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Intracellular lumen extension requires ERM-1-dependent apical membrane expansion and AQP-8-mediated flux.

Nature cell biology (2013-01-22)
Liakot A Khan, Hongjie Zhang, Nessy Abraham, Lei Sun, John T Fleming, Matthew Buechner, David H Hall, Verena Gobel
RESUMEN

Many unicellular tubes such as capillaries form lumens intracellularly, a process that is not well understood. Here we show that the cortical membrane organizer ERM-1 is required to expand the intracellular apical/lumenal membrane and its actin undercoat during single-cell Caenorhabditis elegans excretory canal morphogenesis. We characterize AQP-8, identified in an ERM-1-overexpression (ERM-1[++]) suppressor screen, as a canalicular aquaporin that interacts with ERM-1 in lumen extension in a mercury-sensitive manner, implicating water-channel activity. AQP-8 is transiently recruited to the lumen by ERM-1, co-localizing in peri-lumenal cuffs interspaced along expanding canals. An ERM-1[++]-mediated increase in the number of lumen-associated canaliculi is reversed by AQP-8 depletion. We propose that the ERM-1/AQP-8 interaction propels lumen extension by translumenal flux, suggesting a direct morphogenetic effect of water-channel-regulated fluid pressure.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Mercury(II) chloride, ACS reagent, ≥99.5%
Sigma-Aldrich
Mercury(II) chloride, ReagentPlus®, 99%
Sigma-Aldrich
Mercury standard solution, suitable for atomic absorption spectrometry, 1 mg/mL Hg, 1000 ppm Hg
Sigma-Aldrich
Mercury(II) chloride, ≥98%