E- and N-cadherin drive hepatic polarity and lumen elongation via opposing effects on RhoA activity

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Abstract

Hepatocytes exhibit distinct polarity, forming narrow apical tubes (bile canaliculi, BCs) between adjacent cells. These structures essential to liver architecture and function. Unlike most epithelial cells, hepatocytes express both E- and N-cadherin but their functions and mechanisms remain unknown. We show that E- and N-cadherin are collectively required for hepatic polarity and BC formation but act through distinct, spatially segregated pathways. Both localize to adherens junctions; E-cadherin additionally localizes to lateral membranes and the cleavage furrow during cell division, where it promotes BC elongation and new cell-cell contact formation by controlling spindle orientation and RhoA activation via NuMA and ARHGEF17. N-cadherin maintains hepatic polarity by facilitating RhoA inactivation through the p120-catenin family member ARVCF and its partner p190B/ARHGAP5. Thus, dual cadherin expression drives hepatic polarity and BC formation by controlling RhoA activity in a coordinated but opposing manner.

Summary

Hayase et al. show that E-cadherin promotes bile canaliculi elongation via RhoA activation and oriented cell division, while N-cadherin maintains hepatic polarity by suppressing RhoA, revealing the function and mechanism of dual cadherin expression in hepatocytes.

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