The current dogma is that chemoattractants G protein-coupled receptors activate β phospholipase C while receptor tyrosine kinases activate γ phospholipase C. Here, we show that chemoattractant/G protein-coupled receptor-mediated membrane recruitment of γ2 phospholipase C constitutes G protein-coupled receptor-mediated phospholipase C signaling and is essential for neutrophil polarization and migration during chemotaxis. In response to a chemoattractant stimulation, cells lacking γ2 phospholipase C (plcg2kd) displayed altered dynamics of diacylglycerol production and calcium response, increased Ras/PI3K/Akt activation, elevated GSK3 phosphorylation and cofilin activation, impaired dynamics of actin polymerization, and, consequently, defects in cell polarization and migration during chemotaxis. The study reveals a molecular mechanism of membrane targeting of γ2 phospholipase C and the signaling pathways by which γ2 phospholipase C plays an essential role in neutrophil chemotaxis.
Keywords: 2 phospholipase C (PLC2); G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR); calcium-promoted Ras inactivator (CAPRI); chemotaxis; neutrophils; phospholipase C (PLC).
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