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Publication
Journal: Journal of Cell Biology
May/5/1997
Abstract
To explore the role of GTPases in endocytosis, we developed an assay using Xenopus oocytes injected with recombinant proteins to follow the uptake of the fluid phase marker HRP. HRP uptake was inhibited in cells injected with GTPgammaS or incubated with aluminum fluoride, suggesting a general role for GTPases in endocytosis. Injection of Rab5 into oocytes, as well as Rab5:Q79L, a mutant with decreased GTPase activity, increased HRP uptake. Injection of Rab5:S34N, the dominant-negative mutant, inhibited HRP uptake. Injection of N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor (NSF) stimulated HRP uptake, and ATPase-defective NSF mutants inhibited HRP uptake when coinjected with Rab5:Q79L, confirming a requirement for NSF in endocytosis. Surprisingly, injection of Rab7:WT stimulated both uptake and degradation/activation of HRP. The latter appears to be due to enhanced transport to a late endosomal/prelysosomal degradative compartment that is monensin sensitive. Enhancement of uptake by Rab7 appears to function via an Rab5-sensitive pathway in oocytes since the stimulatory effect of Rab7 was blocked by coinjection of Rab5:S34N. Stimulation of uptake by Rab5 was blocked by Rab5:S34N but not by Rab7:T22N. Our results suggest that Rab7, while functioning downstream of Rab5, may be rate limiting for endocytosis in oocytes.
Publication
Journal: European Journal of Cell Biology
September/27/2007
Abstract
Prostasomes are vesicles secreted by epithelial cells of the prostate gland. However, little is known about the mechanism and the regulation of prostasome secretion. Since endocytic organelles may be involved in prostasome release, PC-3-derived prostasomes were investigated by Western blot analysis for the presence of marker proteins normally associated with these organelles. Prostasomes secreted by PC-3 cells contain clathrin, Tsg101, Hrs, Rab11, Rab5, LAMP-1, LAMP-2, LAMP-3/CD63, and annexin II. Moreover, electron microscopy of PC-3 cells revealed the presence of characteristic multivesicular body-like secretory lysosomes containing vesicles with the same size-distribution as released prostasomes. Ultrastructural immunogold labelling showed that LAMP-1, LAMP-2 and LAMP-3/CD63 were associated with these vesicles. In addition, we have investigated whether cholesterol plays a role in prostasome release by the human prostate cancer cell line PC-3. Interestingly, prostasome release was significantly increased when the cholesterol levels of PC-3 cells were reduced by the cholesterol-sequestering agent methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MBCD), or by treatment with lovastatin and mevalonate. In conclusion, these studies indicate that cholesterol plays an important role in the release of prostasomes by the human prostate cancer PC-3 cells, and suggest that prostasomes may be released after fusion of secretory lysosomes with the plasma membrane.
Publication
Journal: Nature
March/13/2017
Abstract
An early step in intracellular transport is the selective recognition of a vesicle by its appropriate target membrane, a process regulated by Rab GTPases via the recruitment of tethering effectors. Membrane tethering confers higher selectivity and efficiency to membrane fusion than the pairing of SNAREs (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptors) alone. Here we address the mechanism whereby a tethered vesicle comes closer towards its target membrane for fusion by reconstituting an endosomal asymmetric tethering machinery consisting of the dimeric coiled-coil protein EEA1 (refs 6, 7) recruited to phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate membranes and binding vesicles harbouring Rab5. Surprisingly, structural analysis reveals that Rab5:GTP induces an allosteric conformational change in EEA1, from extended to flexible and collapsed. Through dynamic analysis by optical tweezers, we confirm that EEA1 captures a vesicle at a distance corresponding to its extended conformation, and directly measure its flexibility and the forces induced during the tethering reaction. Expression of engineered EEA1 variants defective in the conformational change induce prominent clusters of tethered vesicles in vivo. Our results suggest a new mechanism in which Rab5 induces a change in flexibility of EEA1, generating an entropic collapse force that pulls the captured vesicle towards the target membrane to initiate docking and fusion.
Publication
Journal: EMBO Reports
March/29/2010
Abstract
Tumour cannibalism is a characteristic of malignancy and metastatic behaviour. This atypical phagocytic activity is a crucial survival option for tumours in conditions of low nutrient supply, and has some similarities to the phagocytic activity of unicellular microorganisms. In fact, Dictyostelium discoideum has been used widely as a model to study phagocytosis. Recently, phg1A has been described as a protein that is primarily involved in the phagocytic process of this microorganism. The closest human homologue to phg1A is transmembrane 9 superfamily protein member 4 (TM9SF4). Here, we report that TM9SF4 is highly expressed in human malignant melanoma cells deriving from metastatic lesions, whereas it is undetectable in healthy human tissues and cells. TM9SF4 is predominantly expressed in acidic vesicles of melanoma cells, in which it co-localizes with the early endosome antigens Rab5 and early endosome antigen 1. TM9SF4 silencing induced marked inhibition of cannibal activity, which is consistent with a derangement of intracellular pH gradients, with alkalinization of acidic vesicles and acidification of the cell cytosol. We propose TM9SF4 as a new marker of malignancy, representing a potential new target for anti-tumour strategies with a specific role in tumour cannibalism and in the establishment of a metastatic phenotype.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
June/3/2012
Abstract
Insulin resistance is a key factor in the etiology of type 2 diabetes. Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake is mediated by the glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4), which is expressed mainly in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue. Insulin-stimulated translocation of GLUT4 from its intracellular compartment to the plasma membrane is regulated by small guanosine triphosphate hydrolases (GTPases) and is essential for the maintenance of normal glucose homeostasis. Here we show that the p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75(NTR)) is a regulator of glucose uptake and insulin resistance. p75(NTR) knockout mice show increased insulin sensitivity on normal chow diet, independent of changes in body weight. Euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp studies demonstrate that deletion of the p75(NTR) gene increases the insulin-stimulated glucose disposal rate and suppression of hepatic glucose production. Genetic depletion or shRNA knockdown of p75(NTR) in adipocytes or myoblasts increases insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and GLUT4 translocation. Conversely, overexpression of p75(NTR) in adipocytes decreases insulin-stimulated glucose transport. In adipocytes, p75(NTR) forms a complex with the Rab5 family GTPases Rab5 and Rab31 that regulate GLUT4 trafficking. Rab5 and Rab31 directly interact with p75(NTR) primarily via helix 4 of the p75(NTR) death domain. Adipocytes from p75(NTR) knockout mice show increased Rab5 and decreased Rab31 activities, and dominant negative Rab5 rescues the increase in glucose uptake seen in p75(NTR) knockout adipocytes. Our results identify p75(NTR) as a unique player in glucose metabolism and suggest that signaling from p75(NTR) to Rab5 family GTPases may represent a unique therapeutic target for insulin resistance and diabetes.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
November/11/1998
Abstract
Early endosome fusion, which has been extensively characterized using an in vitro reconstitution assay, is Rab5-dependent. To examine the requirement for Rab5 on both fusion partners, we prepared cytosol and endosomes depleted of Rab5. Unlike control cytosol, Rab5-depleted cytosol was only marginally active in the in vitro endosome fusion. However, fusion could be restored by the addition of wild-type Rab5 or Rab5 D136N, a mutant whose nucleotide specificity favors xanthine over guanine. The addition of Rab5 D136N restored fusion only in the presence of XTP. In the absence of XTP or in the presence of XDP, Rab5 D136N failed to restore fusion. When fusion was carried out with endosomal vesicles depleted of Rab GTPases (by preincubation of vesicles with GDP dissociation inhibitor), together with cytosol immunodepleted of Rab5, fusion was virtually absent. We then used immunodepleted cytosol and GDP dissociation inhibitor-treated vesicles to determine whether Rab5 is required by both fusion partners. Using separate sets of endosomal vesicles, we found that priming both sets of Rab5-depleted vesicles with Rab5 Q79L, a GTPase-defective mutant, substantially stimulated endosome fusion. Priming one set of vesicles with Rab5 Q79L and a second set of vesicles with Rab5 S34N failed to activate fusion. When both sets of Rab5-depleted vesicles were primed with Rab5 D136N supplemented with XTP, endosome fusion was stimulated, similar to that observed with Rab5 Q79L. However, when one set of vesicles was preincubated with Rab5 D136N plus XTP and the second set with Rab5 D136N and XDP, no stimulation of fusion was observed. We conclude that Rab5-GTP is required on both fusion partners for docking and fusion of early endosomes. To confirm the fusion of Rab5-GTP-positive vesicles in vivo, we expressed GFP-Rab5 Q79L in fibroblasts and observed fusion of Rab5-positive vesicles. We failed to record fusion of Rab5-positive vesicles with Rab5-negative vesicles. We conclude that Rab5-GTP is required on both sets of endosomes for fusion in vitro and in living cells.
Publication
Journal: Science Signaling
December/9/2010
Abstract
Rab5 is a small guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) that regulates the early stages of endocytosis and is conserved in eukaryotes. Rab5 regulates the internalization of receptors and other membrane-associated signaling proteins. The function of Rab5 in these processes is considered relatively passive, so that the endocytic capacity of Rab5 is used during, for example, beta-arrestin-dependent internalization of G protein (heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding protein)-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Direct recruitment or activation of Rab5 by the components of these signaling pathways has not been reported. Here, we demonstrate an interaction of Drosophila Rab5 and an immediate transducer of GPCR signaling, the G protein G(o), in vitro and in vivo. Rab5 and G(o) bound to each other as purified proteins, as well as in fly extracts. In cellular assays, G(o) led to Rab5 activation and endosome fusion. We further showed that the G(o)-Rab5 interaction functioned in Drosophila planar cell polarity and Wingless signal transduction, pathways initiated by GPCRs of the Frizzled (Fz) family. Additionally, the recycling Rab GTPases Rab4 and Rab11 functioned in Fz- and G(o)-mediated signaling to favor planar cell polarity over canonical Wingless signaling. The interplay between heterotrimeric G proteins and Rab GTPases controlled receptor internalization, revealing a previously uncharacterized regulatory mechanism in GPCR signaling.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Cell Biology
March/12/2000
Abstract
To understand intracellular trafficking modulations by live Salmonella, we investigated the characteristics of in vitro fusion between endosomes and phagosomes containing live (LSP) or dead Salmonella (DSP). We observed that fusion of both DSP and LSP were time, temperature and cytosol dependent. GTPgammaS and treatment of the phagosomes with Rab-GDI inhibited fusion, indicating involvement of Rab-GTPases. LSP were rich in rab5, alpha-SNAP, and NSF, while DSP mainly contained rab7. Fusion of endosomes with DSP was inhibited by ATP depletion, N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) treatment, and in NEM-sensitive factor (NSF)-depleted cytosol. In contrast, fusion of endosomes with LSP was not inhibited by ATP depletion or NEM treatment, and occurred in NSF-depleted cytosol. However, ATPgammaS inhibited both fusion events. Fusion of NEM-treated LSP with endosomes was abrogated in NSF- depleted cytosol and was restored by adding purified NSF, whereas no fusion occurred with NEM-treated DSP, indicating that NSF recruitment is dependent on continuous signals from live Salmonella. Binding of NSF with LSP required prior presence of rab5 on the phagosome. We have also shown that rab5 specifically binds with Sop E, a protein from Salmonella. Our results indicate that live Salmonella help binding of rab5 on the phagosomes, possibly activate the SNARE which leads to further recruitment of alpha-SNAP for subsequent binding with NSF to promote fusion of the LSP with early endosomes and inhibition of their transport to lysosomes.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Virology
October/15/2009
Abstract
Canine parvovirus (CPV) and feline panleukopenia virus (FPV) are closely related parvoviruses that differ in their host ranges for cats and dogs. Both viruses bind their host transferrin receptor (TfR), enter cells by clathrin-mediated endocytosis, and traffic with that receptor through endosomal pathways. Infection by these viruses appears to be inefficient and slow, with low numbers of virions infecting the cell after a number of hours. Species-specific binding to TfR controls viral host range, and in this study FPV and strains of CPV differed in the levels of cell attachment, uptake, and infection in canine and feline cells. During infection, CPV particles initially bound and trafficked passively on the filopodia of canine cells while they bound to the cell body of feline cells. That binding was associated with the TfR as it was disrupted by anti-TfR antibodies. Capsids were taken up from the cell surface with different kinetics in canine and feline cells but, unlike transferrin, most did not recycle. Capsids labeled with fluorescent markers were seen in Rab5-, Rab7-, or Rab11-positive endosomal compartments within minutes of uptake, but reached the nucleus. Constitutively active or dominant negative Rab mutants changed the intracellular distribution of capsids and affected the infectivity of virus in cells.
Publication
Journal: International Journal of Biochemistry and Cell Biology
October/30/2011
Abstract
Connexins (Cx) are key regulators of cell proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. Cx trafficking and endocytosis need interactions with a large number of signaling and scaffolding proteins. We demonstrate herein that Cx43-GFP gap junction plaque endocytosis was blocked in cells transfected by the dominant-negative form of dynamin2 (Dyn2K44A) and by dynasore, an inhibitor of dynamin GTPase activity, which reduced the association between dynamin2 and Cx43. Our data also reveal that recruitment of the GTPase at the plasma membrane and its activation by c-Src are key events for Cx43 internalization. In addition they show that dynamin2 participated in internalization and degradation of the gap junction plaque but also in recycling of Cx43 to the plasma membrane through respectively Rab5/Rab7 and Rab11 pathways. These results demonstrate for the first time that dynamin2 is a new Cx partner and report an innovating mechanistic model by which dynamin2 may control Cx43 gap junction plaque invagination, endocytosis, recycling and degradation. These processes are magnified in response to carcinogen exposure underlining their potential importance during carcinogenesis.
Publication
Journal: EMBO Reports
April/25/2001
Abstract
Rab5 and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) have been proposed to co-regulate receptor endocytosis by controlling early endosome fusion. However, in this report we demonstrate that inhibition of epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated PI3K activity by expression of the kinase-deficient PI3K p110 subunit (p110delta kin) does not block the lysosomal targeting and degradation of the EGF receptor (EGFR). Moreover, inhibition of total PI3K activity by wortmannin or LY294002 significantly enlarges EGFR-containing endosomes and dissociates the early-endosomal autoantigen EEA1 from membrane fractions. However, this does not block the lysosomal targeting and degradation of EGFR. In contrast, transfection of cells with mutant Rab5 S34N or microinjection of anti-Rabaptin5 antibodies inhibits EGFR endocytosis. Our results, therefore, demonstrate that PI3K is not universally required for the regulation of receptor intracellular trafficking. The present work suggests that the intracellular trafficking of EGFR is controlled by a novel endosome fusion pathway that is regulated by Rab5 in the absence of PI3K, rather than by the previously defined endosome fusion pathway that is co-regulated by Rab5 and PI3K.
Authors
Publication
Journal: Nature Structural and Molecular Biology
March/5/2012
Abstract
Rab small G proteins control membrane trafficking events required for many processes including secretion, lipid metabolism, antigen presentation and growth factor signaling. Rabs recruit effectors that mediate diverse functions including vesicle tethering and fusion. However, many mechanistic questions about Rab-regulated vesicle tethering are unresolved. Using chemically defined reaction systems, we discovered that Vps21, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae ortholog of mammalian endosomal Rab5, functions in trans with itself and with at least two other endosomal Rabs to directly mediate GTP-dependent tethering. Vps21-mediated tethering was stringently and reversibly regulated by an upstream activator, Vps9, and an inhibitor, Gyp1, which were sufficient to drive dynamic cycles of tethering and detethering. These experiments reveal a previously undescribed mode of tethering by endocytic Rabs. In our working model, the intrinsic tethering capacity Vps21 operates in concert with conventional effectors and SNAREs to drive efficient docking and fusion.
Publication
Journal: Traffic
November/23/2008
Abstract
Trypanosoma cruzi can infect and replicate in macrophages. During invasion, T. cruzi interacts with different macrophage receptors to induce its own phagocytosis. However, the nature of those receptors and the molecular mechanisms involved are poorly understood. In this study, we demonstrate that T. cruzi metacyclic trypomastigotes but not epimastigotes were able to induce Rab5 activation and binding to the early endosomes in peritoneal macrophages. In this process, active Rab5 colocalized with parasites in the phagosome and with the Rab5A effector molecule early endosomal antigen 1. Phagosome formation and T. cruzi internalization were inhibited in Raw 264.7 macrophages expressing a dominant-negative form of Rab5 [(S34N)Rab5]. Using T. cruzi membrane extracts, we verified that the Rab5 activation depends on the interaction between parasite surface molecules and macrophages surface molecule. In addition, during infection of macrophages, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway was activated. Assays carried out using a selective PI3K inhibitor (LY294002) showed that the PI3K activation is essential for Rab5 activation by T. cruzi infection and for the entrance and intracellular replication of T. cruzi in macrophages. Moreover, using macrophages from knockout mice, we found that activation of Rab5, fusion of early endosomes and phagocytosis induced by T. cruzi infection involved Toll-like receptor (TLR)2 but were independent of TLR4 receptors.
Publication
Journal: Virology
December/20/2007
Abstract
Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEEV) is a New World alphavirus that can cause fatal encephalitis in humans. It remains a naturally emerging disease as well as a highly developed biological weapon. VEEV is transmitted to humans in nature by mosquito vectors. Little is known about VEEV entry, especially in mosquito cells. Here, a novel luciferase-based virus entry assay is used to show that the entry of VEEV into mosquito cells requires acidification. Furthermore, mosquito homologs of key human proteins (Rab5 and Rab7) involved in endocytosis were isolated and characterized. Rab5 is found on early endosomes and Rab7 on late endosomes and both are important for VEEV entry in mammalian cells. Each was shown to have analogous function in mosquito cells to that seen in mammalian cells. The wild-type, dominant negative and constitutively active mutants were then used to demonstrate that VEEV requires passage through early and late endosomes before infection can take place. This work indicates that the infection mechanism in mosquitoes and mammals is through a common and ancient evolutionarily conserved pathway.
Publication
Journal: Cellular Microbiology
December/20/2010
Abstract
To investigate the cell entry and intracellular trafficking of anthrax oedema factor (EF) and lethal factor (LF), they were C-terminally fused to the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) and monomeric Cherry (mCherry) fluorescent proteins. Both chimeras bound to the surface of BHK cells treated with protective antigen (PA) in a patchy mode. Binding was followed by rapid internalization, and the two anthrax factors were found to traffic along the same endocytic route and with identical kinetics, indicating that their intracellular path is essentially dictated by PA. Colocalization studies indicated that anthrax toxins enter caveolin-1 containing compartments and then endosomes marked by phoshatidylinositol 3-phoshate and Rab5, but not by early endosome antigen 1 and transferrin. After 40 min, both EF and LF chimeras were observed to localize within late compartments. Eventually, LF and EF appeared in the cytosol with a time-course consistent with translocation from late endosomes. Only the EGFP derivatives reached the cytosol because they are translocated by the PA channel, while the mCherry derivatives are not. This difference is attributed to a higher resistance of mCherry to unfolding. After translocation, LF disperses in the cytosol, while EF localizes on the cytosolic face of late endosomes.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
June/6/2013
Abstract
LGR5 is a Wnt pathway associated G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) that serves as a molecular determinant of stem cells in numerous tissues including the intestine, stomach, hair follicle, eye, and mammary gland. Despite its importance as a marker for this critical niche, little is known about LGR5 signaling nor the biochemical mechanisms and receptor determinants that regulate LGR5 membrane expression and intracellular trafficking. Most importantly, in cells LGR5 is predominantly intracellular, yet the mechanisms underlying this behavior have not been determined. In this work we elucidate a precise trafficking program for LGR5 and identify the motif at its C terminus that is responsible for the observed constitutive internalization. We show that this process is dependent upon dynamin GTPase activity and find that wild-type full-length LGR5 rapidly internalizes into EEA1- and Rab5-positive endosomes. However, LGR5 fails to rapidly recycle to the plasmid membrane through Rab4-positive vesicles, as is common for other GPCRs. Rather, internalized LGR5 transits through Rab7- and Rab9-positive vesicles, co-localizes in vesicles with Vps26, a retromer complex component that regulates retrograde trafficking to the trans-Golgi network (TGN) and reaches a steady-state distribution in the TGN within 2 h. Using mutagenesis, particularly of putative phosphorylation sites, we show that the amino acid pair, serine 861 and 864, is the principal C-tail determinant that mediates LGR5 constitutive internalization. The constitutive internalization of LGR5 to the TGN suggests the existence of novel biochemical roles for its Wnt pathway related, but ill defined signaling program.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neuroscience
August/3/2009
Abstract
Astrocytes release ATP and glutamate through vesicular exocytosis to mediate neuron-glial interactions. In contrast to exocytosis, the endocytic pathways in astroglial cells are poorly understood. Here, we identify a constitutive endocytic pathway in cultured astrocytes that is dependent on neither clathrin nor dynamin. This dynamin-independent endocytic pathway is regulated by Rab5, an early endosome protein. The endocytosed vesicles show fast transition from early endosomes to late endosomes and lysosomes within a few minutes. Interestingly, this clathrin- and dynamin-independent endocytosis in astrocytes is potently regulated by intracellular Ca(2+). ATP and glutamate greatly enhance the dynamin-independent endocytosis through elevating the intracellular Ca(2+). In addition, amyloid-beta peptide (A beta) also enhances the dynamin-independent endocytosis by inducing Ca(2+) transients in astrocytes. These results demonstrate a novel endocytic pathway in glial cells that is dynamin independent but tightly regulated by intracellular Ca(2+). The regulation by ATP, glutamate, and A beta suggests an important role of the dynamin-independent endocytosis in both physiological and pathological conditions.
Publication
Journal: British Journal of Cancer
August/18/2004
Abstract
Reduced accumulation of cisplatin is the most consistent feature seen in cisplatin-resistant (CP-r) cells that are cross-resistant to other cytotoxic compounds, such as methotrexate. In this report, defective uptake of a broad range of compounds, including [(14)C]-carboplatin, [(3)H]MTX, [(3)H]folic acid (FA), [(125)I]epidermal growth factor, (59)Fe, [(3)H]glucose, and [(3)H]proline, as well as (73)As(5+) and (73)As(3+), was detected in CP-r human hepatoma and epidermal carcinoma cells that we have previously shown are defective in fluid-phase endocytosis. Downregulation of several small GTPases, such as rab5, rac1, and rhoA, which regulate endocytosis, was found in CP-r cells. However, expression of an early endosomal protein and clathrin heavy chain was not changed, suggesting that the defective endocytic pathway is clathrin independent. Reduced expression of the cell surface protein, folate-binding protein (FBP), which is a carrier for the uptake of MTX, was also observed in the CP-r cells by confocal immunofluorescence microscopy and Real-Time PCR. Reactivation of the silenced FBP gene in the CP-r cells by a DNA demethylation agent, 2-deoxy-5-aza-cytidine (DAC) demonstrates that hypermethylation occurred in the CP-r cells. The uptake of [(14)C]carboplatin, [(3)H]FA, and [(3)H]MTX increased in an early stage CP-r cell line (KB-CP1) after treatment with DAC. Both a defective endocytic pathway and DNA hypermethylation resulting in the downregulation of small regulatory GTPases and cell surface receptors contribute to the reduced accumulation of a broad range of compounds in CP-r cells.
Publication
Journal: Development (Cambridge)
July/12/2010
Abstract
In addition to apicobasal polarization, some epithelia also display polarity within the plane of the epithelium. To what extent polarized endocytosis plays a role in the establishment and maintenance of planar cell polarity (PCP) is at present unclear. Here, we investigated the role of Rabenosyn-5 (Rbsn-5), an evolutionarily conserved effector of the small GTPase Rab5, in the development of Drosophila wing epithelium. We found that Rbsn-5 regulates endocytosis at the apical side of the wing epithelium and, surprisingly, further uncovered a novel function of this protein in PCP. At early stages of pupal wing development, the PCP protein Fmi redistributes between the cortex and Rab5- and Rbsn-5-positive early endosomes. During planar polarization, Rbsn-5 is recruited at the apical cell boundaries and redistributes along the proximodistal axis in an Fmi-dependent manner. At pre-hair formation, Rbsn-5 accumulates at the bottom of emerging hairs. Loss of Rbsn-5 causes intracellular accumulation of Fmi and typical PCP alterations such as defects in cell packing, in the polarized distribution of PCP proteins, and in hair orientation and formation. Our results suggest that establishment of planar polarity requires the activity of Rbsn-5 in regulating both the endocytic trafficking of Fmi at the apical cell boundaries and hair morphology.
Publication
Journal: Development (Cambridge)
January/3/2011
Abstract
The cuticular exoskeleton of arthropods is a composite material comprising well-separated layers that differ in function and molecular constituents. Epidermal cells secrete these layers sequentially, synthesizing components of distal cuticle layers before proximal ones. Could the order of synthesis and secretion be sufficient to account for the precision with which cuticle components localize to specific layers? We addressed this question by studying the spatial restriction of melanization in the Drosophila wing. Melanin formation is confined to a narrow layer within the distal procuticle. Surprisingly, this tight localization depends on the multi-ligand endocytic receptor Megalin (Mgl). Mgl acts, in part, by promoting endocytic clearance of Yellow. Yellow is required for black melanin formation, and its synthesis begins as cuticle is secreted. Near the end of cuticle secretion, its levels drop precipitously by a mechanism that depends on Mgl and Rab5-dependent endocytosis. In the absence of Mgl, Yellow protein persists at higher levels and melanin granules form ectopically in more proximal layers of the procuticle. We propose that the tight localization of the melanin synthesis machinery to the distal procuticle depends not only on the timing of its synthesis and secretion, but also on the rapid clearance of these components before synthesis of subsequent cuticle layers.
Publication
Journal: European Journal of Cell Biology
May/18/1997
Abstract
The small GTPase Rab5 is an important regulator of membrane fusion in the early endocytic pathway. Here we have studied at the light microscopy level the morphology of early endosomes in MDCK cells stably expressing a GTPase-deficient Rab5 mutant, Rab5 Q79L, N-terminally tagged with a myc-epitope. These cells contain large vacuoles, readily visible by phase-contrast microscopy. Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy showed the presence of the epitopetagged protein on large perinuclear vacuoles, as well as on smaller peripheral structures. A subset of the perinuclear vacuoles appeared to colocalize with the late endosomal GTPase, Rab7. In addition, a population of very large Rab7-positive, Rab5 Q79L-negative structures were observed, suggesting that an increase in the size of early endosomes may be accompanied by an increased size of later or more mature endocytic structures. Using antibodies against the myc epitope and the early endosomal autoantigen EEA1 as markers, we found that endosomes in wild-type and mutant MDCK cells rapidly tubulate in the presence of bafilomycin A1, an inhibitor of vacuolar H(+)-ATPase. Elongated or tubular endosomes partially colocalized with microtubules and were redistributed upon preincubation with the microtubule depolymerizing agent nocodazole before bafilomycin A1 treatment. Treatment of the Rab5 Q79L expressing cells with nocodazole alone led to a spatial redistribution and a significant decrease in the size of EEA1-positive structures, whereas their number increased. These results implicate microtubules in the bafilomycin A1-induced tubulation of endosomes as well as in the vacuolation of endosomes caused by Rab5 Q79L.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Physiology
January/8/2009
Abstract
Little is known about the postinternalization trafficking of surface-expressed voltage-gated potassium channels. Here, for the first time, we investigate into which of four major trafficking pathways a voltage-gated potassium channel is targeted after internalization. In both a cardiac myoblast cell line and in HEK293 cells, channels were found to internalize and to recycle quickly. Upon internalization, Kv1.5 rapidly associated with Rab5-and Rab4-positive endosomes, suggesting that the channel is internalized via a Rab5-dependent pathway and rapidly targeted for recycling to the plasma membrane. Nevertheless, as indicated by colocalization with Rab7, a fraction of the channels are targeted for degradation. Recycling through perinuclear endosomes is limited; colocalization with Rab11 was evident only after 24 h postsurface labelling. Expression of dominant negative (DN) Rab constructs significantly increased Kv1.5 functional expression. In the myoblast line, Rab5DN increased Kv1.5 current densities to 1305 +/- 213 pA pF(-1) from control 675 +/- 81.6 pA pF(-1). Rab4DN similarly increased Kv1.5 currents to 1382 +/- 155 pA pF(-1) from the control 522 +/- 82.7 pA pF(-1) at +80 mV. Expression of the Rab7DN increased Kv1.5 currents 2.5-fold in HEK293 cells but had no significant effect in H9c2 myoblasts, and, unlike the other Rab GTPases tested, over-expression of wild-type Rab7 decreased Kv1.5 currents in the myoblast line. Densities fell to 573 +/- 96.3 pA pF(-1) from the control 869 +/- 135.5 pA pF(-1). The Rab11DN was slow to affect Kv1.5 currents but had comparable effects to other dominant negative constructs after 48 h. With the exception of Rab11DN and nocodazole, the effects of interference with microtubule-dependent trafficking by nocodazole or p50 overexpression were not additive with the Rab dominant negatives. The Rab GTPases thus constitute dynamic targets by which cells may modulate Kv1.5 functional expression.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
April/17/2005
Abstract
Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is a common autosomal dominant disorder caused by loss or malfunction of hamartin (tsc1) or tuberin (tsc2). Many lesions in TS do not demonstrate loss of heterozygosity for these genes, implying that dominant negative forms of these genes may account for some hamartomas and neoplasms in TS. To test this hypothesis, we expressed a dominant negative allele of tuberin (DeltaRG) behind the cytomegalovirus promoter in NIH3T3 cells and transgenic mice. This allele binds hamartin but has a deletion in the C terminus of tuberin, leading to constitutive activation of rap1 and rab5/rabaptin. Expression of DeltaRG in NIH3T3 cells led to a strong induction of reactive oxygen species, induction of vascular endothelial growth factor, and malignant transformation in vivo. Expression of DeltaRG driven by the constitutive cytomegalovirus promoter led to high level expression in all murine tissues examined, including skin, kidney, liver, and brain. Surprisingly, mice expressing the DeltaRG transgene developed a fibrovascular collagenoma in the dermis, which closely resembles the Shagreen patch observed in human patients with TS. In addition, numerous small subpial collections of external granule cells in the cerebellum were observed, which may be the murine equivalent of subependymal giant cell astrocytomas or tubers commonly seen in TS patients. Thus, expression of a dominant negative tuberin in multiple tissues can lead to a tissue-specific phenotype resembling some of the findings in human TS. Our data are the first to demonstrate that specific signaling abnormalities underlie specific hamartomas in a model of a human genetic disorder.
Publication
Journal: Molecular and Cellular Biology
September/12/2006
Abstract
Exogenous delivery of carrier-linked phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate [PtdIns(3)P] to adipocytes promotes the trafficking, but not the insertion, of the glucose transporter GLUT4 into the plasma membrane. However, it is yet to be demonstrated if endogenous PtdIns(3)P regulates GLUT4 trafficking and, in addition, the metabolic pathways mediating plasma membrane PtdIns(3)P synthesis are uncharacterized. In unstimulated 3T3-L1 adipocytes, conditions under which PtdIns(3,4,5)P3 was not synthesized, ectopic expression of wild-type, but not catalytically inactive 72-kDa inositol polyphosphate 5-phosphatase (72-5ptase), generated PtdIns(3)P at the plasma membrane. Immunoprecipitated 72-5ptase from adipocytes hydrolyzed PtdIns(3,5)P2, forming PtdIns(3)P. Overexpression of the 72-5ptase was used to functionally dissect the role of endogenous PtdIns(3)P in GLUT4 translocation and/or plasma membrane insertion. In unstimulated adipocytes wild type, but not catalytically inactive, 72-5ptase, promoted GLUT4 translocation and insertion into the plasma membrane but not glucose uptake. Overexpression of FLAG-2xFYVE/Hrs, which binds and sequesters PtdIns(3)P, blocked 72-5ptase-induced GLUT4 translocation. Actin monomer binding, using latrunculin A treatment, also blocked 72-5ptase-stimulated GLUT4 translocation. 72-5ptase expression promoted GLUT4 trafficking via a Rab11-dependent pathway but not by Rab5-mediated endocytosis. Therefore, endogenous PtdIns(3)P at the plasma membrane promotes GLUT4 translocation.
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