Circulation Research. 2006;98:306-308
doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000208059.16734.35
(Circulation Research. 2006;98:306.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.
Organizing Motility
LIM Domains, LPP, and Smooth Muscle Migration
Mark W. Majesky
From the Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center, and Departments of Medicine & Genetics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Correspondence to Mark W. Majesky, PhD, Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center, 8200 MBRB, Campus Box 7126, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7126. E-mail mmajesky{at}med.unc.edu
See related article, pages 378385
Key Words: smooth muscle cells LIM domain migration focal adhesions
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Introduction
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Vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) acquire a highly specialized
cytoskeleton during development that is organized for efficient
transmission of contractile force. This SMC cytoskeleton must
be extensively reorganized to support directed cell migrations
that are required for repair of arterial injury. Particularly
important in this reorganization process are adaptor proteins
that mediate the assembly of multiprotein complexes involved
in cell adhesion, lamellipodial extensions, signal transduction,
and transcriptional activation. One such adaptor protein is
called lipoma-preferred partner (LPP), a member of the LIM domaincontaining
protein family, most closely related to zxyin, ajuba, LIM domaincontaining
protein-1 (LIMD1), and thyroid receptor-interacting protein-6
(TRIP6).
1 Evidence to suggest that LPP is a smooth musclerestricted
LIM protein that plays an important role in SMC migration after
arterial injury is reported by Gorenne et al in this issue of
Circulation Research.
2
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Discovery of LPP as a Translocation Partner in Human Lipomas
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LPP was discovered as a component of t(3:12) chromosome translocations
found in benign tumors of human adipose tissue (lipomas).
3 The
chromosome 3 breakpoint occurred in a 400-kb genomic locus that
encoded a protein with proline-rich sequences and leucine zipper
motifs at its N terminus and three LIM domains at its C terminus.
The t(3:12) translocation produced a fusion protein containing
the N-terminal DNA binding domain of HMGIC fused to the C-terminal
LIM domains of a protein encoded by the chromosome 3 locus.
The latter was given the name LIM domaincontaining lipoma-preferred
partner (LPP).
3 The lipoma-associated fusion protein is localized
to the nucleus
4 and can function as a transcription activator.
5 Translocations involving the LIM domains of LPP are the most
common chromosomal translocations found in human tumors. In
addition to lipomas, they have been found in various benign
and malignant tumors of mesenchymal origin, including leukemias
(fused with the mixed lineage leukemia protein (MLL),
6 and pulmonary
chondroid hamartomas (fused with HMGA2).
7
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The LIM Domain, a Versatile Motif for ProteinProtein Interaction
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Modular docking domains that mediate proteinprotein interactions
are critical components of cellular regulatory and signaling
networks. The LIM domain, in particular, is a highly versatile
peptide cassette found in many adaptor proteins that mediates
the assembly of multiprotein complexes involved in cell adhesion,
cytoskeletal remodeling, cell motility, and gene transcription.
LIM domains were first identified as cysteine and histidine-rich
motifs present in
Lin-11, a
C elegans gene required for asymmetric
division of vulval precursors,
Isl1, a rat insulin 1 gene enhancer
binding protein, and
Mec3, a
C elegans gene required for mechanosensory
neuron development.
1,8 The utility of the LIM domain is reflected
by the frequency with which it is found in the human genome,
with at least 58 genes containing one or more LIM domains,
1 a number that is similar in frequency to SH2 domaincontaining
proteins.
9 The structures of several LIM domains have been determined
by NMR spectroscopy and by X-ray crystallography. They fold
in the conformation of two zinc fingers stabilized by tetrahedryl
zinc coordination.
10 Because most LIM proteins have multiple,
often tandem, LIM repeats, it is of interest that the two LIM
domains of cysteine-rich LIM protein-1 (CRP1) can fold independently
of one another, display distinct protein binding surfaces, and
exhibit little or no restraint on rotation or conformation as
a result of their proximity.
10,11 These features suggest that
a single protein containing multiple LIM domains can probably
bind several partners simultaneously, a characteristic feature
of a protein with scaffold or adaptor function.
Many LIM proteins, including LPP, can shuttle between the cytoplasm and the nucleus, suggesting they may transfer information directly from the cytoskeleton or focal adhesions to the transcription machinery. However, there is no compelling evidence for sequence-specific DNA binding by a LIM domain. The LIM-homeodomain class of proteins, including Isl1, can bind to DNA via their homeodomains, but not their LIM domains. When implicated in transcriptional control, LIM proteins are usually found to mediate the assembly of interacting partners to form transcriptionally active complexes. For example, LIM only protein-2 (LMO2) is a double LIM domain protein that is required for erythropoiesis in the yolk sac and early embryo.12 The tandem LIM domains of LMO2 were found to provide docking sites for GATA-1 and TAL-1/E47, thus producing a multiprotein complex with much greater transcriptional activity for key erythrocyte differentiation genes than any of the individual components alone.13 Similarly, the LIM and glycine-rich repeat-containing proteins CRP1 and CRP2 were found to form a high affinity complex between serum response factor (SRF) and GATA proteins, that greatly increased the affinity of SRF for its DNA recognition CArG box element in various SMC-specific differentiation marker genes.14
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LIM Domains Target LPP to Focal Adhesions in Smooth Muscle Cells
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Through their binding partners, LIM proteins participate in
a diverse array of cellular processes.
1 The C-terminal LIM domains
of LPP are required for targeting the protein to points of cellcell
and cellmatrix contacts.
4 LPP also contains N-terminal
polyproline-rich motifs and ENA/VASP-homology regions that mediate
association with actin filaments and focal adhesions via the
vasodilator stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP) and related proteins
(
Figure).
4 In intact smooth muscle tissues, Gorenne et al reported
finding LPP in punctate foci at the cell surface where it was
colocalized with vinculin in peripheral membrane dense bodies
involved in actin filament attachment sites.
15 In adult tissues,
LPP was present at 100-fold higher levels in smooth muscle-rich
tissues including bladder, uterus, ileum, and aorta than in
non-smooth muscle organs such as liver, heart, or brain. Overexpression
of LPP in cultured human iliac vein SMCs (HIVS) increased EGF-stimulated
cell migration by

2.5-fold in a transwell chemotaxis assay.
Moreover, treatment of HIVS cells with leptomycin-B, an inhibitor
of CRM1-mediated nuclear export, caused accumulation of LPP
in the nucleus.
15 Cytoplasmic-nuclear shuttling has also been
demonstrated for zyxin
16 and TRIP6,
17 suggesting it is a common
property for this class of LIM proteins. Assuming these results
for cytoplasmic-nuclear shuttling in vitro have counterparts
in vivo, it is intriguing to consider a possible signaling role
for LPP in SMCs, possibly in the feedback control of transcription
of cytoskeletal proteins.

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In mature smooth muscle tissues, LPP is localized to membrane-associated peripheral dense bodies (PDBs), sites of actin filament insertion in contractile SMCs. In migrating SMCs, LPP is found colocalized with vinculin at focal adhesions. LPP also contains a nuclear export sequence (NES), and the protein can accumulate in the nucleus through a shuttling mechanism that is sensitive to inhibition of rho kinase activity.15 LPP contains three C-terminal LIM domains that mediate proteinprotein interactions, an ENA/VASP homology motif (E/V), and polyproline (PP) domains that can associate with actin binding proteins. Through these diverse structural domains, LPP can function as an adaptor protein to assemble multiprotein complexes at focal adhesions, PDBs, and possibly in the nucleus.
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LPP Is a Smooth Muscle-Restricted Protein That Promotes Cell Migration
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Extending their previous work, Gorenne et al now report that
the LPP gene is responsive to RhoA-mediated signaling pathways
that activate serum response factor (SRF)-dependent transcription
in SMC differentiation.
2,18,19 Moreover, similar to other SMC
specific genes, overexpression of the SRF coactivator myocardin
increased LPP gene expression by

3-fold after 48 hours.
2 Whereas
previous results showed that overexpression of LPP enhanced
SMC migration in vitro, the present work showed that loss of
function using siRNAs against LPP produced a strong inhibition
of SMC migration in response to an EGF chemotactic gradient.
Of particular interest was the observation that in embryonic
fibroblasts lacking focal adhesion kinase (FAK-null), LPP expression
was reduced by

10-fold, whereas the contents of other focal
adhesion proteins including vinculin, talin, or paxillin were
not altered. Moreover, when FAK levels were restored in FAK-null
cells by use of a tetracycline-based expression system, LPP
levels returned to normal. Furthermore, expression of LPP in
migration-defective FAK null cells led to a significant increase
in cell spreading on a fibronectin matrix. These results suggest
that levels of LPP in SMCs are controlled by FAK signaling and
raise intriguing questions about the role of FAK and LPP as
determinants of SMC phenotype.
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LPP Is Expressed in Migrating SMCs in Stented Pig Coronary Arteries
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In adult pig hearts, uninjured coronary arteries exhibit strong
immunostaining for LPP that colocalizes with smooth muscle

-actin
(SMA) and smoothelin (SMO) in the tunica media. No expression
of LPP was found in the adventitial layer. In injured vessels
28 days after stent implantation, neointimal cells migrating
around the stent wound were positive for LPP and SMA, but not
SMO.
2 Adventitial cells remained negative, but LPP expression
could be detected in the walls of microvessels located in the
adventitial layer. These dynamic patterns of expression in injured
coronary arteries suggest that LPP may partner with multiple
players to facillitate cytoskeletal remodeling events needed
to accomplish the transition from stationary to migrating SMCs
in vivo.
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Summary
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LIM domaincontaining proteins are versatile adaptors
that provide docking sites for assembly of multiprotein complexes
that mediate a wide variety of processes in cells. For vascular
SMCs, extensive reorganization of cellmatrix contacts
and cytoskeletal structure required for conversion from a stationary
contractile phenotype to a migratory repair phenotype requires
the activity of such adaptor proteins. The findings reported
by Gorenne et al suggest that LPP be included in the list of
important players in the SMC phenotype transition response that
accompanies wound healing.
2 They raise a number of new questions
including: What is the role of LPP in mature adult quiescent
SMCs, what proteins associate with LPP at focal adhesions to
promote SMC migration, does LPP shuttle to the nucleus in SMCs
in vivo, and if so what nuclear proteins does it partner with
and what gene targets does it control?
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Acknowledgments
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Work in the authors laboratory was supported by the National
Institutes of Health grant HL-19242. Helpful discussions with
Robert J. Schwartz concerning the multiple roles of LIM proteins
in cardiovascular development are gratefully acknowledged.
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Footnotes
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The opinions expressed in this editorial are not necessarily
those of the editors or of the American Heart Association.
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- I. Gorenne, L. Jin, T. Yoshida, J.M. Sanders, I.J. Sarembock, G.K. Owens, A.P. Somlyo, and A.V. Somlyo
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