作者
Paul Markus Müller,Juliane Rademacher,Richard D. Bagshaw,Celina Wortmann,Carolin Barth,Jakobus van Unen,M. Keziban,Girolamo Giudice,Rebecca L. Eccles,Louise Heinrich,Patricia Pascual Vargas,Marta Sanchez-Castro,Lennart Brandenburg,Geraldine Mbamalu,Monika Tucholska,Lisa Spatt,Maciej T. Czajkowski,Robert-William Welke,Sunqu Zhang,Vivian Nguyen,Trëndelina Rrustemi,Philipp Trnka,Kiara Freitag,Brett Larsen,Oliver Popp,Philipp Mertins,Anne‐Claude Gingras,Frederick P. Roth,Karen Colwill,Chris Bakal,Olivier Pertz,Tony Pawson,Evangelia Petsalaki,Oliver Rocks
摘要
Rho GTPases are central regulators of the cytoskeleton and, in humans, are controlled by 145 multidomain guanine nucleotide exchange factors (RhoGEFs) and GTPase-activating proteins (RhoGAPs). How Rho signalling patterns are established in dynamic cell spaces to control cellular morphogenesis is unclear. Through a family-wide characterization of substrate specificities, interactomes and localization, we reveal at the systems level how RhoGEFs and RhoGAPs contextualize and spatiotemporally control Rho signalling. These proteins are widely autoinhibited to allow local regulation, form complexes to jointly coordinate their networks and provide positional information for signalling. RhoGAPs are more promiscuous than RhoGEFs to confine Rho activity gradients. Our resource enabled us to uncover a multi-RhoGEF complex downstream of G-protein-coupled receptors controlling CDC42–RHOA crosstalk. Moreover, we show that integrin adhesions spatially segregate GEFs and GAPs to shape RAC1 activity zones in response to mechanical cues. This mechanism controls the protrusion and contraction dynamics fundamental to cell motility. Our systems analysis of Rho regulators is key to revealing emergent organization principles of Rho signalling. Müller et al. provide a comprehensive resource depicting cellular substrates, localization and interacting partners of RhoGEF and RhoGAP proteins regulating the canonical Rho family of GTPases.