DaPKC-dependent phosphorylation of Crumbs is required for epithelial cell polarity in Drosophila. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Both in Drosophila and vertebrate epithelial cells, the establishment of apicobasal polarity requires the apically localized, membrane-associated Par-3-Par-6-aPKC protein complex. In Drosophila, this complex colocalizes with the Crumbs-Stardust (Sdt)-Pals1-associated TJ protein (Patj) complex. Genetic and molecular analyses suggest a functional relationship between them. We show, by overexpression of a kinase-dead Drosophila atypical PKC (DaPKC), the requirement for the kinase activity of DaPKC to maintain the position of apical determinants and to restrict the localization of basolateral ones. We demonstrate a novel physical interaction between the apical complexes, via direct binding of DaPKC to both Crb and Patj, and identify Crumbs as a phosphorylation target of DaPKC. This phosphorylation of Crumbs is functionally significant. Thus, a nonphosphorylatable Crumbs protein behaves in vivo as a dominant negative. Moreover, the phenotypic effect of overexpressing wild-type Crumbs is suppressed by reducing DaPKC activity. These results provide a mechanistic framework for the functional interaction between the Par-3-Par-6-aPKC and Crumbs-Sdt-Patj complexes based in the posttranslational modification of Crb by DaPKC.

publication date

  • August 9, 2004

Research

keywords

  • Drosophila Proteins
  • Epithelial Cells
  • Membrane Proteins
  • Protein Kinase C

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2172211

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 4143119015

PubMed ID

  • 15302858

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 166

issue

  • 4