhesion
1Cell Adhesion
- 311 304 Cell Molecular Biology
- September 1, 2006
- Lecturer Mr. Jirapat Chunthapong
2Introduction
Cross-sectional view of part of the wall of the
intestine
Alberts et al., 2002
3Polarized epithelial cells have distinct apical,
basal, and lateral surfaces
Lodish et al., 2004
41. Cell Adhesion Molecules
Lodish et al., 2004
52. Cell Junctions
- Three major classes of cell junctions
- Anchoring junctions
- Tight junctions
- Gap junctions
Lodish et al., 2004
6A summary of various cell junctions found in
vertebrate epithelial cells
Alberts et al., 2002
72.1 Anchoring Junctions
- Specialized region on the cell surface
- Contains cell-adhesion molecules or adhesion
receptors that interact with other cells or the
extracellular matrix and with cytoskeletal fibers - Major types
- Adherens junctions (zonula adherens)
- Desmosomes (macula adherens)
- Hemidesmosomes
82.1.1 Adherens Junctions
- Also known as zonula adherens
- A type of specialized adhesive junction,
partially common in epithelia - Plasma membranes of adjacent cells are connected
by cadherins or other cell adhesion molecules
(e.g., integrins)
9Alberts et al., 2002
10Lodish et al., 2004
11The influence of extracellular Ca2 on structure
and function of E-cadherin
Alberts et al., 2002
12Lodish et al., 2004
13Alberts et al., 2002
142.1.2 Desmosome
- Also known as macula adherens
- Disc-shaped adhesive junction (1 mm diameter)
- Located basal to adherens junction
- Contains desmogleins desmocollins (desmosomal
cadherins structurally different from classical
cadherins) - Found in variety of tissues (esp., those that
need mechanical strength e.g., cardiac muscle
epithelia of skin and uterine cervix)
15(No Transcript)
16- Dense cytoplasmic plaques, on the inner surface
of plasma membrane, contains desmoplakins
plakoglobin - Serves as site of anchorage for looping
intermediate filaments that extend into the
cytoplasm
Schematic model showing components of a desmosome
Lodish et al., 2004
17- Desmoplakins plakoglobin serve as adaptor
proteins that link desmosomal cadherins to
intermediate filaments - 3-D network of intermediate filaments provides
structural continuity and tensile strength to the
entire sheet of cells - Pemphigus vulgaris (an autoimmune disease) has
antibody against one of his/her own desmogleins ?
loss of epidermal cell-cell adhesion ? severe
blistering of the skin
182.1.3 Hemidesmosome
- Specialized adhesive structure at the basal
surface of epithelial cells - Function attach the cells to their underlying
basement membrane (basal lamina) - Contains a dense plaque on the inner membrane,
with keratin-containing intermediate filaments
coursing out into the cytoplasm
19Lodish et al., 2004
20a b
Karp, G., 2005
21A hemidesmosome junction
Nature Reviews Genetics 3, 199-209 (2002)
222.2 Tight Junctions
- Seals adjacent epithelial cells together
- Locate at the very apical end of junctional
complexes between cells - Form a selective permeability barrier across
epithelial sheet - Seals off body cavities such as intestine,
stomach lumen, bile duct, blood-brain barrier,
etc.
23Lodish et al., 2004
24(a)
(b)
(c)
Tight junctions (a) From freeze-fracture
preparation, (b) Schematic diagram,
(c) Major proteins of tight
junctions
Lodish et al., 2004
25- Freeze-fracture preparation reveals the structure
of tight junction as a honeycomb-like network of
ridges grooves - Linkage of rows of protein particles (3-4 nm Ø)
- Major proteins occludin, claudin-1, JAM
(junction adhesion molecule) - Prevents the diffusion of macromolecules across
epithelial sheet - Prevents diffusion of membrane proteins and
glycolipids between the apical and the
basolateral regions of the plasma membrane
26Transcellular and paracellular pathways of
transportIn paracellular transport, molecules
move through tight junctionswhose permeability
to small molecules and ions depends on the
composition of the junctional components and the
physiologicalstate of the epithelial cells
Lodish et al., 2004
27Alberts et al., 2002
28The role of tight junctions in allowing epithelia
to serve as barriers to solute diffusion
Alberts et al., 2002
292.3 Gap Junctions
- Sites between animal cells that are specialized
for intercellular communication - Span the adjacent plasma membranes with very fine
strands or molecular pipelines that allow the
passage of small molecules (1000 daltons) - Electrical metabolic couplings
30Lodish et al., 2004
31Alberts et al., 2002
32- Gap junctions are constructed from transmembrane
protein called connexin - Six identical protein subunits assemble to form a
structure called connexon - Two connexons from adjacent plasma membranes
align to form a continuous aqueous channel of gap
junction - Gap junctions in different tissues can have
different permeability due to difference in
connexin (there are at least 11 distinct
connexins)