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Publication
Journal: Cell Research
September/23/2012
Abstract
Neurotrophins and their receptors adopt signaling endosomes to transmit retrograde signals. However, the mechanisms of retrograde signaling for other ligand/receptor systems are poorly understood. Here, we report that the signals of the purinergic (P)2X(3) receptor, an ATP-gated ion channel, are retrogradely transported in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neuron axons. We found that Rab5, a small GTPase, controls the early sorting of P2X(3) receptors into endosomes, while Rab7 mediates the fast retrograde transport of P2X(3) receptors. Intraplantar injection and axonal application into the microfluidic chamber of α, β-methylene-ATP (α, β-MeATP), a P2X selective agonist, enhanced the endocytosis and retrograde transport of P2X(3) receptors. The α, β-MeATP-induced Ca(2+) influx activated a pathway comprised of protein kinase C, rat sarcoma viral oncogene and extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK), which associated with endocytic P2X(3) receptors to form signaling endosomes. Disruption of the lipid rafts abolished the α, β-MeATP-induced ERK phosphorylation, endocytosis and retrograde transport of P2X(3) receptors. Furthermore, treatment of peripheral axons with α, β-MeATP increased the activation level of ERK and cAMP response element-binding protein in the cell bodies of DRG neurons and enhanced neuronal excitability. Impairment of either microtubule-based axonal transport in vivo or dynein function in vitro blocked α, β-MeATP-induced retrograde signals. These results indicate that P2X(3) receptor-activated signals are transmitted via retrogradely transported endosomes in primary sensory neurons and provide a novel signaling mechanism for ligand-gated channels.
Publication
Journal: Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
April/5/2006
Abstract
Rab GTPases are regulators of membrane trafficking that cycle between active (GTP-bound) and inactive (GDP-bound) states. In this study, we report the identification of a new human Rab5 guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF), which we have named RAP6 (Rab5-activating protein 6). RAP6 contains a Rab5 GEF and a Ras GAP domain. We show that the Vps9 domain is sufficient for the interaction of RAP6 with GDP-bound Rab5 and that RAP6 stimulates Rab5 guanine nucleotide exchange. We also find that the Ras GAP domain of RAP6 shows GAP activity for Ras. Immunofluorescence experiments reveal that RAP6 is associated with plasma membrane and small intracellular vesicles that also contain Rab5. Additionally, the overexpression of RAP6 affects both fluid phase and receptor-mediated endocytosis. This study is the first to show that RAP6 is a novel regulator of endocytosis that exhibits GEF activity specific for Rab5 and GAP activity specific for Ras.
Publication
Journal: PLoS ONE
October/27/2014
Abstract
Rab5, the prototypical Rab GTPase and master regulator of the endocytic pathway, is encoded as three differentially expressed isoforms, Rab5A, Rab5B and Rab5C. Here, we examined the differential effects of Rab5 isoform silencing on cell motility and report that Rab5C, but neither Rab5A nor Rab5B, is selectively associated with the growth factor-activation of Rac1 and with enhanced cell motility. Initial observations revealed that silencing of Rab5C expression, but neither Rab5A nor Rab5C, led to spindle-shaped cells that displayed reduced formation of membrane ruffles. When subjected to a scratch wound assay, cells depleted of Rab5C, but not Rab5A or Rab5B, demonstrated reduced cell migration. U937 cells depleted of Rab5C also displayed reduced cell motility in a Transwell plate migration assay. To examine activation of Rac, HeLa cells stably expressing GFP-Rac1 were independently depleted of Rab5A, Rab5B or Rab5C and seeded onto coverslips imprinted with a crossbow pattern. 3-D GFP-Rac1 images of micro-patterned cells show that GFP-Rac1 was less localized to the cell periphery in the absence of Rab5C. To confirm the connection between Rab5C and Rac activation, HeLa cells depleted of Rab5 isoforms were starved and then stimulated with EGF. Rac1 pull-down assays revealed that EGF-stimulated Rac1 activity was significantly suppressed in Rab5C-suppressed cells. To determine whether events upstream of Rac activation were affected by Rab5C, we observed that EGF-stimulated Akt phosphorylation was suppressed in cells depleted of Rab5C. Finally, since spatio-temporal assembly/disassembly of adhesion complexes are essential components of cell migration, we examined the effect of Rab5 isoform depletion on the formation of focal adhesion complexes. Rab5C-depleted HeLa cells have significantly fewer focal adhesion foci, in accordance with the lack of persistent lamellipodial protrusions and reduced directional migration. We conclude that Rab5 isoforms selectively oversee the multiple signaling and trafficking events associated with the endocytic network.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
February/2/1999
Abstract
The porin (PorB) of Neisseria gonorrhoeae has been implicated in the pathogenesis of this species. Porin is believed to translocate from the bacterial outer membrane into target cell membranes affecting various cell functions. Here we investigated the effect of porin on phagosome maturation. Phagocytosis of latex beads by human macrophages was allowed in the presence or absence of purified porin. Isolation of latex bead-containing phagosomes and subsequent two-dimensional gel electrophoresis revealed substantial differences in the phagosomal protein composition. Immunoblotting detected higher amounts of annexin II and the early endocytic markers Rab5 and transferrin receptor and decreased levels of the late endocytic markers Rab7 and cathepsin D in phagosomes obtained in the presence of porin compared with those obtained in its absence. Furthermore, association of Rab4 with the latex bead-containing phagosomes was revealed by flow cytometry. The amount of this small GTPase was markedly higher in the phagosomes isolated in the presence of porin. The data thus indicate that neisserial porin is itself able to arrest phagosome maturation within macrophages.
Publication
Journal: Nature Communications
October/21/2013
Abstract
Krüppel-like factor 5 regulates pluripotent stem cell self-renewal, but its role in somatic stem cells is unknown. Here we show that Krüppel-like factor 5-deficient haematopoietic stem cells and progenitors fail to engraft after transplantation. This haematopoietic stem cell and progenitor defect is associated with impaired bone marrow homing and lodging and decreased retention in bone marrow, and with decreased adhesion to fibronectin and expression of membrane-bound β1/β2-integrins. In vivo-inducible gain-of-function of Krüppel-like factor 5 in haematopoietic stem cells increases haematopoietic stem cell and progenitor adhesion. The expression of Rab5 family members, mediators of β1/β2-integrin recycling in the early endosome, is decreased in Klf5(Δ/Δ) haematopoietic stem cells and progenitors. Krüppel-like factor 5 binds directly to the promoter of Rab5a/b, and overexpression of Rab5b rescues the expression of activated β1/β2-integrins, adhesion and bone marrow homing of Klf5(Δ/Δ) haematopoietic stem cells and progenitors. Altogether, these data indicate that Krüppel-like factor 5 is indispensable for adhesion, homing, lodging and retention of haematopoietic stem cells and progenitors in the bone marrow through Rab5-dependent post-translational regulation of β1/β2 integrins.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
December/12/1993
Abstract
Rab5 is a small molecular weight GTP-binding protein that functions in endocytic vesicle traffic. Like other Ras-related proteins, Rab5 is prenylated on C-terminal cysteine residues, although it lacks the typical C-terminal CAAX motif (where A is any aliphatic amino acid and X is any amino acid) to direct this post-translational modification. We have investigated structural requirements for the in vitro geranylgeranylation of Rab5. Rab5N133I, a point mutant that has impaired ability to bind GTP or GDP, undergoes modification to a limited extent and at a severely reduced rate when compared to cognate Rab5. A second point mutant, Rab5Q79L, can be processed to approximately the same extent as wild-type albeit at a reduced rate. Since the latter mutation results in defective GTPase activity, these combined observations indicate that guanine nucleotide binding plays an important role in the geranylgeranylation reaction and suggest that the GDP-bound form of Rab5 is the preferred conformation for interaction with Rab prenyltransferase. This idea is supported by the finding that non-hydrolyzable GTP analogs inhibit Rab5 prenylation, while in vitro processing of both H-ras and the gamma 2 subunit of regulatory G proteins is unaffected at concentrations of guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) up to 400 microM. Moreover, a truncation mutant lacking the C-terminal cysteines, Rab5(1-211), serves as an inhibitor of Rab5wt geranylgeranylation when liganded with GDP but not GTP gamma S. Thus, the recognition of Rab5 as a substrate by Rab prenyltransferase involves structural elements exclusive of the C terminus and dependent upon the GDP-binding conformation of the protein.
Publication
Journal: Endocrinology
December/17/1996
Abstract
We investigated whether Rab5, a small guanosine triphosphatase that regulates early endocytic transport in different cell types is involved in the insulin-regulated endocytic pathways in adipocytes. Rab5 was detected in freshly isolated adipocytes and 3T3-L1 adipocytes, but its expression level was not markedly increased with adipocyte differentiation. After subcellular fractionation of adipocytes incubated in the absence of insulin, Rab5 was found to be abundant in plasma membrane and cytosol, but was also present in high and low density microsomes. This subcellular distribution was compatible with a role in early endocytosis. When cells were incubated with insulin, the concentration of Rab5 decreased by about 50% in the internal compartments. In contrast to Rab4, which also leaves the low density microsomes in response to insulin, Rab5 was not found in Glut4-containing vesicles purified by immunoadsorption on antibodies to Glut4. When adipocytes were treated with wortmannin, an inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, the effect of insulin on Rab5 movement was not affected, whereas the insulin-induced movements of Rab4 and Glut4 were abolished. In parallel, wortmannin inhibited the increase in horseradish peroxidase uptake induced by insulin, an index of fluid phase endocytosis, but did not prevent the endocytosis of the glucose transporters. As a whole, our results suggest that Rab5 is not involved in insulin-stimulated Glut4 exocytosis. These results are compatible with the postulated role of Rab5 in the endocytotic pathway, at a step that does not require phosphatidyl-inositol 3-kinase activation.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Biology of the Cell
September/5/2011
Abstract
Coats define the composition of carriers budding from organelles. In addition, coats interact with membrane tethers required for vesicular fusion. The yeast AP-3 (Adaptor Protein Complex 3) coat and the class C Vps/HOPS (HOmotypic fusion and Protein Sorting) tether follow this model as their interaction occurs at the carrier fusion step. Here we show that mammalian Vps class C/HOPS subunits and clathrin interact and that acute perturbation of clathrin function disrupts the endosomal distribution of Vps class C/HOPS tethers in HEK293T and polarized neuronal cells. Vps class C/HOPS subunits and clathrin exist in complex with either AP-3 or hepatocyte growth factor receptor substrate (Hrs). Moreover, Vps class C/HOPS proteins cofractionate with clathrin-coated vesicles, which are devoid of Hrs. Expression of FK506 binding protein (FKBP)-clathrin light chain chimeras, to inhibit clathrin membrane association dynamics, increased Vps class C/HOPS subunit content in rab5 endosomal compartments. Additionally, Vps class C/HOPS subunits were concentrated at tips of neuronal processes, and their delivery was impaired by expression of FKBP-clathrin chimeras and AP20187 incubation. These data support a model in which Vps class C/HOPS subunits incorporate into clathrin-coated endosomal domains and carriers in mammalian cells. We propose that vesicular (AP-3) and nonvesicular (Hrs) clathrin mechanisms segregate class C Vps/HOPS tethers to organelles and domains of mammalian cells bearing complex architectures.
Publication
Journal: Molecular and Cellular Biology
July/17/2002
Abstract
We previously described the isolation of ysl2-1 due to its genetic interaction with Delta ypt51/vps21, a mutant with a deletion of the coding sequence for the yeast Rab5 homolog, which regulates endocytic traffic between early and late endosomes. Here we report that Ysl2p is a novel 186.8-kDa peripheral membrane protein homologous to members of the Sec7 family. We provide multiple genetic and biochemical evidence for an interaction between Ysl12p and the Arf-like protein Arl1p, consistent with a potential function as an Arf guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF). The temperature-sensitive alleles ysl2-307 and ysl2-316 are specifically defective in ligand-induced degradation of Ste2p and alpha-factor and exhibit vacuole fragmentation directly upon a shift to 37 degrees C. In living cells, green fluorescent protein (GFP)-Ysl2p colocalizes with endocytic elements that accumulate FM4-64. The GFP-Ysl2p staining is sensitive to a mutation in VPS27 resulting in the formation of an aberrant class E compartment, but it is not affected by a sec7 mutation. Consistent with the idea that Ysl2p and Arl1p have closely related functions, Delta arl1 cells are defective in endocytic transport and in vacuolar protein sorting.
Publication
Journal: Experimental Cell Research
May/15/2006
Abstract
Rin1 is a multifunctional protein containing several domains, including Ras binding and Rab5 GEF domains. The role of Rin1 in insulin receptor internalization and signaling was examined by expressing Rin1 and deletion mutants in cells utilizing a retrovirus system. Here, we show that insulin-receptor-mediated endocystosis and fluid phase insulin-stimulated endocytosis are enhanced in cells expressing the Rin1:wild type and the Rin1:C deletion mutant, which contain both the Rab5-GEF and GTP-bound Ras binding domains. However, the Rin1:N deletion mutant, which contains both the SH2 and proline-rich domains, blocked insulin-stimulated receptor-mediated and insulin-stimulated fluid phase endocytosis. In addition, the expression of Rin1:delta (429-490), a natural occurring splice variant, also blocked both receptor-mediated and fluid phase endocystosis. Furthermore, association of the Rin1 SH2 domain with the insulin receptor was dependent on tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor. Morphological analysis indicates that Rin1 co-localizes with insulin receptor both at the cell surface and in endosomes upon insulin stimulation. Interestingly, the expression of Rin1:wild type and both deletion mutants blocks the activation of Erk1/2 and Akt1 kinase activities without affecting either JN or p38 kinase activities. DNA synthesis and Elk-1 activation are also altered by the expression of Rin1:wild type and the Rin1:C deletion mutant. In contrast, the expression of Rin1:delta stimulates both Erk1/2 and Akt1 activation, DNA synthesis and Elk-1 activation. These results demonstrate that Rin1 plays an important role in both insulin receptor membrane trafficking and signaling.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neurochemistry
October/24/2001
Abstract
Synaptic vesicle proteins are suggested to travel from the trans-Golgi network to active zones via tubulovesicular organelles, but the participation of different populations of endosomes in trafficking remains a matter of debate. Therefore, we generated a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged version of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) and studied the localization of VAChT in organelles in the cell body and varicosities of living cholinergic cells. GFP-VAChT is distributed to both early and recycling endosomes in the cell body and is also observed to accumulate in endocytic organelles within varicosities of SN56 cells. GFP-VAChT positive organelles in varicosities are localized close to plasma membrane and are labeled with FM4-64 and GFP-Rab5, markers of endocytic vesicles and early endosomes, respectively. A GFP-VAChT mutant lacking a dileucine endocytosis motif (leucine residues 485 and 486 changed to alanine residues) accumulated at the plasma membrane in SN56 cells. This endocytosis-defective GFP-VAChT mutant is localized primarily at the somal plasma membrane and exhibits reduced neuritic targeting. Furthermore, the VAChT mutant did not accumulate in varicosities, as did VAChT. Our data suggest that clathrin-mediated internalization of VAChT to endosomes at the cell body might be involved in proper sorting and trafficking of VAChT to varicosities. We conclude that genesis of competent cholinergic secretory vesicles depends on multiple interactions of VAChT with endocytic proteins.
Publication
Journal: Developmental Cell
November/11/2014
Abstract
Pruning of unnecessary axons and/or dendrites is crucial for maturation of the nervous system. However, little is known about cell adhesion molecules (CAMs) that control neuronal pruning. In Drosophila, dendritic arborization neurons, ddaCs, selectively prune their larval dendrites. Here, we report that Rab5/ESCRT-mediated endocytic pathways are critical for dendrite pruning. Loss of Rab5 or ESCRT function leads to robust accumulation of the L1-type CAM Neuroglian (Nrg) on enlarged endosomes in ddaC neurons. Nrg is localized on endosomes in wild-type ddaC neurons and downregulated prior to dendrite pruning. Overexpression of Nrg alone is sufficient to inhibit dendrite pruning, whereas removal of Nrg causes precocious dendrite pruning. Epistasis experiments indicate that Rab5 and ESCRT restrain the inhibitory role of Nrg during dendrite pruning. Thus, this study demonstrates the cell-surface molecule that controls dendrite pruning and defines an important mechanism whereby sensory neurons, via endolysosomal pathway, downregulate the cell-surface molecule to trigger dendrite pruning.
Publication
Journal: Cellular Microbiology
January/7/2013
Abstract
Interactions between Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacilli and alveolar macrophages have been extensively characterized, while similar analyses in epithelial cells have not been performed. In this study, we microscopically examined endosomal trafficking of M. tuberculosis strain Erdman in A549 cells, a human type II pneumocyte cell line. Immuno-electron microscopic (IEM) analyses indicate that M. tuberculosis bacilli are internalized to a compartment labelled first with Rab5 and then with Rab7 small GTPase proteins. This suggests that, unlike macrophages, M. tuberculosis bacilli traffic to late endosomes in epithelial cells. However, fusion of lysosomes with the bacteria-containing compartment appears to be inhibited, as illustrated by IEM studies employing LAMP-2 and cathepsin-L antibodies. Examination by transmission electron microscopy and IEM revealed M. tuberculosis-containing compartments surrounded by double membranes and labelled with antibodies against the autophagy marker Lc3, providing evidence for involvement and intersection of the autophagy and endosomal pathways. Interestingly, inhibition of the autophagy pathway using 3-methyladenine improved host cell viability and decreased numbers of viable intracellular bacteria recovered after 72 h post infection. Collectively, these data suggest that trafficking patterns for M. tuberculosis bacilli in alveolar epithelial cells differ from macrophages, and that autophagy is involved this process.
Publication
Journal: Current Opinion in Plant Biology
July/14/2015
Abstract
Membrane-bounded organelles are connected to each other by membrane trafficking, which is accomplished by membrane fusion between transport vesicles and target organelles mediated by RAB GTPases and SNARE proteins. Of those trafficking pathways networking plant organelles, the vacuolar trafficking pathway has recently been shown to be uniquely diversified from non-plant systems, most likely reflecting unique functions of plant vacuoles such as the storage of proteins and other organic compounds, generation of turgor pressure, and space-filling to enlarge plant bodies. Plant-unique trafficking machineries in addition to evolutionarily conserved molecular components are allocated to this trafficking pathway in distinctive ways. In this review, we summarize recent findings on SNARE proteins and RAB GTPases mediating vacuolar transport in plants, especially focusing on the functions and regulation of two distinct trans-SNARE complexes and RAB5 and RAB7 in multiple vacuolar trafficking pathways.
Publication
Journal: PLoS Pathogens
October/2/2014
Abstract
KSHV envelope glycoproteins interact with cell surface heparan sulfate and integrins, and activate FAK, Src, PI3-K, c-Cbl, and Rho-GTPase signal molecules in human microvascular dermal endothelial (HMVEC-d) cells. c-Cbl mediates the translocation of virus bound α3β1 and αVβ3 integrins into lipid rafts (LRs), where KSHV interacts and activates EphrinA2 (EphA2). EphA2 associates with c-Cbl-myosin IIA and augmented KSHV-induced Src and PI3-K signals in LRs, leading to bleb formation and macropinocytosis of KSHV. To identify the factor(s) coordinating the EphA2-signal complex, the role of CIB1 (calcium and integrin binding protein-1) associated with integrin signaling was analyzed. CIB1 knockdown did not affect KSHV binding to HMVEC-d cells but significantly reduced its entry and gene expression. In contrast, CIB1 overexpression increased KSHV entry in 293 cells. Single virus particle infection and trafficking during HMVEC-d cell entry was examined by utilizing DiI (envelope) and BrdU (viral DNA) labeled virus. CIB1 was associated with KSHV in membrane blebs and in Rab5 positive macropinocytic vesicles. CIB1 knockdown abrogated virus induced blebs, macropinocytosis and virus association with the Rab5 macropinosome. Infection increased the association of CIB1 with LRs, and CIB1 was associated with EphA2 and KSHV entry associated signal molecules such as Src, PI3-K, and c-Cbl. CIB1 knockdown significantly reduced the infection induced EphA2, Src and Erk1/2 activation. Mass spectrometry revealed the simultaneous association of CIB1 and EphA2 with the actin cytoskeleton modulating myosin IIA and alpha-actinin 4 molecules, and CIB1 knockdown reduced EphA2's association with myosin IIA and alpha-actinin 4. Collectively, these studies revealed for the first time that CIB1 plays a role in virus entry and macropinocytosis, and suggested that KSHV utilizes CIB1 as one of the key molecule(s) to coordinate and sustain the EphA2 mediated signaling involved in its entry, and CIB1 is an attractive therapeutic target to block KSHV infection.
Publication
Journal: Molecular Neurobiology
January/6/2008
Abstract
Autosomal recessive mutations in the ALS2 gene lead to a clinical spectrum of motor dysfunction including juvenile onset amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS2), primary lateral sclerosis, and hereditary spastic paraplegia. The 184-kDa alsin protein, encoded by the full-length ALS2 gene, contains three different guanine-nucleotide-exchange factor-like domains, which may play a role in the etiology of the disease. Multiple in vitro biochemical and cell biology assays suggest that alsin dysfunction affects endosome trafficking through a Rab5 small GTPase family-mediated mechanism. Four ALS2-deficient mouse models have been generated by different groups and used to study the behavioral and pathological impact of alsin deficiency. These mouse models largely fail to recapitulate hallmarks of motor neuron disease, but the subtle deficits that are observed in behavior and pathology have aided in our understanding of the relationship between alsin and motor dysfunction. In this review, we summarize recent clinical and molecular reports regarding alsin and attempt to place these results within the larger context of motor neuron disease.
Publication
Journal: Human Genetics
June/27/2010
Abstract
Defects leading to impaired intracellular trafficking have recently been shown to play an important role in the pathogenesis of genodermatoses, such as the Ehlers-Danlos and the cutis laxa syndromes. A new genodermatosis, termed macrocephaly, alopecia, cutis laxa and scoliosis (MACS) syndrome has been described, resulting from a homozygous 1-bp deletion in RIN2. RIN2 encodes the Ras and Rab interactor 2, involved in the regulation of Rab5-mediated early endocytosis. We performed a clinical, ultrastructural and molecular study in a consanguineous Algerian family with three siblings affected by a distinctive autosomal recessive genodermatosis, reported in 2005 by Verloes et al. The most striking clinical features include progressive facial coarsening, gingival hypertrophy, severe scoliosis, sparse hair and skin and joint hyperlaxity. Ultrastructural studies of the skin revealed important abnormalities in the collagen fibril morphology, and fibroblasts exhibited a dilated endoplasmic reticulum and an abnormal Golgi apparatus with rarefied and dilated cisternae. Molecular analysis of RIN2 revealed a novel homozygous 2-bp deletion in all affected individuals. The c.1914_1915delGC mutation introduces a frameshift and creates a premature termination codon, leading to nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. These findings confirm that RIN2 defects are associated with a distinct genodermatosis and underscore the involvement of RIN2 and its associated pathways in the pathogenesis of connective tissue disorders. The current family displays considerable phenotypic overlap with MACS syndrome. However, our family shows a dermatological and ultrastructural phenotype belonging to the Ehlers-Danlos rather than the cutis laxa spectrum. Therefore, the MACS acronym is not entirely appropriate for the current family.
Publication
Journal: American Journal of Physiology - Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology
May/8/2008
Abstract
Lung vascular lesions in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) are characterized by enlarged, vacuolated ("megalocytotic") pulmonary arterial endothelial (PAEC) and smooth muscle cells (PASMC). We have recently proposed that dysfunction of vesicle tethers, soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment proteins (SNAPs), and SNAP receptors (SNAREs), leading to disruptions of intracellular trafficking in the Golgi to plasma membrane (centrifugal) and the plasma membrane to cell interior (centripetal) directions is a key causal mechanism in this disease. In PAH, there was a reciprocal relationship between loss of caveolin-1 (cav-1) in PAECs and increased expression of "activated" tyrosine-phosphorylated STAT3 (PY-STAT3) associated with a block in centrifugal trafficking to/through the Golgi organelle. In the present study, we investigated 1) whether centripetal trafficking of STAT3 and PY-STAT3 in PAECs and PASMCs was membrane-associated, and 2) whether this might be affected in PAH. Immunofluorescence and live cell imaging studies showed that, in both PAEC and PASMC, STAT3 was associated with cytoplasmic vesicles partially colocalizing with markers of the endolysosomal compartments (clathrin, EEA1, Rab5, Rab11, and LAMP1). Overexpression of cav-1 increased the targeting of STAT3 to lysosomes and inhibited STAT3 transcriptional activity. Exposure of PAECs to monocrotaline (MCT) pyrrole, which causes PAH in the rat, led to a loss of caveolar STAT3 with increased sequestration of STAT3 and PY-STAT3 in endosomes. In vivo, marked cytoplasmic sequestration of activated PY-STAT3 was a common feature in PAEC in the rat/MCT model and in cells in the proliferative arterial and plexiform lesions in PAH in humans. These data highlight the epigenetic regulation of centripetal cytokine and growth-factor signaling pathways and its modulation in PAH.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Cell Biology
February/1/2016
Abstract
Endocytosis allows cargo to enter a series of specialized endosomal compartments, beginning with early endosomes harboring Rab5 and its effector EEA1. There are, however, additional structures labeled by the Rab5 effector APPL1 whose role in endocytic transport remains unclear. It has been proposed that APPL1 vesicles are transport intermediates that convert into EEA1 endosomes. Here, we tested this model by analyzing the ultrastructural morphology, kinetics of cargo transport, and stability of the APPL1 compartment over time. We found that APPL1 resides on a tubulo-vesicular compartment that is capable of sorting cargo for recycling or degradation and that displays long lifetimes, all features typical of early endosomes. Fitting mathematical models to experimental data rules out maturation of APPL1 vesicles into EEA1 endosomes as a primary mechanism for cargo transport. Our data suggest instead that APPL1 endosomes represent a distinct population of Rab5-positive sorting endosomes, thus providing important insights into the compartmental organization of the early endocytic pathway.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
April/22/2015
Abstract
We report that oxytocin (Oxt) receptors (Oxtrs), on stimulation by the ligand Oxt, translocate into the nucleus of osteoblasts, implicating this process in the action of Oxt on osteoblast maturation. Sequential immunocytochemistry of intact cells or isolated nucleoplasts stripped of the outer nuclear membrane showed progressive nuclear localization of the Oxtr; this nuclear translocation was confirmed by monitoring the movement of Oxtr-EGFP as well as by immunogold labeling. Nuclear Oxtr localization was conclusively shown by Western immunoblotting and MS of nuclear lysate proteins. We found that the passage of Oxtrs into the nucleus was facilitated by successive interactions with β-arrestins (Arrbs), the small GTPase Rab5, importin-β (Kpnb1), and transportin-1 (Tnpo1). siRNA-mediated knockdown of Arrb1, Arrb2, or Tnpo1 abrogated Oxt-induced expression of the osteoblast differentiation genes osterix (Sp7), Atf4, bone sialoprotein (Ibsp), and osteocalcin (Bglap) without affecting Erk phosphorylation. Likewise and again, without affecting pErk, inhibiting Arrb recruitment by mutating Ser rich clusters of the nuclear localization signal to Ala abolished nuclear import and Oxtr-induced gene expression. These studies define a previously unidentified mechanism for Oxtr action on bone and open possibilities for direct transcriptional modulation by nuclear G protein-coupled receptors.
Publication
Journal: Biomaterials
January/19/2012
Abstract
Polyethylenimine (PEI) is one of the most effective and widely used cationic macromolecules in experimental gene transfer/therapy protocols. However, the further clinical application of PEI is largely impeded by its cytotoxicity. Here we performed a fundamental investigation on the mechanism of PEI-induced cytotoxicity in both hepatic and nephritic cell lines. It was demonstrated that besides necrosis and apoptosis, autophagy was apparently associated with PEI-induced cytotoxicity and contributed to aggravated cell damage. Specifically, at the early stage (3 h) of PEI-induced cytotoxicity, autophagy was mainly correlated with lysosome damage, but in the later phase (after a 24-h recovery), autophagy was mainly related with mitochondrial injury. Modulation of Rab5, Rab7 expression and inhibition of clathrin-mediated endocytosis pathway significantly affected the formation of autophagosome, which suggested that the endolysosome transport pathway especially the clathrin-mediated endocytosis at least partly facilitated PEI-induced autophagy. As PEI-induced autophagy played a causative role in its cytotoxicity, it's highly recommended to design PEI-based gene-carriers that could avoid the endolysosome transport pathway.
Publication
Journal: Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
December/13/2004
Abstract
The intracellular association of symbiotic dinoflagellates (zooxanthellae) with marine cnidarians is the very foundation of the highly productive and diversified coral reef ecosystems. To reveal its underlying molecular mechanisms, we previously cloned ApRab7, a Rab7 homologue of the sea anemone Aiptasia pulchella, and demonstrated its selective exclusion from phagosomes containing live zooxanthellae, but not from those containing either dead or photosynthesis-impaired algae. In this study, Rab5 was characterized, due to its key role in endocytosis and phagocytosis acting upstream of Rab7. The Aiptasia Rab5 homologue (ApRab5) is 79.5% identical to human Rab5C and contains all Rab-specific signature motifs. Subcellular fractionation study showed that ApRab5 is mainly cytosolic. EGFP reporter and phagocytosis studies indicated that membrane-associated ApRab5 is present in early endocytic and phagocytic compartments, and is able to promote their fusion. Significantly, immunofluorescence study showed that the majority of phagosomes containing either resident or newly internalized live zooxanthellae were labeled with ApRab5, while those containing either heat-killed or photosynthesis-impaired algae were mostly negative for ApRab5 staining whereas the opposite was observed for ApRab7. We propose that active phagosomal retention of ApRab5 is part of the mechanisms employed by live zooxanthellae to: (1) persist inside their host cells and (2) exclude ApRab7 from their phagosomes, thereby, establishing and/or maintaining an endosymbiotic relationship with their cnidarian hosts.
Publication
Journal: Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
February/17/2014
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) induces KCa3.1 downregulation in Fabry disease (FD). We investigated whether Gb3 induces KCa3.1 endocytosis and degradation.
RESULTS
KCa3.1, especially plasma membrane-localized KCa3.1, was downregulated in both Gb3-treated mouse aortic endothelial cells (MAECs) and human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Gb3-induced KCa3.1 downregulation was prevented by lysosomal inhibitors but not by a proteosomal inhibitor. Endoplasmic reticulum stress-inducing agents did not induce KCa3.1 downregulation. Gb3 upregulated the protein levels of early endosome antigen 1 and lysosomal-associated membrane protein 2 in MAECs. Compared with MAECs from age-matched wild-type mice, those from aged α-galactosidase A (Gla)-knockout mice, an animal model of FD, showed downregulated KCa3.1 expression and upregulated early endosome antigen 1 and lysosomal-associated membrane protein 2 expression. In contrast, no significant difference was found in early endosome antigen 1 and lysosomal-associated membrane protein 2 expression between young Gla-knockout and wild-type MAECs. In aged Gla-knockout MAECs, clathrin was translocated close to the cell border and clathrin knockdown recovered KCa3.1 expression. Rab5, an effector of early endosome antigen 1, was upregulated, and Rab5 knockdown restored KCa3.1 expression, the current, and endothelium-dependent relaxation.
CONCLUSIONS
-Gb3 accelerates the endocytosis and lysosomal degradation of endothelial KCa3.1 via a clathrin-dependent process, leading to endothelial dysfunction in FD.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neuroscience
September/8/2014
Abstract
Precise regulation of axon branching is crucial for neuronal circuit formation, yet the mechanisms that control branch formation are not well understood. Moreover, the highly complex morphology of neurons makes them critically dependent on protein/membrane trafficking and transport systems, although the functions for membrane trafficking in neuronal morphogenesis are largely undefined. Here we identify a kinesin adaptor, Calsyntenin-1 (Clstn-1), as an essential regulator of axon branching and neuronal compartmentalization in vivo. We use morpholino knockdown and a Clstn-1 mutant to show that Clstn-1 is required for formation of peripheral but not central sensory axons, and for peripheral axon branching in zebrafish. We used live imaging of endosomal trafficking in vivo to show that Clstn-1 regulates transport of Rab5-containing endosomes from the cell body to specific locations of developing axons. Our results suggest a model in which Clstn-1 patterns separate axonal compartments and define their ability to branch by directing trafficking of specific endosomes.
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