CGC Bibliography Paper 4897
CED-12/ELMO, a novel member of the CrkII/DOCK180/Rac pathway, is required for phagocytosis and cell migration.
Gumienny TL,
Brugnera E,
Tosello-Trampont AC,
Kinchen JM,
Haney LB,
Nishiwaki K,
Walk SF,
Nemergut ME,
Macara IG,
Francis R,
Schedl T,
Qin Y,
Van Aelst L,
Hengartner MO,
Ravichandran KS
- Medline:
- 11595183
- Citation:
- Cell 107: 27-41 2001
- Type:
- ARTICLE
- Genes:
- ced-1 ced-2 ced-3 ced-5 ced-6 ced-7 ced-10 ced-12
- Abstract:
- The C. elegans genes ced-2, ced-5, and ced-10, and their mammalian homologs crkII, dock180, and rac1, mediate cytoskeletal rearrangements during phagocytosis of apoptotic cells and cell motility. Here, we describe an additional member of this signaling pathway, ced-12, and its mammalian homologs, elmo1 and elmo2. In C. elegans, CED-12 is required for engulfment of dying cells and for cell migrations. In mammalian cells, ELMO1 functionally cooperates with CrkII and Dock180 to promote phagocytosis and cell shape changes. CED-12/ELMO-1 binds directly to CED-5/ Dock180; this evolutionarily conserved complex stimulates a Rac-GEF, leading to Rac1 activation and cytoskeletal rearrangements. These studies identify CED-12/ELMO as an upstream regulator of Rac1 that affects engulfment and cell migration from C. elegans to mammals.