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Ubiquitous membrane-bound DNase activity in podosomes and invadopodia.

The Journal of cell biology (2021-04-28)
Kaushik Pal, Yuanchang Zhao, Yongliang Wang, Xuefeng Wang
ABSTRACT

Podosomes and invadopodia, collectively termed invadosomes, are adhesive and degradative membrane structures formed in many types of cells and are well known for recruiting various proteases. However, another major class of degradative enzymes, deoxyribonuclease (DNase), remains unconfirmed and not studied in invadosomes. Here, using surface-immobilized nuclease sensor (SNS), we demonstrated that invadosomes recruit DNase to their core regions, which degrade extracellular double-stranded DNA. We further identified the DNase as GPI-anchored membrane-bound DNase X. DNase recruitment is ubiquitous and consistent in invadosomes of all tested cell types. DNase activity exhibits within a minute after actin nucleation, functioning concomitantly with protease in podosomes but preceding it in invadopodia. We further showed that macrophages form DNase-active podosome rosettes surrounding bacteria or micropatterned antigen islets, and the podosomes directly degrade bacterial DNA on a surface, exhibiting an apparent immunological function. Overall, this work reports DNase in invadosomes for the first time, suggesting a richer arsenal of degradative enzymes in invadosomes than known before.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Cytochalasin D, from Zygosporium mansonii, ≥98% (TLC and HPLC), powder
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Albumin, biotin labeled bovine, lyophilized powder
Sigma-Aldrich
(−)-Blebbistatin, solid, synthetic
Sigma-Aldrich
Lysozyme from chicken egg white, powder or granules, ≥90 %, ≥39,000 units/mg protein
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Anti-TKS5 Antibody, clone 13H6.3, clone 13H6.3, from mouse