cIAP1 regulates TNF-mediated cdc42 activation and filopodia formation

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TitrecIAP1 regulates TNF-mediated cdc42 activation and filopodia formation
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuteursMarivin A., Berthelet J., Cartier J., Paul C., Gemble S., Morizot A., Boireau W., Saleh M., Bertoglio J., Solary E., Dubrez L.
JournalONCOGENE
Volume33
Pagination5534-5545
Date PublishedNOV 27
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0950-9232
Mots-cléscdc42, IAPS, Metastasis, Ras, RhoGTPases, TNF
Résumé

Tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) is a cytokine endowed with multiple functions, depending on the cellular and environmental context. TNF receptor engagement induces the formation of a multimolecular complex including the TNFR-associated factor TRAF2, the receptor-interaction protein kinase RIP1 and the cellular inhibitor of apoptosis cIAP1, the latter being essential for NF-kappa B activation. Here, we show that cIAP1 also regulates TNF-induced actin cytoskeleton reorganization through a cdc42-dependent, NF-kappa B-independent pathway. Deletion of cIAP1 prevents TNF-induced filopodia and cdc42 activation. The expression of cIAP1 or its E3-ubiquitin ligase-defective mutant restores the ability of cIAP1(-/-) MEFs to produce filopodia, whereas a cIAP1 mutant unable to bind TRAF2 does not. Accordingly, the silencing of TRAF2 inhibits TNF-mediated filopodia formation, whereas silencing of RIP1 does not. cIAP1 directly binds cdc42 and promotes its RhoGDI alpha-mediated stabilization. TNF decreases cIAP1-cdc42 interaction, suggesting that TNF-induced recruitment of cIAP1/TRAF2 to the receptor releases cdc42, which in turn triggers actin remodeling. cIAP1 also regulates cdc42 activation in response to EGF and HRas-V12 expression. A downregulation of cIAP1 altered the cell polarization, the cell adhesion to endothelial cells and cell intercalation, which are cdc42-dependent processes. Finally, we demonstrated that the deletion of cIAP1 regulated the HRas-V12-mediated transformation process, including anchorage-dependent cell growth, tumour growth in a xenograft model and the development of experimental metastasis in the lung.

DOI10.1038/onc.2013.499