The tight junction protein ZO-1 (zonula occludens protein 1) has recruiting/scaffolding functions in the junctional complex of epithelial and endothelial cells. Homodimerization was proposed to be crucial for ZO-1 function. Here, we investigated the ability of ZO-1 domains to mediate self-interaction in living cells. We expressed ZO-1 truncation mutants as fusions with derivatives of green fluorescent protein in tight junction-free HEK-293 cells and determined self-association by means of fluorescence resonance energy transfer measurements using live-cell imaging. We show that both an SH3-hinge-GuK fusion protein and the PDZ2 domain self-associate in our test system. The recombinant PDZ2 domain also binds to ZO-1 and ZO-2 in tight junction-forming HT29/B6 cell lysates, as demonstrated by coprecipitation. Both interaction types are of relevance for the function of ZO-1 in the regulation of the junctional complex in polar cells.
© 2012 New York Academy of Sciences.