Regulating Organelle Transport
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《细胞学杂志》
Using frog melanophores, the authors find that cytoplasmic dynein, dynactin, and kinesin II remain attached to pigment granules, whether the granules are being aggregated or dispersed. However, motors and dynactin from melanophores aggregating or dispersing their granules have differential microtubule binding activities that can be reversed by the same phosphatases and kinases that control transport direction in vivo. Based on their results, Reese and Haimo propose a model in which phosphorylation and dephosphorylation cyclically activate and inhibit motor–microtubule interactions to determine the direction of organelle transport.
In Vitro Endocytic Vesicle Sorting System
Beginning on page 179, Bananis et al. describe the first in vitro system for studying the segregation of ligand and receptor in early endosomes. In addition to providing important insights into the mechanisms driving endosome fission, the new work establishes a defined system in which additional factors involved in segregation can be identified and studied.
The mechanism by which endocytic vesicles sort ligand from receptor has been difficult to characterize, though previous work suggested that microtubules and molecular motors are involved in this process. Using an endocytic vesicle preparation derived from rat liver, the authors reconstituted the process in vitro. This system demonstrates that vesicles must bind to and move along microtubules to undergo fission, which produces two daughter vesicles, one enriched in receptor and one enriched in ligand. Motility and fission require ATP, and are prevented by inhibitors of kinesins, but not by inhibitors of dynein. The researchers conclude that endosome fission requires microtubules and kinesin-based motors, and suggest that efficient segregation of ligand and receptor could occur in vivo through multiple rounds of fission. The availability of the in vitro system should lead to a more detailed understanding of this process.
Two Isoforms of Agrin
Burgess et al. (page 41) show that the proteoglycan agrin, which is critical in organizing synaptic differentiation at the neuromuscular junction, exists in two isoforms with distinct NH2-terminal sequences. The two isoforms differ in both tissue distribution and subcellular localization, suggesting a mechanism by which agrin could play diverse roles in cell–cell interactions.
Though agrin is expressed in a variety of tissues, its roles at sites other than the neuromuscular junction have remained poorly understood. In the new work, the authors found that mice express two isoforms of agrin with distinct NH2-terminal peptides, dubbed the short NH2-terminal (SN) and long NH2-terminal (LN) forms. The presence of two isoforms in vivo explains the lack of homology between the NH2 termini of agrins isolated from rats and chickens. Whereas SN-agrin is found primarily in the nervous system, LN-agrin is found in both neural and nonneural tissues. At the subcellular level, LN-agrin is matrix-associated, whereas SN-agrin is attached to the plasma membrane. When LN-agrin expression is abolished in mice, the animals show drastic defects in the formation of neuromuscular junctions. The data suggest that LN-agrin is a component of the basal lamina that plays a signaling role at the neuromuscular junction, whereas SN-agrin may be involved primarily in interactions between neurons.
P-Selectin Sorting Pathway
In findings that provide important new insights into the mechanisms of receptor recycling, Straley and Green (page 107) show that the transmembrane protein P-selectin is recycled to the TGN through late endosomes, rather than sorting or recycling endosomes. Previous work had suggested that this pathway was used primarily by specialized proteins residing in the late endosomes and TGN, but the new results imply that it may be a more general sorting pathway used by a variety of proteins.
P-selectin, a cell adhesion protein involved in inflammation, is sorted from the recycling pathway used by the LDL receptor in endosomes, but it has remained unclear whether this sorting occurs in early or late endosomes, or a combination of the two. The authors studied the internalization of P-selectin in PC12 and CHO cells, and found that P-selectin is transported to the TGN six to seven times faster than the LDL receptor. P-selectin colocalizes with the LDL receptor for 20 min after internalization, but a mutant deficient in endosomal sorting activity is rapidly separated from the LDL pathway, indicating that P-selectin is sorted from the LDL receptor in early endosomes. P-selectin is then selectively transported to late endosomes, resulting in rapid delivery to the TGN.
Controlling mRNA Stability
Using affinity chromatography, Brennan et al. (page 1) identified four previously described proteins as factors that interact with HuR, a ubiquitously expressed protein that can bind and stabilize mRNAs containing AU-rich elements (AREs). The newly discovered ligands appear to modulate the binding of HuR to ARE-containing mRNAs, suggesting that the ligands could have an important role in regulating mRNA stability.
The stability of ARE-containing mRNAs, which include the mRNAs for protooncogenes, cytokines, and lymphokines, appears to be altered through a variety of cell signaling pathways, but the molecular details of this process have remained unknown. In the current work, the authors identified four protein ligands to HuR in HeLa cell extracts, three of which have been described previously as inhibitors of protein phosphatase 2A, a conserved serine/threonine phosphatase. Two of the ligands are also nucleocytoplasmic shuttling proteins that are exported through the CRM1 nuclear export factor. One model consistent with the data is that the HuR binding proteins modulate HuR activity directly, whereas protein phosphatase 2A acts upstream in regulating ARE-mediated mRNA stability. Since all four of the HuR ligands are associated with cellular growth and differentiation, the researchers suggest that the ligands may help stabilize ARE-containing mRNAs to promote cellular differentiation.
Alan W. Dove, 350 E. Willow Grove 406, Philadelphia, PA 19118. E-mail: alanwdove@earthlink.net(Two major models have been proposed to e)
In Vitro Endocytic Vesicle Sorting System
Beginning on page 179, Bananis et al. describe the first in vitro system for studying the segregation of ligand and receptor in early endosomes. In addition to providing important insights into the mechanisms driving endosome fission, the new work establishes a defined system in which additional factors involved in segregation can be identified and studied.
The mechanism by which endocytic vesicles sort ligand from receptor has been difficult to characterize, though previous work suggested that microtubules and molecular motors are involved in this process. Using an endocytic vesicle preparation derived from rat liver, the authors reconstituted the process in vitro. This system demonstrates that vesicles must bind to and move along microtubules to undergo fission, which produces two daughter vesicles, one enriched in receptor and one enriched in ligand. Motility and fission require ATP, and are prevented by inhibitors of kinesins, but not by inhibitors of dynein. The researchers conclude that endosome fission requires microtubules and kinesin-based motors, and suggest that efficient segregation of ligand and receptor could occur in vivo through multiple rounds of fission. The availability of the in vitro system should lead to a more detailed understanding of this process.
Two Isoforms of Agrin
Burgess et al. (page 41) show that the proteoglycan agrin, which is critical in organizing synaptic differentiation at the neuromuscular junction, exists in two isoforms with distinct NH2-terminal sequences. The two isoforms differ in both tissue distribution and subcellular localization, suggesting a mechanism by which agrin could play diverse roles in cell–cell interactions.
Though agrin is expressed in a variety of tissues, its roles at sites other than the neuromuscular junction have remained poorly understood. In the new work, the authors found that mice express two isoforms of agrin with distinct NH2-terminal peptides, dubbed the short NH2-terminal (SN) and long NH2-terminal (LN) forms. The presence of two isoforms in vivo explains the lack of homology between the NH2 termini of agrins isolated from rats and chickens. Whereas SN-agrin is found primarily in the nervous system, LN-agrin is found in both neural and nonneural tissues. At the subcellular level, LN-agrin is matrix-associated, whereas SN-agrin is attached to the plasma membrane. When LN-agrin expression is abolished in mice, the animals show drastic defects in the formation of neuromuscular junctions. The data suggest that LN-agrin is a component of the basal lamina that plays a signaling role at the neuromuscular junction, whereas SN-agrin may be involved primarily in interactions between neurons.
P-Selectin Sorting Pathway
In findings that provide important new insights into the mechanisms of receptor recycling, Straley and Green (page 107) show that the transmembrane protein P-selectin is recycled to the TGN through late endosomes, rather than sorting or recycling endosomes. Previous work had suggested that this pathway was used primarily by specialized proteins residing in the late endosomes and TGN, but the new results imply that it may be a more general sorting pathway used by a variety of proteins.
P-selectin, a cell adhesion protein involved in inflammation, is sorted from the recycling pathway used by the LDL receptor in endosomes, but it has remained unclear whether this sorting occurs in early or late endosomes, or a combination of the two. The authors studied the internalization of P-selectin in PC12 and CHO cells, and found that P-selectin is transported to the TGN six to seven times faster than the LDL receptor. P-selectin colocalizes with the LDL receptor for 20 min after internalization, but a mutant deficient in endosomal sorting activity is rapidly separated from the LDL pathway, indicating that P-selectin is sorted from the LDL receptor in early endosomes. P-selectin is then selectively transported to late endosomes, resulting in rapid delivery to the TGN.
Controlling mRNA Stability
Using affinity chromatography, Brennan et al. (page 1) identified four previously described proteins as factors that interact with HuR, a ubiquitously expressed protein that can bind and stabilize mRNAs containing AU-rich elements (AREs). The newly discovered ligands appear to modulate the binding of HuR to ARE-containing mRNAs, suggesting that the ligands could have an important role in regulating mRNA stability.
The stability of ARE-containing mRNAs, which include the mRNAs for protooncogenes, cytokines, and lymphokines, appears to be altered through a variety of cell signaling pathways, but the molecular details of this process have remained unknown. In the current work, the authors identified four protein ligands to HuR in HeLa cell extracts, three of which have been described previously as inhibitors of protein phosphatase 2A, a conserved serine/threonine phosphatase. Two of the ligands are also nucleocytoplasmic shuttling proteins that are exported through the CRM1 nuclear export factor. One model consistent with the data is that the HuR binding proteins modulate HuR activity directly, whereas protein phosphatase 2A acts upstream in regulating ARE-mediated mRNA stability. Since all four of the HuR ligands are associated with cellular growth and differentiation, the researchers suggest that the ligands may help stabilize ARE-containing mRNAs to promote cellular differentiation.
Alan W. Dove, 350 E. Willow Grove 406, Philadelphia, PA 19118. E-mail: alanwdove@earthlink.net(Two major models have been proposed to e)