[HTML][HTML] Mertk drives myosin II redistribution during retinal pigment epithelial phagocytosis

DJ Strick, W Feng, D Vollrath - Investigative ophthalmology & …, 2009 - iovs.arvojournals.org
DJ Strick, W Feng, D Vollrath
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 2009iovs.arvojournals.org
purpose. Mertk is a key phagocytic receptor in the immune, male reproductive, and visual
systems. In the retinal pigment epithelium, Mertk is required for the daily ingestion of
photoreceptor outer segment (OS) tips. Loss of Mertk function causes retinal degeneration in
rats, mice, and humans; however, little is known about the mechanism by which Mertk
regulates the ingestion phase of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) phagocytosis. To address
this, the authors sought proteins that associated with Mertk during OS phagocytosis …
Abstract
purpose. Mertk is a key phagocytic receptor in the immune, male reproductive, and visual systems. In the retinal pigment epithelium, Mertk is required for the daily ingestion of photoreceptor outer segment (OS) tips. Loss of Mertk function causes retinal degeneration in rats, mice, and humans; however, little is known about the mechanism by which Mertk regulates the ingestion phase of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) phagocytosis. To address this, the authors sought proteins that associated with Mertk during OS phagocytosis.
methods. Lysates of RPE-J cells challenged with OS for various times were immunoprecipitated with Mertk antibody. Potential interacting proteins were identified by mass spectrometry and characterized with confocal microscopy, pharmacologic inhibition, and siRNA knockdown coupled with an in vitro phagocytic assay in primary RPE cells.
results. Myh9, the non–muscle myosin II-A heavy chain, was enriched in immunoprecipitates from OS-treated samples. Myosin II-A and II-B isoforms exhibited a striking redistribution in wild-type rat primary RPE cells challenged with OS, moving from the cell periphery to colocalize with ingested OS over time. In contrast, myosin II-A redistribution in response to OS was blunted in primary RPE cells from RCS rats, which lack functional Mertk. Wild-type rat primary RPE cells treated with the myosin II-specific inhibitor blebbistatin or myosin II siRNAs exhibited a significant phagocytic defect.
conclusions. Mertk mobilizes myosin II from the RPE cell periphery to sites of OS engulfment, where myosin II function is essential for the normal phagocytic ingestion of OS.
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