Visualization of receptor-mediated endocytosis in yeast.
Journal: 1999/March - Molecular Biology of the Cell
ISSN: 1059-1524
PUBMED: 10069819
Abstract:
We studied the ligand-induced endocytosis of the yeast alpha-factor receptor Ste2p by immuno-electron microscopy. We observed and quantitated time-dependent loss of Ste2p from the plasma membrane of cells exposed to alpha-factor. This ligand-induced internalization of Ste2p was blocked in the well-characterized endocytosis-deficient mutant sac6Delta. We provide evidence that implicates furrow-like invaginations of the plasma membrane as the site of receptor internalization. These invaginations are distinct from the finger-like plasma membrane invaginations within actin cortical patches. Consistent with this, we show that Ste2p is not located within the cortical actin patch before and during receptor-mediated endocytosis. In wild-type cells exposed to alpha-factor we also observed and quantitated a time-dependent accumulation of Ste2p in intracellular, membrane-bound compartments. These compartments have a characteristic electron density but variable shape and size and are often located adjacent to the vacuole. In immuno-electron microscopy experiments these compartments labeled with antibodies directed against the rab5 homologue Ypt51p (Vps21p), the resident vacuolar protease carboxypeptidase Y, and the vacuolar H+-ATPase Vph1p. Using a new double-labeling technique we have colocalized antibodies against Ste2p and carboxypeptidase Y to this compartment, thereby identifying these compartments as prevacuolar late endosomes.
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Mol Biol Cell 10(3): 799-817

Visualization of Receptor-mediated Endocytosis in Yeast

Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-5120; Department of Microbiology, State University of New York, Stony Brook, New York 11794; and European Molecular Biology Laboratory, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany
Present address: Institute für Biochemie, Universität Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany.
Corresponding author. E-mail address: ude.drofnats.emoneg@nietstob.
Received 1998 Nov 11; Accepted 1998 Dec 21.

Abstract

We studied the ligand-induced endocytosis of the yeast α-factor receptor Ste2p by immuno-electron microscopy. We observed and quantitated time-dependent loss of Ste2p from the plasma membrane of cells exposed to α-factor. This ligand-induced internalization of Ste2p was blocked in the well-characterized endocytosis-deficient mutant sac6Δ. We provide evidence that implicates furrow-like invaginations of the plasma membrane as the site of receptor internalization. These invaginations are distinct from the finger-like plasma membrane invaginations within actin cortical patches. Consistent with this, we show that Ste2p is not located within the cortical actin patch before and during receptor-mediated endocytosis. In wild-type cells exposed to α-factor we also observed and quantitated a time-dependent accumulation of Ste2p in intracellular, membrane-bound compartments. These compartments have a characteristic electron density but variable shape and size and are often located adjacent to the vacuole. In immuno-electron microscopy experiments these compartments labeled with antibodies directed against the rab5 homologue Ypt51p (Vps21p), the resident vacuolar protease carboxypeptidase Y, and the vacuolar H-ATPase Vph1p. Using a new double-labeling technique we have colocalized antibodies against Ste2p and carboxypeptidase Y to this compartment, thereby identifying these compartments as prevacuolar late endosomes.

Abstract

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank George and Camilla Smith for generous gifts allowing us to establish and maintain an EM facility. We thank Andreas Wesp for comments. Thanks to Elizabeth Jones for the gift of affinity-purified antibodies directed against CPY and Vph1p. We also acknowledge the capable engineers at Gatan for custom installing a Bioscann CCD camera on our vintage Philips 300 electron microscope. Finally, we thank two anonymous reviewers for their insistence that double-label experiments be done. This research was supported by National Institutes of Health grant GM-46406.

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