Local ATP generation by brain-type creatine kinase (CK-B) facilities cell motility


Article
volume 4, issue 3.
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Background: Creatine Kinases (CK) catalyze the reversible transfer of high-energy phosphate groups between ATP and phosphocreatine, thereby playing a storage and distribution role in cellular energetics. Brain-type CK (CK-B) deficiency is coupled to loss of function in neural cell circuits, altered bone-remodeling by osteoclasts and complement-mediated phagocytotic activity of macrophages, processes sharing dependency on actomyosin dynamics. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we provide evidence for direct coupling between CK-B and actomyosin activities in cortical microdomains of astrocytes and fibroblasts during spreading and migration. CK-B transiently accumulates in membrane ruffles and ablation of CK-B activity affects spreading and migration performance. Complementation experiments in CK-B-deficient fibroblasts, using new strategies to force protein relocalization from cytosol to cortical sites at membranes, confirmed the contribution of compartmentalized CK-B to cell morphogenetic dynamics. Conclusion/Significance: Our results provide evidence that local cytoskeletal dynamics during cell motility is coupled to on-site availability of ATP generated by CK-B.





Automatically Extracted Terms
  • migration
  • astrocyte
  • figure
  • actin
  • activity
  • membrane
  • kinase
  • motility
  • protein
  • creatine
  • f-actin
  • control
  • dynamic
  • assay
  • panel
  • expression
  • process
  • enzyme
  • ck-bc 283s
  • cell migration