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1.
Syndecans are heparan sulfate proteoglycans that modulate the activity of several growth factors and cell adhesion molecules. PDZ domains in the adaptor protein syntenin interact with syndecans and with the phosphoinositide PIP(2), which is involved in the regulation of the actin cytoskeleton and membrane trafficking. Here, we show that the syntenin PDZ domain-PIP(2) interaction controls Arf6-mediated syndecan recycling through endosomal compartments. FGF receptor accompanies syndecan along the syntenin-mediated recycling pathway, in a heparan sulfate- and FGF-dependent manner. Syndecans that cannot recycle via this pathway become trapped intracellularly and inhibit cell spreading. This syntenin-mediated syndecan recycling pathway may regulate the surface availability of a number of cell adhesion and signaling molecules.  相似文献   

2.
PDZ domains are among the most abundant protein modules in the known genomes. Their main function is to provide scaffolds for membrane-associated protein complexes by binding to the cytosolic, C-terminal fragments of receptors, channels, and other integral membrane proteins. Here, using both heteronuclear NMR and single crystal X-ray diffraction, we show how peptides with different sequences, including those corresponding to the C-termini of syndecan, neurexin, and ephrin B, can simultaneously bind to both PDZ domains of the scaffolding protein syntenin. The PDZ2 domain binds these peptides in the canonical fashion, and an induced fit mechanism allows for the accommodation of a range of side chains in the P(0) and P(-)(2) positions. However, binding to the PDZ1 domain requires that the target peptide assume a noncanonical conformation. These data help explain how syntenin, and perhaps other PDZ-containing proteins, may preferentially bind to dimeric and clustered targets, and provide a mechanistic explanation for the previously reported cooperative ligand binding by syntenin's two PDZ domains.  相似文献   

3.
Syntenin, a 33 kDa protein, interacts with several cell membrane receptors and with merlin, the product of the causal gene for neurofibromatosis type II. We report a crystal structure of the functional fragment of human syntenin containing two canonical PDZ domains, as well as binding studies for full-length syntenin, the PDZ tandem, and isolated PDZ domains. We show that the functional properties of syntenin are a result of independent interactions with target peptides, and that each domain is able to bind peptides belonging to two different classes: PDZ1 binds peptides from classes I and III, while PDZ2 interacts with classes I and II. The independent binding of merlin by PDZ1 and syndecan-4 by PDZ2 provides direct evidence for the coupling of syndecan-mediated signaling to actin regulation by merlin.  相似文献   

4.
Crystal structures of the PDZ2 domain of the scaffolding protein syntenin, both unbound and in complexes with peptides derived from C termini of IL5 receptor (alpha chain) and syndecan, reveal the molecular roots of syntenin's degenerate specificity. Three distinct binding sites (S(0), S(-1), and S(-2)), with affinities for hydrophobic side chains, function in a combinatorial way: S(-1) and S(-2) act together to bind syndecan, while S(0) and S(-1) are involved in the binding of IL5Ralpha. Neither mode of interaction is consistent with the prior classification scheme, which defined the IL5Ralpha interaction as class I (-S/T-X-phi) and the syndecan interaction as class II (-phi-X-phi). These results, in conjunction with other emerging structural data on PDZ domains, call for a revision of their classification and of the existing model of their mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
Syntenin is a PDZ protein that binds the cytoplasmic C-terminal FYA motif of the syndecans. Syntenin is widely expressed. In cell fractionation experiments, syntenin partitions between the cytosol and microsomes. Immunofluorescence microscopy localizes endogenous and epitope-tagged syntenin to cell adhesion sites, microfilaments, and the nucleus. Syntenin is composed of at least three domains. Both PDZ domains of syntenin are necessary to target reporter tags to the plasma membrane. The addition of a segment of 10 amino acids from the N-terminal domain of syntenin to these PDZ domains increases the localization of the tags to stress fibers and induces the formation of long, branching plasma membrane extensions. The addition of the complete N-terminal region, in contrast, reduces the localization of the tags to plasma membrane/adhesion sites and stress fibers, and reduces the morphotypical effects. Recombinant domains of syntenin with the highest plasma membrane localization display the lowest nuclear localization. Syndecan-1, E-cadherin, beta-catenin, and alpha-catenin colocalize with syntenin at cell-cell contacts in epithelial cells, and coimmunoprecipitate with syntenin from extracts of these cells. These results suggest a role for syntenin in the composition of adherens junctions and the regulation of plasma membrane dynamics, and imply a potential role for syntenin in nuclear processes.  相似文献   

6.
Syntenin蛋白是在原核生物及真核生物中广泛存在的一类胞内衔接蛋白(adaptor proteins). Syntenin由N端结构域(N-terminal domain,NTD)、两个串联的PDZ结构域(postsynaptic density protein, disc large and zonula occludens, PDZ)和C端结构域(C-terminal domain,CTD)组成,在生物进化过程中相对保守. Syntenin蛋白的PDZ结构域可与不同膜受体C端的PDZ结合基序(PDZ-binding motif,PBM)特异性结合, PDZ结构域结合受体的多样性导致了syntenin功能的多样性. 本文综述了syntenin蛋白的发现与分布及其结构特征,对syntenin在肿瘤转移、细胞质膜蛋白组装、参与动物免疫等领域的研究成果进行了较为详细的综述,同时介绍了syntenin在参与动物胚胎发育调控、血管生成和轴突生长等方面的研究进展.  相似文献   

7.
PDZ proteins organize multiprotein signaling complexes. According to current views, PDZ domains engage in protein-protein interactions. Here we show that the PDZ domains of several proteins bind phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)). High-affinity binding of syntenin to PIP(2)-containing lipid layers requires both PDZ domains of this protein. Competition and mutagenesis experiments reveal that the protein and the PIP(2) binding sites in the PDZ domains overlap. Overlay assays indicate that the two PDZ domains of syntenin cooperate in binding to cognate peptides and PIP(2). Experiments on living cells demonstrate PIP(2)-dependent and peptide-dependent modes of plasma membrane association of the PDZ domains of syntenin. These observations suggest that local changes in phosphoinositide concentration control the association of PDZ proteins with their target receptors at the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

8.
The tandem PDZ domains of syntenin promote cell invasion   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Syntenin is a tandem PDZ protein that has recently been shown to be overexpressed in several cancer cells and tissues, and that might play an active role in tumor cell invasion and metastasis. Here we show that overexpression of the tandem PDZ domains of syntenin in non-invasive cells is necessary and sufficient to stimulate these cells to invade a collagen I matrix, and this effect can be regulated by ligand binding to the PDZ domains. Furthermore, we show that syntenin-induced invasion requires signaling through ras, rho and PI3K/MAPK signaling pathways and involves changes in cell-cell adhesion. Inversely, when we used RNA interference to inhibit syntenin expression in different invasive cancer cell lines, we observed a drastically decreased ability of these cells to migrate and invade into collagen type I or Matrigel. RNAi-treated cells also show increased cell aggregation, indicating that syntenin is important for cell-cell adhesion in epithelial cells. Together, these results suggest that downregulation of syntenin by RNA interference could provide a means of inhibiting tumor invasion and possibly metastasis in different cancers, and point to syntenin as a potential cancer biomarker and drug target.  相似文献   

9.
The type 2 secretion system (T2SS) occurring in Gram-negative bacteria is composed of 12-15 different proteins which form large assemblies spanning two membranes and secreting several virulence factors in folded state across the outer membrane. The T2SS component EpsC of Vibrio cholerae plays an important role in this machinery. While anchored in the inner membrane, by far the largest part of EpsC is periplasmic, containing a so-called homology region (HR) domain and a PDZ domain. Here we report studies on the structure and function of both periplasmic domains of EpsC. The crystal structures of two variants of the PDZ domain of EpsC from V. cholerae were determined at better than 2 A resolution. Compared to the short variant, the longer variant contains an additional N-terminal helix, and reveals a significant difference in the position of helix alphaB with respect to the beta-sheet. Both our structures show that the PDZ domain of EpsC adopts a more open form than in previously reported structures of other PDZ domains. Most interestingly, in the crystals of the short EpsC-PDZ domain the peptide binding groove interacts with an alpha-helix from a neighboring subunit burying approximately 921 A2 solvent accessible surface. This makes it possible that the PDZ domain of this bacterial protein binds proteins in a manner which is altogether different from that seen in any other PDZ domain so far. We also determined that the HR domain of EpsC is primarily responsible for the interaction with the secretin EpsD, while the PDZ is not, or much less, so. This new finding, together with studies of others, leads to the suggestion that the PDZ domain of EpsC may interact with exoproteins to be secreted while the HR domain plays a key role in linking the inner-membrane sub-complex of the T2SS in V. cholerae to the outer membrane secretin.  相似文献   

10.
PICK1 (protein interacting with C kinase 1) contains a single PDZ domain known to mediate interaction with the C termini of several receptors, transporters, ion channels, and kinases. In contrast to most PDZ domains, the PICK1 PDZ domain interacts with binding sequences classifiable as type I (terminating in (S/T)XPhi; X, any residue) as well as type II (PhiXPhi; Phi, any hydrophobic residue). To enable direct assessment of the affinity of the PICK1 PDZ domain for its binding partners we developed a purification scheme for PICK1 and a novel quantitative binding assay based on fluorescence polarization. Our results showed that the PICK1 PDZ domain binds the type II sequence presented by the human dopamine transporter (-WLKV) with an almost 15-fold and >100-fold higher affinity than the type I sequences presented by protein kinase Calpha (-QSAV) and the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (-DSLL), respectively. Mutational analysis of Lys(83) in the alphaB1 position of the PDZ domain suggested that this residue mimics the function of hydrophobic residues present in this position in regular type II PDZ domains. The PICK1 PDZ domain was moreover found to prefer small hydrophobic residues in the C-terminal P(0) position of the ligand. Molecular modeling predicted a rank order of (Val > Ile > Leu) that was verified experimentally with up to a approximately 16-fold difference in binding affinity between a valine and a leucine in P(0). The results define the structural basis for the unusual binding pattern of the PICK1 PDZ domain by substantiating the critical role of the alphaB1 position (Lys(83)) and of discrete side chain differences in position P(0) of the ligands.  相似文献   

11.
Gee SH  Quenneville S  Lombardo CR  Chabot J 《Biochemistry》2000,39(47):14638-14646
PDZ domains are modular protein-protein interaction domains that bind to specific C-terminal sequences of membrane proteins and/or to other PDZ domains. Certain PDZ domains in PSD-95 and syntrophins interact with C-terminal peptide ligands and heterodimerize with the extended nNOS PDZ domain. The capacity to interact with nNOS correlates with the presence of a Lys residue in the carboxylate- binding loop of these PDZ domains. Here, we report that substitution of an Arg for Lys-165 in PSD-95 PDZ2 disrupted its interaction with nNOS, but not with the C terminus of the Shaker-type K(+) channel Kv1.4. The same mutation affected nNOS binding to alpha1- and beta1-syntrophin PDZ domains to a lesser extent, due in part to the stabilizing effect of tertiary interactions with the canonical nNOS PDZ domain. PDZ domains with an Arg in the carboxylate-binding loop do not bind nNOS; however, substitution with Lys or Ala was able to confer nNOS binding. Our results indicate that the carboxylate-binding loop Lys or Arg is a critical determinant of nNOS binding and that the identity of this residue can profoundly alter one mode of PDZ recognition without affecting another. We also analyzed the effects of mutating Asp-143, a residue in the alphaB helix of alpha1-syntrophin that forms a tertiary contact with the nNOS PDZ domain. This residue is important for both nNOS and C-terminal peptide binding and confers a preference for peptides with a positively charged residue at position -4. On this basis, we have identified the C terminus of the Kir2.1 channel as a possible binding partner for syntrophin PDZ domains. Together, our results demonstrate that single-amino acid substitutions alter the specificity and affinity of PDZ domains for their ligands.  相似文献   

12.
Wnt signaling pathways are essential for embryonic patterning, and they are disturbed in a wide spectrum of diseases, including cancer. An unresolved question is how the different Wnt pathways are supported and regulated. We previously established that the postsynaptic density 95/disc-large/zona occludens (PDZ) protein syntenin binds to syndecans, Wnt coreceptors, and known stimulators of protein kinase C (PKC)alpha and CDC42 activity. Here, we show that syntenin also interacts with the C-terminal PDZ binding motif of several Frizzled Wnt receptors, without compromising the recruitment of Dishevelled, a key downstream Wnt-signaling component. Syntenin is coexpressed with cognate Frizzled during early development in Xenopus. Overexpression and down-regulation of syntenin disrupt convergent extension movements, supporting a role for syntenin in noncanonical Wnt signaling. Syntenin stimulates c-jun phosphorylation and modulates Frizzled 7 signaling, in particular the PKCalpha/CDC42 noncanonical Wnt signaling cascade. The syntenin-Frizzled 7 binding mode indicates syntenin can accommodate Frizzled 7-syndecan complexes. We propose that syntenin is a novel component of the Wnt signal transduction cascade and that it might function as a direct intracellular link between Frizzled and syndecans.  相似文献   

13.
PDZ domains bind to short segments within target proteins in a sequence-specific fashion. Glutamate receptor-interacting protein (GRIP)/ABP family proteins contain six to seven PDZ domains and interact via the sixth PDZ domain (class II) with the C termini of various proteins including liprin-alpha. In addition the PDZ456 domain mediates the formation of homo- and heteromultimers of GRIP proteins. To better understand the structural basis of peptide recognition by a class II PDZ domain and PDZ-mediated multimerization, we determined the crystal structures of the GRIP1 PDZ6 domain alone and in complex with a synthetic C-terminal octapeptide of human liprin-alpha at resolutions of 1.5 and 1.8 A, respectively. Remarkably, unlike other class II PDZ domains, Ile-736 at alphaB5 rather than conserved Leu-732 at alphaB1 makes a direct hydrophobic contact with the side chain of the Tyr at the -2 position of the ligand. Moreover, the peptide-bound structure of PDZ6 shows a slight reorientation of helix alphaB, indicating that the second hydrophobic pocket undergoes a conformational adaptation to accommodate the bulkiness of the Tyr side chain, and forms an antiparallel dimer through an interface located at a site distal to the peptide-binding groove. This configuration may enable formation of GRIP multimers and efficient clustering of GRIP-binding proteins.  相似文献   

14.
The syndecans, cell surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), bind numerous ligands via their HS glycosaminoglycan chains. The response to this binding is flavored by the identity of the core protein that bears the HS chains. Each of the syndecan core proteins has a short cytoplasmic domain that binds cytosolic regulatory factors. The syndecans also contain highly conserved transmembrane domain and extracellular domains for which important activities are slowly emerging. These protein domains, which will be the focus of this review, localize the syndecan to sites at the cell surface during development where they collaborate with other receptors to regulate signaling and cytoskeletal organization.  相似文献   

15.
Schwannomin isoform-1 interacts with syntenin via PDZ domains.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The neurofibromatosis type 2 gene (NF2) is involved in the pathogenesis of benign tumors of the human nervous system. The NF2 protein, called schwannomin or merlin, is inactivated in virtually all schwannomas and meningiomas. The molecular mechanisms by which schwannomin functions as a tumor suppressor is unknown but believed to involve plasma membrane-cytoskeletal interactions. Two major alternatively spliced isoforms of schwannomin differing in their C termini have been reported. Using the yeast two-hybrid system, we have identified syntenin as a binding partner for schwannomin isoform-1 (sch-1). Syntenin is an adapter protein that couples transmembrane proteoglycans to cytoskeletal components and is involved in intracellular vesicle transport. The C terminus 25 amino acids of sch-1 and the two PDZ domains of syntenin mediate their binding, and mutations introduced within the VAFFEEL region of sch-1 defined a sequence crucial for syntenin recognition. We have showed that the two proteins interacted in vitro and in vivo and localized underneath the plasma membrane. Fibroblast cells expressing heterologous antisense syntenin display alterations in the subcellular distribution of sch-1. Together, these results provide the first functional clue to the existence of schwannomin isoforms and could unravel novel pathways for the transport and subcellular localization of schwannomin in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
The mammalian Na+/H+ exchange regulatory factor 1 (NHERF1) is a multidomain scaffolding protein essential for regulating the intracellular trafficking and macromolecular assembly of transmembrane ion channels and receptors. NHERF1 consists of tandem PDZ-1, PDZ-2 domains that interact with the cytoplasmic domains of membrane proteins and a C-terminal (CT) domain that binds the membrane-cytoskeleton linker protein ezrin. NHERF1 is held in an autoinhibited state through intramolecular interactions between PDZ2 and the CT domain that also includes a C-terminal PDZ-binding motif (-SNL). We have determined the structures of the isolated and tandem PDZ2CT domains by high resolution NMR using small angle x-ray scattering as constraints. The PDZ2CT structure shows weak intramolecular interactions between the largely disordered CT domain and the PDZ ligand binding site. The structure reveals a novel helix-turn-helix subdomain that is allosterically coupled to the putative PDZ2 domain by a network of hydrophobic interactions. This helical subdomain increases both the stability and the binding affinity of the extended PDZ structure. Using NMR and small angle neutron scattering for joint structure refinement, we demonstrate the release of intramolecular domain-domain interactions in PDZ2CT upon binding to ezrin. Based on the structural information, we show that human disease-causing mutations in PDZ2, R153Q and E225K, have significantly reduced protein stability. Loss of NHERF1 expressed in cells could result in failure to assemble membrane complexes that are important for normal physiological functions.  相似文献   

17.
AF-6 is a key molecule essential for structure organization of cell-cell junction of polarized epithelia. It belongs to a novel cell-cell adhesion system. The AF-6 PDZ domain mediates interactions by binding to a specific amino acid sequence in target proteins. Here we report the solution structure of the AF-6 PDZ domain determined by NMR. Previously, the AF-6 PDZ domain was considered to be a class II PDZ domain. However we found that a unique hydrophilic amino acid, Gln70, at position alphaB1 makes the alphaB/betaB groove of the AF-6 PDZ domain significantly different from that of the canonical class II PDZ domain. The AF-6 PDZ domain does not have the second hydrophobic binding pocket, and the N-terminal end of alphaB is closer to betaB. Using BIACORE and NMR chemical shift perturbation experiments, we have studied the binding characteristics of the PDZ domain to the C-terminal peptide of Neurexin, KKNKDKEYYV, and that of Bcr, KRQSILFSTEV. The C-terminal peptide of Neurexin is a class II ligand, whereas that of Bcr is a class I ligand. The dissociation constants of these ligands were 4.08 x 10(-7) and 2.23 x 10(-6) m, respectively. Each of the four C-terminal positions in Neurexin and Bcr may contribute to the interaction. The three-dimensional models of the AF-6 PDZ-Neurexin C-terminal peptide complex and the AF-6 PDZ-Bcr C-terminal peptide complex were built up by molecular dynamics simulations. Unlike the canonical class II PDZ domain, Ala74 at alphaB5 rather than the residue at alphaB1 makes direct hydrophobic contact with the side chain of Tyr at the -2 position of the ligand.  相似文献   

18.
The second PDZ domain of postsynaptic density-95 (PSD-95 PDZ2) plays a critical role in coupling N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors to neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS). In this work, the solution structure of PSD-95 PDZ2 was determined to high resolution by NMR spectroscopy. The structure of PSD-95 PDZ2 was compared in detail with that of alpha1-syntrophin PDZ domain, as the PDZ domains share similar target interaction properties. The interaction of the PSD-95 PDZ2 with a carboxyl-terminal peptide derived from a cytoplasmic protein CAPON was studied by NMR titration experiments. Complex formation between PSD-95 PDZ2 and the nNOS PDZ was modelled on the basis of the crystal structure of the alpha1-syntrophin PDZ/nNOS PDZ dimer. We found that the prolonged loop connecting the betaB and betaC strands of PSD-95 PDZ2 is likely to play a role in both the binding of the carboxyl-terminal peptide and the nNOS beta-finger. Finally, the backbone dynamics of the PSD-95 PDZ2 in the absence of bound peptide were studied using a model-free approach. The "GLGF"-loop and the loop connecting alphaB and betaF of the protein display some degree of flexibility in solution. The rest of the protein is rigid and lacks detectable slow time-scale (microseconds to milliseconds) motions. In particular, the loop connecting betaB and betaC loop adopts a well-defined, rigid structure in solution. It appears that the loop adopts a pre-aligned conformation for the PDZ domain to interact with its targets.  相似文献   

19.
The complexity of mechanisms driving protein sorting into exosomes is only beginning to emerge. In a paper recently published in Cell Research, Roucourt et al. report that trimming of heparan sulfate side chains of syndecans by endosomal heparanase facilitates sorting into exosomes by the formation of tight syndecan clusters that are recruited by the multivalent adaptor syntenin to the ALIX-ESCRT sorting machinery at endosomes.Multicellular organisms function by virtue of intercellular communication, which can be accomplished through direct cell-cell contact or transfer of secreted molecules. A third mode of communication, which is increasingly recognized, involves extracellular vesicles (EVs)1. EVs are composed of integrated molecular packages of membrane proteins, cytosolic proteins, lipids, and RNA, and can transmit complex messages from donor to specific target cells. EVs have been implicated in many different physiological processes, including immune regulation, stem cell regulation, tissue morphogenesis, and gamete function, but also in disease such as cancer progression and metastasis, and neurodegeneration. EVs can be released from donor cells by shedding from the plasma membrane, and these are then generally referred to as microvesicles (MVs). In contrast, EVs that are secreted by multivesicular endosomes (MVEs) are called exosomes. The intraluminal vesicles of MVEs are generated by inward budding of the endosomal limiting membrane (Figure 1), and hence exosomes have the same topology as MVs and cells, with their exoplasmic side exposed.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Syndecans are processed at endosomes, first by trimming associated heparin sulfate site chains, followed by proteolytic cleavage. Clustered syndecan can now be recruited by multivalent syntenin, which on its turn is coupled to the ESCRT machinery via ALIX. Similarly, CD63 is recruited by syntenin, and with it presumably other membrane proteins that are associated with tetraspanin webs. Heparanase also stimulates sorting of CD63, indicating that the two pathways driven by syndecan and CD63 are somehow integrated.Although physiological functions of EVs have nowadays been proposed in > 9 000 reports, MVs and exosomes are usually not discerned. This is mainly due to lack of knowledge on molecular mechanisms that drive or regulate the sorting of molecules into MVs or exosomes, and this also hampers the design of experiments to demonstrate in vivo relevance of EVs in intercellular communication. Molecular mechanisms for exosome formation at endosomes involve the endosomal-sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) machinery. ESCRT was originally identified to drive the sorting of ubiquitin-conjugated membrane proteins into vesicles that bud into the lumen of a distinct set of MVEs that ultimately fuse with lysosomes rather than with the plasma membrane, resulting in the degradation of their vesicular contents. ESCRT is composed of 4 multiprotein sub-complexes, of which ESCRT-0, -I and -II recognize and sequester ubiquitinated membrane proteins at the endosomal delimiting membrane, while ESCRT-III drives membrane budding and actual scission of intraluminal vesicles2. Sorting of proteins into exosomes, however, appears to occur independently of cargo ubiquitination, and only a selected number of ESCRT components are involved in exosome formation3. For example, ubiquitination of MHC class II is required for its sorting into intraluminal vesicles of lysosome-targeted MVEs, but not for incorporation into exosomes4. Sorting of the transferrin receptor to exosomes, which occurs efficiently only in reticulocytes, is also independent of ubiquitination, but instead relies on direct binding of its cytoplasmic domain to the ESCRT accessory protein ALIX5.The research group of Guido David has previously shown that sorting of membrane proteins of the syndecan family into exosomes also involves ALIX, but in that case is linked to ALIX via the cytosolic adaptor syntenin6. Syntenin couples to membrane proteins with two PDZ domains and to ALIX with three LYPXnL motifs, and ALIX binds on its turn to ESCRT-III, the machinery responsible for intraluminal vesicle formation at MVEs. Syndecans form complexes through lateral interactions between their attached heparan sulfate polysaccharide chains. Guido David and co-workers have now shown that heparanase activity in endosomes trims long heparan sulphate chains into shorter ones, allowing clustering of syndecans. Further condensation is achieved as a consequence of removal of the syndecan luminal domain by endosomal proteases, leaving the membrane-embedded C-terminal domain. Heparanase-induced clustering is thought to stimulate the binding of syndecan cytoplasmic domains to the tandem PDZ domains of syntenin, driving ALIX-ESCRT-mediated sorting into exosomes. Interestingly, heparanase activity also facilitated the recruitment of CD63 into exosomes, in a syntenin-dependent manner6,7. Sorting of many membrane proteins into exosomes coincides with their association with tetraspanin membrane proteins8. Webs of interacting tetraspanins and associated proteins are stabilized by protein palmitoylation, and lipids also play an important role in the formation of tetraspanin webs, conceivably explaining the relative enrichment of cholesterol and glycosylceramides in exosomes, as well as the dependency on sphingomyelinase activity for exosome formation9. Non-tetraspanin membrane proteins may in this way piggy-back onto tetraspanin webs for their sorting into exosomes8. Interestingly, the tetraspanin CD63, which is highly enriched in exosomes and considered to be important for chaperoning cargo into exosomes10, can also be recruited by syntenin11. Sorting of tetraspanin webs at endosomes into exosomes could thus, similar to syndecans, be driven by the cytoplasmic adaptor syntenin, and the recruitment by syntenin of tetraspanin webs and syndecan clusters are thus integrated processes (Figure 1).All in all, a complex picture is emerging, in which both CD63 and syndecans, and possibly other membrane proteins that associate with endosomal syndecan and/or tetraspanin-enriched microdomains, are sorted into exosomes by a shared syntenin-ALIX-ESCRT machinery.Importantly, not all EV cargoes appear to depend on heparanase-syntenin-ALIX-ESCRT, as exemplified by flotillin, CD9 and CD816,7. One possible explanation is that distinct but parallel sorting mechanisms exist that drive cargo into a single population of exosomes. Another possibility is that separate sorting mechanisms drive the formation of distinct EV populations containing different cargo molecules. For example, syntenin-dependent and -independent EVs may be represented by exosomes and plasma membrane-derived MVs, respectively. The origin of EVs, exosomes or MVs, is ill defined in most research. The current study by Roucourt and coworkers7 provides molecular tools, supplementation with heparanase to stimulate, or syntenin depletion to interfere with, cargo incorporation into exosomes, that could help researchers to establish the precise origin of EVs, as well as their roles in biological processes.  相似文献   

20.
The multiple PSD-95, Dlg, and Zo-1 (PDZ) domain protein, glutamate receptor-interacting protein (GRIP), is involved in the clustering and trafficking of the alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate receptor by directly binding to the cytoplasmic tail of the receptor's GluR2 subunit. Both the forth and fifth PDZ domains (PDZ4 and PDZ5) of GRIP are required for effective binding to the receptor. Using NMR and circular dichroism spectroscopic techniques, we show that PDZ5 is completely unstructured in solution. Freshly prepared PDZ4 is largely folded, but the domain can spontaneously unfold. Neither PDZ4 nor PDZ5 binds to GluR2 in solution. Unexpectedly, when PDZ4 and PDZ5 are covalently connected (i.e. PDZ45), both PDZ domains become well folded and stable in solution. The covalent linkage of the two PDZ domains is essential for proper folding of the tandem PDZ domains and its effective binding to GluR2. The interdomain chaperoning effect observed in the PDZ domains of GRIP represents a previously uncharacterized function of PDZ domains.  相似文献   

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