Determination of the mechanisms of desmosome loss during EMT
Lead Research Organisation:
The University of Manchester
Department Name: School of Biological Sciences
Abstract
Cells in stress-exposed tissues, e.g. heart muscle and the coverings of body surfaces, are bound together by tiny, rivet-like structures called desmosomes. Aberrant function of these structures causes diseases such as sudden heart failure, defective wound healing, cancer spread and certain blistering diseases of the skin and oral cavity. Some of these conditions are among the most common causes of morbidity and death, while others are rare but extremely unpleasant, difficult to treat and can be fatal. Desmosomes are also important for normal development, where they stabilise developing tissues. It is therefore essential to understand how desmosome function is regulated.
We have shown that an important factor contributing to the toughness of tissues is that desmosomes exhibit a highly adhesive state known as hyper-adhesion. Hyper-adhesion is important for tissue strength, but also locks cells together, thus restricting their movement. During wound healing, epidermal cells migrate to close the wound, their migration being triggered by wounding. The invasive spread of cancer cells also requires cell migration and in development cell movement generates the correct architecture of tissues.
In order to move, cells need to reduce the degree of adhesion between them. We have shown that on wounding desmosomes rapidly lose hyper-adhesion, becoming more weakly adhesive. However, this weakening of adhesion may not be sufficient to permit the adequate movement. Instead, cells may need to lose some or all of their desmosomes. How they do this is not understood.
Some evidence from electron microscopy studies of cancers and wounds suggests cells may be able to engulf whole desmosomes and therefore become stuck together more loosely. This is evident because desmosomes have a characteristic, easily recognisable structure. Normally desmosomes appear at the junction between cells but these studies have shown whole desmosome inside cells, as though one cell has "eaten" the desmosome! However unlikely this seems we have now induced cell separation in culture and shown that they do indeed engulf whole desmosomes. This is exciting because it enables us to investigate the mechanism behind a process that occurs in normal and diseased tissues.
Desmosome engulfment resembles a process called phagocytosis whereby cells of the immune system engulf extracellular particles, e.g. bacteria. Phagocytosis requires active contractile activity by the engulfing cell so as to surround the particle and draw it inside. This, in turn, requires the action of the cell's contractile apparatus, which depends upon filamentous proteins called actin and myosin, similar to those involved in muscle contraction. Desmosomes are not normally associated with these proteins but instead are internally linked to other filaments called intermediate filaments (IF). The IF are linked from cell-to-cell by desmosomes, forming a scaffold that gives great strength to tissues. However, IF possess no contractile activity. So if the filaments they attach to cannot contract, how are desmosomes engulfed?
Our pilot studies suggest the cell's contractile apparatus is somehow involved in desmosome engulfment and a regulatory enzyme called protein kinase C (PKC), known to be involved in phagocytosis and actin regulation, participates. To understand the mechanism in greater detail we will use state-of the-art microscopy to study how desmosomes become associated with the contractile machinery as they switch from hyper-adhesion to engulfment. Also we will use mass spectrometry to identify novel proteins involved in the process and to determine the role of PKC. Finally, we will use molecular cell biology to determine the functions of the key proteins in detail.
Our results will both further our understanding of normal development and provide a basis for new therapies for major health problems such as chronic wounds, skin blistering diseases and, potentially, for limiting the spread of cancer.
We have shown that an important factor contributing to the toughness of tissues is that desmosomes exhibit a highly adhesive state known as hyper-adhesion. Hyper-adhesion is important for tissue strength, but also locks cells together, thus restricting their movement. During wound healing, epidermal cells migrate to close the wound, their migration being triggered by wounding. The invasive spread of cancer cells also requires cell migration and in development cell movement generates the correct architecture of tissues.
In order to move, cells need to reduce the degree of adhesion between them. We have shown that on wounding desmosomes rapidly lose hyper-adhesion, becoming more weakly adhesive. However, this weakening of adhesion may not be sufficient to permit the adequate movement. Instead, cells may need to lose some or all of their desmosomes. How they do this is not understood.
Some evidence from electron microscopy studies of cancers and wounds suggests cells may be able to engulf whole desmosomes and therefore become stuck together more loosely. This is evident because desmosomes have a characteristic, easily recognisable structure. Normally desmosomes appear at the junction between cells but these studies have shown whole desmosome inside cells, as though one cell has "eaten" the desmosome! However unlikely this seems we have now induced cell separation in culture and shown that they do indeed engulf whole desmosomes. This is exciting because it enables us to investigate the mechanism behind a process that occurs in normal and diseased tissues.
Desmosome engulfment resembles a process called phagocytosis whereby cells of the immune system engulf extracellular particles, e.g. bacteria. Phagocytosis requires active contractile activity by the engulfing cell so as to surround the particle and draw it inside. This, in turn, requires the action of the cell's contractile apparatus, which depends upon filamentous proteins called actin and myosin, similar to those involved in muscle contraction. Desmosomes are not normally associated with these proteins but instead are internally linked to other filaments called intermediate filaments (IF). The IF are linked from cell-to-cell by desmosomes, forming a scaffold that gives great strength to tissues. However, IF possess no contractile activity. So if the filaments they attach to cannot contract, how are desmosomes engulfed?
Our pilot studies suggest the cell's contractile apparatus is somehow involved in desmosome engulfment and a regulatory enzyme called protein kinase C (PKC), known to be involved in phagocytosis and actin regulation, participates. To understand the mechanism in greater detail we will use state-of the-art microscopy to study how desmosomes become associated with the contractile machinery as they switch from hyper-adhesion to engulfment. Also we will use mass spectrometry to identify novel proteins involved in the process and to determine the role of PKC. Finally, we will use molecular cell biology to determine the functions of the key proteins in detail.
Our results will both further our understanding of normal development and provide a basis for new therapies for major health problems such as chronic wounds, skin blistering diseases and, potentially, for limiting the spread of cancer.
Technical Summary
Desmosomes are cell-cell junctions linked to intracellular intermediate filaments (IF). They adopt hyper-adhesion that assists tissues, e.g. epidermis and heart muscle, to resist shear, but restricts cell movement. In development, wound repair and cancer spread, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) enables movement. EMT involves junction downregulation, but how desmosomes are downregulated is unknown. Pilot data show cells engulf whole desmosomes during EMT, consistent with electron microscopy analyses of wounds and cancer, but how it occurs is unclear as IF lack motor activity. Pilot data indicate engulfment involves actin and protein kinase C alpha (PKC), and suggest crosstalk with actin-linked adherens junctions (AJ). The switch from hyperadhesion to Ca2+-dependence precedes desmosome downregulation. Pilot fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) suggests this involves "loosening" of structure, consistent with EM studies.
The major question of this study will be: How are desmosomes downregulated during EMT?
The two questions that we will address are:
1) What dynamic changes accompany desmosome downregulation?
We will use FRAP and photoactivation to study mobility of desmosomal components, and FRET and superresolution microscopy to study desmosome associations with AJ and actin regulators. We will use proximity biotinylation (Bio-ID) in conjunction with mass spectrometry to determine the protein associations of desmosomes during downregulation.
2) What is the mechanism of desmosome downregulation?
Pilot data have indicated regulatory roles for plakoglobin and plakophilin-1. Retroviral protein expression will be used to determine the protein domains and phosphorylation sites that are involved. Phosphoproteomic analysis will identify phosphorylation sites in these and other plaque proteins.
Insights from these studies will ultimately lead to novel strategies to prevent diseases and further our understanding of development.
The major question of this study will be: How are desmosomes downregulated during EMT?
The two questions that we will address are:
1) What dynamic changes accompany desmosome downregulation?
We will use FRAP and photoactivation to study mobility of desmosomal components, and FRET and superresolution microscopy to study desmosome associations with AJ and actin regulators. We will use proximity biotinylation (Bio-ID) in conjunction with mass spectrometry to determine the protein associations of desmosomes during downregulation.
2) What is the mechanism of desmosome downregulation?
Pilot data have indicated regulatory roles for plakoglobin and plakophilin-1. Retroviral protein expression will be used to determine the protein domains and phosphorylation sites that are involved. Phosphoproteomic analysis will identify phosphorylation sites in these and other plaque proteins.
Insights from these studies will ultimately lead to novel strategies to prevent diseases and further our understanding of development.
Planned Impact
The proposed project combines biological, physical, and medical aspects, is concerned with the refinement of cutting edge techniques and investigates molecular mechanisms potentially relevant to development, pathology and medical treatment. Thus, there are a wide range of direct and indirect beneficiaries from the research:
(1) Biotechnology. Understanding how cells interact with each other and establishing methodologies that enable cellular responses to be directed will be of benefit for biotechnology research and industry, particularly for wound healing and possibly tissue engineering. Cell lines stably expressing GFP-tagged proteins may become valuable for the screening of materials and drugs affecting cellular behaviour. We expect a high potential impact in the biotechnology area and will actively search for relevant systems/companies to share our knowledge. The impact will be direct and mid-term.
(2) Pharmaceutical industry. Unravelling how desmosome regulation is involved in strengthening tissues will provide a starting point for the development of pharmaceutical products influencing cell to cell communication. Modulating cell responses to changing environments may promote regeneration. Thus, there is the potential to commercialise products used to modulate cell to cell adhesion. It will be direct and mid- to long-term.
(3) General public. Images generated from this project are colourful, intuitive, attractive and make the science more accessible. They are useful for engaging the public, and particularly children through school lectures, about science. We will further set up a website about "The Cell's Ability to Talk to Each Other" which will contain sections accessible to the lay person. This will focus on how disciplines can be integrated to deliver tangible benefits for society, in terms of finding new ways to understand and treat disease. Moreover, contributing to the successful treatment of tissue injuries has an enormous impact on general health. Promoting regeneration processes will improve life quality of thousands of people in the UK and beyond the borders. Furthermore, it will drastically reduce treatment costs, thus directly and indirectly impacting the healthcare system. The impact is indirect and mid- to long-term.
(4) Researchers of various backgrounds. Understanding cell adhesion processeses is highly relevant to biology and biophysics. It is known that cell to cell communication is involved in many physiological and pathological processes ranging from embryo formation to blistering diseases, wound healing defects and cancer, adding an impact on medical research. The application and refinement of cutting edge methods is particularly relevant to method developers and analysts. Accordingly, scientists working in any of those areas might be highly interested in the outcome of the project. The impact will be direct and immediate.
(5) Staff working on the project. Researchers will work interdisciplinary, interact with many scientists of different backgrounds and companies and creatively solve problems. They will further develop communication, problem solving and entrepreneurial skills and acquire new technical and IT skills, which will be useful in any later profession.
(1) Biotechnology. Understanding how cells interact with each other and establishing methodologies that enable cellular responses to be directed will be of benefit for biotechnology research and industry, particularly for wound healing and possibly tissue engineering. Cell lines stably expressing GFP-tagged proteins may become valuable for the screening of materials and drugs affecting cellular behaviour. We expect a high potential impact in the biotechnology area and will actively search for relevant systems/companies to share our knowledge. The impact will be direct and mid-term.
(2) Pharmaceutical industry. Unravelling how desmosome regulation is involved in strengthening tissues will provide a starting point for the development of pharmaceutical products influencing cell to cell communication. Modulating cell responses to changing environments may promote regeneration. Thus, there is the potential to commercialise products used to modulate cell to cell adhesion. It will be direct and mid- to long-term.
(3) General public. Images generated from this project are colourful, intuitive, attractive and make the science more accessible. They are useful for engaging the public, and particularly children through school lectures, about science. We will further set up a website about "The Cell's Ability to Talk to Each Other" which will contain sections accessible to the lay person. This will focus on how disciplines can be integrated to deliver tangible benefits for society, in terms of finding new ways to understand and treat disease. Moreover, contributing to the successful treatment of tissue injuries has an enormous impact on general health. Promoting regeneration processes will improve life quality of thousands of people in the UK and beyond the borders. Furthermore, it will drastically reduce treatment costs, thus directly and indirectly impacting the healthcare system. The impact is indirect and mid- to long-term.
(4) Researchers of various backgrounds. Understanding cell adhesion processeses is highly relevant to biology and biophysics. It is known that cell to cell communication is involved in many physiological and pathological processes ranging from embryo formation to blistering diseases, wound healing defects and cancer, adding an impact on medical research. The application and refinement of cutting edge methods is particularly relevant to method developers and analysts. Accordingly, scientists working in any of those areas might be highly interested in the outcome of the project. The impact will be direct and immediate.
(5) Staff working on the project. Researchers will work interdisciplinary, interact with many scientists of different backgrounds and companies and creatively solve problems. They will further develop communication, problem solving and entrepreneurial skills and acquire new technical and IT skills, which will be useful in any later profession.
Publications


Fülle JB
(2021)
Desmosome dualism - most of the junction is stable, but a plakophilin moiety is persistently dynamic.
in Journal of cell science

Fülle JB
(2024)
Proximity Mapping of Desmosomes Reveals a Striking Shift in Their Molecular Neighborhood Associated With Maturation.
in Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP
Description | We examined the dynamic turnover of a number of desmosomal adhesion proteins and tested how these dynamics change when adhesion receptors change their adhesive states. The findings also show how cells downregulate desmosomes when they start moving apart from each other as it happens during wounding. We recently published these findings in the Journal of Cell Science. We have also done extensive mass spectrometry experiments and identified a network of proteins associated with desmosomes that changes depending on the adhesion state of desmosomes. The findings explain how desmosomes and their individual components are linked to a variety of signalling pathways; a major publication is currently under preparation. |
Exploitation Route | communication and presentations at conferences; publications |
Sectors | Education Healthcare |
Description | BBSRC pool panel member - Invitation for panel C 2024 |
Geographic Reach | National |
Policy Influence Type | Participation in a guidance/advisory committee |
Description | Invitation on a grant panel for the Executive Agency for Higher Education, Research, Development and Innovation Funding (UEFISCDI) in Rumania. |
Geographic Reach | Europe |
Policy Influence Type | Participation in a guidance/advisory committee |
Description | Invitation to the 2023 "pool of experts" for BBSRC applications. |
Geographic Reach | National |
Policy Influence Type | Participation in a guidance/advisory committee |
Description | A novel health promoting device and its potential in accelerating wound healing |
Amount | £20,000 (GBP) |
Organisation | University of Manchester |
Sector | Academic/University |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 12/2018 |
End | 03/2019 |
Description | Collaboration with John Common at A*STAR; Singapore |
Organisation | Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) |
Country | Singapore |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | This collaboration involves a shared PhD student who started in Sept 2022; the student will perform research in both institutions (2 years in Manchester and 2 years in Singapore). |
Collaborator Contribution | Will pay the stipend and consumables when the student is for 2 years in Singapore. |
Impact | Pilot data for the continuation of the 4 year project. |
Start Year | 2022 |
Description | Desmosome dynamics under tension (Birgit Lane) |
Organisation | Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) |
Country | Singapore |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | The project lead to the continuation of a collaboration with Professor Birgit Lane with whom we share a studentship. |
Collaborator Contribution | - intellectual contribution - reagents; plasmids |
Impact | Yet unpublished data about dynamics of desmosomal components. |
Start Year | 2018 |
Description | The network of desmosomal protein interactions (Edward Manser) |
Organisation | Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR) |
Country | Singapore |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | - We have sent cell lines expressing desmosomal components. - intellectual and data exchange |
Collaborator Contribution | - the lab of Ed Manser runs a complementary Mass Spectrometry method which will deliver additional data about protein networks in desmosomes. |
Impact | Data about protein interactions |
Start Year | 2018 |
Description | Desmosome Disease Meeting (Grainau, Germany) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | My postdoc was selected for a short talk and poster presentation which sparked questions and discussion. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://desmosome-disease-meeting.com/program/ |
Description | E-learning project for high schools |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | An undergraduate student is in charge of an e-learning project which will generate movies associated with lessons to teach how cells generate and communicate with their extracelluar environment. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
Description | GRC international conference |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | postdoc involved in this project gave a poster presentation about desmosomes, which sparked plenty of questions and discussion; led to the invitation to a follow up Desomsome meeting in Germany. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://www.grc.org/signaling-by-adhesion-receptors-conference/2022/ |
Description | Hosting of 2 A Level students from Loretto High School in Manchester |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an open day or visit at my research institution |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | Hosting 2 A level students for one day. Day organisation: Tour through the research lab and imaging facility; introduction in the projects running in the laboratory; presentation of the lab projects with discussions involving laboratory members; outlook discussion for science in gerneral. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
Description | Manchester Science Festival |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | Yes |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | was informative stimulating for non-scientists and sparked questions and discussion. Sparked interests of the public. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2010,2011,2013,2014 |
Description | Pint of Science |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
Results and Impact | Public engagement event "Pint of Science" series in Manchester (UK); joint event with an artist (Sally Gilford); Title: Becoming the Matrix. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://pintofscience.co.uk/event/becoming-the-matrix |
Description | Placement visit of High School pupils (year10) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | 2 week long placement of pupil |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2018 |
Description | School visit St Bedes (Manchester) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Local |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | Info evening about potential careers in Science. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2018 |
Description | School visits abroad (Singapore, Indonesia and Malaysia) and participation and recruitment fairs for international undergraduate students. |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Schools |
Results and Impact | Several high school classes were visited with a selection of talks around the topic of "How cells sense their environment and the role in health and disease". Around 20-50 students visited per school visit (some with parents); 4 school visits in 2015 (Singapore only); 10 in 2016 (Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia). Besides engagement, the talks about my labs research aimed to attract international undergraduate students to the University of Manchester. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2015,2016 |