CED-2/CrkII and CED-10/Rac control phagocytosis and cell migration in Caenorhabditis elegans

Author:  ["Peter W. Reddien","H. Robert Horvitz"]

Publication:  Nature Cell Biology

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Abstract

Engulfment of apoptotic cells in Caenorhabditis elegans is controlled by two partially redundant pathways. Mutations in genes in one of these pathways, defined by the genes ced-2, ced-5 and ced-10, result in defects both in the engulfment of dying cells and in the migrations of the two distal tip cells of the developing gonad. Here we find that ced-2 and ced-10 encode proteins similar to the human adaptor protein CrkII and the human GTPase Rac, respectively. Together with the previous observation that ced-5 encodes a protein similar to human DOCK180, our findings define a signalling pathway that controls phagocytosis and cell migration. We provide evidence that CED-2 and CED-10 function in engulfing rather than dying cells to control the phagocytosis of cell corpses, that CED-2 and CED-5 physically interact, and that ced-10 probably functions downstream of ced-2 and ced-5. We propose that CED-2/CrkII and CED-5/DOCK180 function to activate CED-10/Rac in a GTPase signalling pathway that controls the polarized extension of cell surfaces.

Cite this article

Reddien, P., Horvitz, H. CED-2/CrkII and CED-10/Rac control phagocytosis and cell migration in Caenorhabditis elegans. Nat Cell Biol 2, 131–136 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1038/35004000

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