Fernando Martín-Belmonte
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Fernando Martín-Belmonte.
Nature Cell Biology | 2010
David M. Bryant; Anirban Datta; Alejo E. Rodríguez-Fraticelli; Johan Peränen; Fernando Martín-Belmonte; Keith E. Mostov
To form epithelial organs cells must polarize and generate de novo an apical domain and lumen. Epithelial polarization is regulated by polarity complexes that are hypothesized to direct downstream events, such as polarized membrane traffic, although this interconnection is not well understood. We have found that Rab11a regulates apical traffic and lumen formation through the Rab guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF), Rabin8, and its target, Rab8a. Rab8a and Rab11a function through the exocyst to target Par3 to the apical surface, and control apical Cdc42 activation through the Cdc42 GEF, Tuba. These components assemble at a transient apical membrane initiation site to form the lumen. This Rab11a-directed network directs Cdc42-dependent apical exocytosis during lumen formation, revealing an interaction between the machineries of vesicular transport and polarization.
Nature Reviews Cancer | 2012
Fernando Martín-Belmonte; Mirna Perez-Moreno
After years of extensive scientific discovery much has been learned about the networks that regulate epithelial homeostasis. Loss of expression or functional activity of cell adhesion and cell polarity proteins (including the PAR, crumbs (CRB) and scribble (SCRIB) complexes) is intricately related to advanced stages of tumour progression and invasiveness. But the key roles of these proteins in crosstalk with the Hippo and liver kinase B1 (LKB1)–AMPK pathways and in epithelial function and proliferation indicate that they may also be associated with the early stages of tumorigenesis. For example, deregulation of adhesion and polarity proteins can cause misoriented cell divisions and increased self-renewal of adult epithelial stem cells. In this Review, we highlight some advances in the understanding of how loss of epithelial cell polarity contributes to tumorigenesis.
Nature Cell Biology | 2006
Ama Gassama-Diagne; Wei Yu; Martin ter Beest; Fernando Martín-Belmonte; Arlinet Kierbel; Joanne Engel; Keith E. Mostov
Polarity is a central feature of eukaryotic cells and phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate (PtdIns(3,4,5)P3) has a central role in the polarization of neurons and chemotaxing cells. In polarized epithelial cells, PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 is stably localized at the basolateral plasma membrane, but excluded from the apical plasma membrane, as shown by localization of GFP fused to the PtdIns(3,4,5)P3-binding pleckstrin-homology domain of Akt (GFP-PH–Akt), a fusion protein that indicates the location of PtdIns(3,4,5)P3. Here, we ectopically inserted exogenous PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 into the apical plasma membrane of polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. Within 5 min many cells formed protrusions that extended above the apical surface. These protrusions contained basolateral plasma membrane proteins and excluded apical proteins, indicating that their plasma membrane was transformed from apical to basolateral. Addition of PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 to the basolateral surface of MDCK cells grown as cysts caused basolateral protrusions. MDCK cells grown in the presence of a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor had abnormally short lateral surfaces, indicating that PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 regulates the formation of the basolateral surface.
Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2008
Fernando Martín-Belmonte; Keith E. Mostov
Epithelial cells have an apical surface facing a lumen or outside of the organism, and a basolateral surface facing other cells and extracellular matrix. The identity of the apical surface is determined by phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, while phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphophosphate determines the identity of the basolateral surface. The Par3/Par6/atypical protein kinase C complex, as well as the Crumbs and Scribble complexes, controls epithelial polarity. Par4 and AMP kinase regulate polarity during conditions of energy depletion. Lumens are formed in hollow cysts and tubules by fusions of apical vesicles, such as the vacuolar apical compartment, with the plasma membrane. The polarity of individual cells is oriented and coordinated with other cells by interactions with the extracellular matrix.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2002
Luis Sanchez-Pulido; Fernando Martín-Belmonte; Alfonso Valencia; Miguel A. Alonso
MARVEL is a novel domain with a four transmembrane-helix architecture that has been identified in proteins of the myelin and lymphocyte (MAL), physins, gyrins and occludin families. Association with specialized membrane microdomains has been reported for some of these MARVEL domain-containing proteins. Their function could be related to cholesterol-rich membrane apposition events in a variety of cellular processes, such as biogenesis of vesicular transport carriers or tight junction regulation. The MARVEL domain appears to be related to complex human diseases, such as schizophrenia and inflammation.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
Alejo E. Rodríguez-Fraticelli; Silvia Vergarajauregui; Dennis J. Eastburn; Anirban Datta; Miguel A. Alonso; Keith E. Mostov; Fernando Martín-Belmonte
Intersectin 2 localizes to centrosomes, where it regulates Cdc42 and helps to orient the apical surface correctly during cyst formation. (See also companion paper from Qin et al., in this issue.)
Nature Cell Biology | 2012
Manuel Gálvez-Santisteban; Alejo E. Rodríguez-Fraticelli; David M. Bryant; Silvia Vergarajauregui; Takao Yasuda; Inmaculada Bañón-Rodríguez; Ilenia Bernascone; Anirban Datta; Natalie Spivak; Kitty Young; Christiaan L. Slim; Paul Brakeman; Mitsunori Fukuda; Keith E. Mostov; Fernando Martín-Belmonte
The formation of epithelial tissues requires both the generation of apical–basal polarity and the coordination of this polarity between neighbouring cells to form a central lumen. During de novo lumen formation, vectorial membrane transport contributes to the formation of a singular apical membrane, resulting in the contribution of each cell to only a single lumen. Here, from a functional screen for genes required for three-dimensional epithelial architecture, we identify key roles for synaptotagmin-like proteins 2-a and 4-a (Slp2-a/4-a) in the generation of a single apical surface per cell. Slp2-a localizes to the luminal membrane in a PtdIns(4,5)P2-dependent manner, where it targets Rab27-loaded vesicles to initiate a single lumen. Vesicle tethering and fusion is controlled by Slp4-a, in conjunction with Rab27/Rab3/Rab8 and the SNARE syntaxin-3. Together, Slp2-a/4-a coordinate the spatiotemporal organization of vectorial apical transport to ensure that only a single apical surface, and thus the formation of a single lumen, occurs per cell.
Developmental Cell | 2010
Ricardo Madrid; Juan F. Aranda; Alejo E. Rodríguez-Fraticelli; Leandro Ventimiglia; Laura Andrés-Delgado; Mona Shehata; Susan Fanayan; Hamideh Shahheydari; Sergio Gómez; Alberto Corsín Jiménez; Fernando Martín-Belmonte; Jennifer A. Byrne; Miguel A. Alonso
Transcytosis is a widespread pathway for apical targeting in epithelial cells. MAL2, an essential protein of the machinery for apical transcytosis, functions by shuttling in vesicular carriers between the apical zone and the cell periphery. We have identified INF2, an atypical formin with actin polymerization and depolymerization activities, which is a binding partner of MAL2. MAL2-positive vesicular carriers associate with short actin filaments during transcytosis in a process requiring INF2. INF2 binds Cdc42 in a GTP-loaded-dependent manner. Cdc42 and INF2 regulate MAL2 dynamics and are necessary for apical transcytosis and the formation of lateral lumens in hepatoma HepG2 cells. INF2 and MAL2 are also essential for the formation of the central lumen in organotypic cultures of epithelial MDCK cells. Our results reveal a functional mechanism whereby Cdc42, INF2, and MAL2 are sequentially ordered in a pathway dedicated to the regulation of transcytosis and lumen formation.
Endocrinology | 1998
Fernando Martín-Belmonte; Leonor Kremer; Juan Pablo Albar; Mónica Marazuela; Miguel A. Alonso
The MAL proteolipid, an integral membrane protein expressed in T lymphocytes, polarized epithelial MDCK cells, and myelin-forming cells, has been identified as a component of internal glycolipid-enriched membrane (GEM) microdomains. On the basis of its ability to induce vesicle formation by ectopic expression, MAL has been recently proposed as a component of the machinery for GEM vesiculation. Taking into account the proposed role of GEMs in polarized transport, we have investigated the expression of the MAL gene in thyroid cells. Interestingly, MAL messenger RNA species were detected in the human thyroid, whereas they were undetectable in other endocrine glands tested. Moreover, epithelial FRT cells, a polarized rat cell line of thyroid origin, also expressed MAL transcripts. Immunohistochemical analysis of thyroid follicles, with a newly developed anti-MAL monoclonal antibody, indicates that MAL distribution is restricted to the apical zone of thyroid epithelial cells. Biochemical analyses, using FRT ce...
Journal of Cell Biology | 2012
Alejo E. Rodríguez-Fraticelli; Muriel Auzan; Miguel A. Alonso; Michel Bornens; Fernando Martín-Belmonte
By controlling cell spreading, physical confinement of cells limits peripheral actin contractility and thereby promotes polarity establishment, centrosome positioning, and subsequent lumen formation by epithelial cells.