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1.
Eisosomes define sites of plasma membrane organization. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, eisosomes delimit furrow-like plasma membrane invaginations that concentrate sterols, transporters, and signaling molecules. Eisosomes are static macromolecular assemblies composed of cytoplasmic proteins, most of which have no known function. In this study, we used a bioinformatics approach to analyze a set of 20 eisosome proteins. We found that the core components of eisosomes, paralogue proteins Pil1 and Lsp1, are distant homologues of membrane-sculpting Bin/amphiphysin/Rvs (BAR) proteins. Consistent with this finding, purified recombinant Pil1 and Lsp1 tubulated liposomes and formed tubules when the proteins were overexpressed in mammalian cells. Structural homology modeling and site-directed mutagenesis indicate that Pil1 positively charged surface patches are needed for membrane binding and liposome tubulation. Pil1 BAR domain mutants were defective in both eisosome assembly and plasma membrane domain organization. In addition, we found that eisosome-associated proteins Slm1 and Slm2 have F-BAR domains and that these domains are needed for targeting to furrow-like plasma membrane invaginations. Our results support a model in which BAR domain protein-mediated membrane bending leads to clustering of lipids and proteins within the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Eisosomes are stable domains at the plasma membrane of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and have been proposed to function in endocytosis. Eisosomes are composed of two main cytoplasmic proteins, Pil1 and Lsp1, that form a scaffold around furrow-like plasma membrane invaginations. We show here that the poorly characterized eisosome protein Seg1/Ymr086w is important for eisosome biogenesis and architecture. Seg1 was required for efficient incorporation of Pil1 into eisosomes and the generation of normal plasma membrane furrows. Seg1 preceded Pil1 during eisosome formation and established a platform for the assembly of other eisosome components. This platform was further shaped and stabilized upon the arrival of Pil1 and Lsp1. Moreover, Seg1 abundance controlled the shape of eisosomes by determining their length. Similarly, the Schizosaccharomyces pombe Seg1-like protein Sle1 was necessary to generate the filamentous eisosomes present in fission yeast. The function of Seg1 in the stepwise biogenesis of eisosomes reveals striking architectural similarities between eisosomes in yeast and caveolae in mammals.  相似文献   

3.
Spatial organization of membranes into domains of distinct protein and lipid composition is a fundamental feature of biological systems. The plasma membrane is organized in such domains to efficiently orchestrate the many reactions occurring there simultaneously. Despite the almost universal presence of membrane domains, mechanisms of their formation are often unclear. Yeast cells feature prominent plasma membrane domain organization, which is at least partially mediated by eisosomes. Eisosomes are large protein complexes that are primarily composed of many subunits of two Bin-Amphiphysin-Rvs domain-containing proteins, Pil1 and Lsp1. In this paper, we show that these proteins self-assemble into higher-order structures and bind preferentially to phosphoinositide-containing membranes. Using a combination of electron microscopy approaches, we generate structural models of Pil1 and Lsp1 assemblies, which resemble eisosomes in cells. Our data suggest that the mechanism of membrane organization by eisosomes is mediated by self-assembly of its core components into a membrane-bound protein scaffold with lipid-binding specificity.  相似文献   

4.
Eisosomes are recently described fungal structures that play roles in the organization of the plasma membrane and endocytosis. Their major protein components are Pil1 and Lsp1, and previous studies showed that these proteins are phosphorylated by the sphingolipid long-chain base-activated Pkh1 and Pkh2 protein kinases in vitro. We show that Pkh1 and Pkh2 phosphorylate Pil1 and Lsp1 in vivo to produce species B, and that heat stress, which activates Pkh1 and Pkh2, generates a more highly phosphorylated species, C. Cells with low Pkh activity lack species B and C and contain abnormally organized eisosomes. To verify that Pil1 phosphorylation is essential for correct eisosome organization, phosphorylated serine and threonine residues were identified and changed to alanines. A variant Pil1 protein lacking five phosphorylation sites did not form eisosomes during log phase growth, indicating that phosphorylation is critical for eisosome organization. We also found that eisosomes are dynamic structures and disassemble when the Ypk protein kinases, which are activated by the sphingolipid-Pkh signaling pathway, are inactivated or when the sphingolipid signal is pharmacologically blocked with myriocin. We conclude that eisosome formation and turnover are regulated by the sphingolipid-Pkh1/2-Ypk1/2 signaling pathway. These data and previous data showing that endocytosis is regulated by the sphingolipid-Pkh1/2-Ypk1/2 signaling pathway suggest that Pkh1 and -2 respond to changes in membrane sphingolipids and transmit this information to eisosomes via Pil1 phosphorylation. Eisosomes then control endocytosis to align the composition and function of the plasma membrane to match demand.  相似文献   

5.
The molecular composition of plasma membranes is constantly remodeled by endocytosis and exocytosis. Eisosomes are large cytoplasmic protein assemblies that localize to specialized domains on the yeast plasma membrane. They are of uniform size and immobile, and their disruption leads to large aberrant plasma membrane invaginations and endocytic defects. It is unknown how eisosomes are formed or inherited and what governs their size, distribution, and location. Here we show that eisosomes are formed de novo in the bud of dividing cells. They colonize newly formed membrane at a fixed density in a polarized wave proceeding from the bud neck to the bud tip and become anchored at the site of their formation. Pil1, one of the two main eisosome subunits, emerges as the central regulator of eisosome biogenesis that determines both size and location of eisosomes. Lowering Pil1 expression leads to normal-sized eisosomes at a reduced density, suggesting that eisosomes must be of a minimal size. Conversely, raising Pil1 expression leads to larger eisosomes at a fixed density, suggesting that under these conditions eisosome nucleation sites are limiting. Pil1 expression is regulated by the cell cycle, which synchronizes eisosome formation with plasma membrane growth. Our results establish a first framework of the molecular principles that define eisosome assembly and distribution.  相似文献   

6.
Eisosomes help sequester a subgroup of plasma membrane proteins into discrete membrane domains that colocalize with sites of endocytosis. Here we show that the major eisosome component Pil1 in vivo is a target of the long-chain base (LCB, the biosynthetic precursors to sphingolipids)-signaling pathway mediated by the Pkh-kinases. Eisosomes disassemble if Pil1 is hyperphosphorylated (i) upon overexpression of Pkh-kinases, (ii) upon reducing LCB concentrations by inhibiting serine-palmitoyl transferase in lcb1-mutant cells or by poisoning the enzyme with myriocin, and (iii) upon mimicking hyperphosphorylation in pil1-mutant cells. Conversely, more Pil1 assembles into eisosomes if Pil1 is hypophosphorylated (i) upon reducing Pkh-kinase activity in pkh1 pkh2-mutant cells, (ii) upon activating Pkh-kinases by addition of LCBs, and (iii) upon mimicking hypophosphorylation in pil1-mutant cells. The resulting enlarged eisosomes show altered organization. Other data suggest that Pkh signaling and sphingolipids are important for endocytosis. Taken together with our previous results that link eisosomes to endocytosis, these observations suggest that Pkh-kinase signaling relayed to Pil1 may help regulate endocytic events to modulate the organization of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

7.
The plasma membrane delineates the cell and mediates its communication and material exchange with the environment. Many processes of the plasma membrane occur through interactions of proteins with phosphatidylinositol(4,5)-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P2), which is highly enriched in this membrane and is a key determinant of its identity. Eisosomes function in lateral organization of the plasma membrane, but the molecular function of their major protein subunits, the BAR domain–containing proteins Pil1 and Lsp1, is poorly understood. Here we show that eisosomes interact with the PI(4,5)P2 phosphatase Inp51/Sjl1, thereby recruiting it to the plasma membrane. Pil1 is essential for plasma membrane localization and function of Inp51 but not for the homologous phosphatidylinositol bisphosphate phosphatases Inp52/Sjl2 and Inp53/Sjl3. Consistent with this, absence of Pil1 increases total and available PI(4,5)P2 levels at the plasma membrane. On the basis of these findings, we propose a model in which the eisosomes function in maintaining PI(4,5)P2 levels by Inp51/Sjl1 recruitment.  相似文献   

8.
The cortical cytoskeleton mediates a range of cellular activities such as endocytosis, cell motility, and the maintenance of cell rigidity. Traditional polymers, including actin, microtubules, and septins, contribute to the cortical cytoskeleton, but additional filament systems may also exist. In yeast cells, cortical structures called eisosomes generate specialized domains termed MCCs to cluster specific proteins at sites of membrane invaginations. Here we show that the core eisosome protein Pil1 forms linear cortical filaments in fission yeast cells and that purified Pil1 assembles into filaments in vitro. In cells, Pil1 cortical filaments are excluded from regions of cell growth and are independent of the actin and microtubule cytoskeletons. Pil1 filaments assemble slowly at the cell cortex and appear stable by time-lapse microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. This stability does not require the cell wall, but Pil1 and the transmembrane protein Fhn1 colocalize and are interdependent for localization to cortical filaments. Increased Pil1 expression leads to cytoplasmic Pil1 rods that are stable and span the length of cylindrical fission yeast cells. We propose that Pil1 is a novel component of the yeast cytoskeleton, with implications for the role of filament assembly in the spatial organization of cells.  相似文献   

9.
Eisosomes are multiprotein structures that generate linear invaginations at the plasma membrane of yeast cells. The core component of eisosomes, the BAR domain protein Pil1, generates these invaginations through direct binding to lipids including phosphoinositides. Eisosomes promote hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5 bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P2) by functioning with synaptojanin, but the cellular processes regulated by this pathway have been unknown. Here, we found that PI(4,5)P2 regulation by eisosomes inhibits the cell integrity pathway, a conserved MAPK signal transduction cascade. This pathway is activated by multiple environmental conditions including osmotic stress in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Activation of the MAPK Pmk1 was impaired by mutations in the phosphatidylinositol (PI) 5-kinase Its3, but this defect was suppressed by removal of eisosomes. Using fluorescent biosensors, we found that osmotic stress induced the formation of PI(4,5)P2 clusters that were spatially organized by eisosomes in both fission yeast and budding yeast cells. These cortical clusters contained the PI 5-kinase Its3 and did not assemble in the its3-1 mutant. The GTPase Rho2, an upstream activator of Pmk1, also co-localized with PI(4,5)P2 clusters under osmotic stress, providing a molecular link between these novel clusters and MAPK activation. Our findings have revealed that eisosomes regulate activation of MAPK signal transduction through the organization of cortical lipid-based microdomains.  相似文献   

10.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae homologs, Pkh1/2p, of the mammalian 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 (PDK1) regulate the Pkc1-MAP kinase cascade and the partially parallel Ypk1/2p pathway(s) that control growth and cell integrity. Mammalian PDK1 is regulated by 3-phosphoinositides, whereas Pkh1/2p are regulated by sphingolipid long-chain bases (LCBs). Recently Pkh1/2p were found to complex with two related proteins, Pil1p (Ygr086) and Lsp1p (Ypl004). Because these two proteins are not related to any known protein we sought to characterize their functions. We show that Pkh1p phosphorylates both proteins in vitro in a reaction that is only weakly regulated by LCBs. In contrast, LCBs inhibit phosphorylation of Pil1p by Pkh2p, whereas LCBs stimulate phosphorylation of Lsp1p by Pkh2p. We find that Pil1p and Lsp1p down-regulate resistance to heat stress and, specifically, that they down-regulate the activity of the Pkc1p-MAP and Ypk1p pathways during heat stress. Pil1p and Lsp1p are thus the first proteins identified as regulators of Pkh1/2p. An unexpected finding was that the level of Ypk1p is greatly reduced in pkc1Delta cells, indicating that Pkc1p controls the level of Ypk1p. Homologs of Pil1p and Lsp1p are widespread in nature, and our results suggest that they may be negative regulators of PDK-like protein kinases and their downstream cellular pathways that control cell growth and survival.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Eisosomes are furrows in the yeast plasma membrane that form a membrane domain with distinct lipid and protein composition. Recent studies highlighted the importance of this domain for the regulation of proton‐nutrient symporters. The amino acids and other nutrients, which these transporters deliver to the cytoplasm not only feed into metabolic pathways but also activate the metabolic regulator TORC1. Eisosomes have also been shown to harbor the membrane stress sensors Slm1 and Slm2. Membrane tension caused by hypoosmotic shock results in the redistribution of Slm1/2 from eisosomes to TORC2 which in turn regulates lipid synthesis. Therefore, eisosomes function upstream of both TORC1 and TORC2 regulation.  相似文献   

13.
We have developed and applied a method unifying fluorescence microscopy and mass spectrometry for studying spatial and temporal properties of proteins and protein complexes in yeast cells. To combine the techniques, first we produced a variety of DNA constructs that can be used for genomic tagging of proteins with modular fluorescent and affinity tags. The modular tag consists of one of the multiple versions of monomeric fluorescent proteins fused to a variety of small affinity epitopes. After this step we tested the constructs by tagging two yeast proteins, Pil1 and Lsp1, the core components of eisosomes, the large protein complexes involved in endocytosis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, with a variety of fluorescent and affinity probes. Among the modular tags produced we found several combinations that were optimal for determining subcellular localization and for purifying the tagged proteins and protein complexes for the detailed analysis by mass spectrometry. And finally, we applied the designed method for finding the new protein components of eisosomes and for gaining new insights into molecular mechanisms regulating eisosome assembly and disassembly by reversible phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. Our results indicate that this approach combining fluorescence microscopy and mass spectrometry into a single method provides a unique perspective into molecular mechanisms regulating composition and dynamic properties of the protein complexes in living cells.Fluorescent proteins have become invaluable probes for studying molecular processes in living cells with light microscopy techniques (13). Proteins, organelles, and entire cells can be selectively visualized using a variety of fluorescent proteins fused to the proteins of interest (16). Combined with genetics and molecular biology techniques fluorescence microscopy provides an efficient tool for observing molecular phenotypes useful for dissecting the pathways of cell cycle progression and cell response to internal and external signals (7). However, understanding the mechanism controlling the properties of proteins in cells can be a challenging task, frequently requiring a comprehensive characterization of the proteins at the molecular level.The proteins tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP)1 can be also purified using GFP antibodies. Cheeseman and Desai (8) and Cristea et al. (9) have enriched GFP-tagged proteins and protein complexes for further detailed analysis by MS. The MS-based methods for protein analysis are fast, sensitive, and able to identify both proteins in complex protein mixtures and residues bearing post-translational modifications (10, 11). Thus, the addition of affinity purification and mass spectrometry steps enabled the researchers to study protein interactions and the post-translational modifications in the context of the protein subcellular localization. Juxtaposition of the protein localization, composition of the protein complexes, and post-translational modifications frequently yield a unique perspective of the cellular processes and the molecular mechanisms of their regulation (12, 13).Using fluorescent proteins also as affinity probes can be problematic in several instances. First of all, the good quality antibodies against the rapidly increasing number of fluorescent proteins (3, 6) are not yet readily available. Furthermore raising antibodies specifically recognizing fluorescent proteins originating from the same organism but fluorescing a different color can be difficult or even impossible because such proteins frequently differ by mutations of only a few amino acids (16). Thus, we seek an alternative approach to the design of tags suitable for subcellular localization and purification of proteins and protein complexes that is 1) independent of the availability of antibody to a specific form of a fluorescent protein, 2) suitable for multiplexing, i.e. simultaneous observation of subcellular localization of several proteins and affinity purification of the proteins and stably associated protein complexes, and 3) flexible and easy to modify to incorporate better versions of fluorescent proteins and affinity tags after they are discovered.One possible solution that satisfies the stated requirements is to use a modular tag containing a version of a fluorescent protein fused to an affinity epitope. In this case we can decouple requirements for both modules and optimize the performance of each one independently for fluorescence microscopy and affinity purification experiments. To our knowledge, this possibility was first realized by Thorn and co-worker (14) who have fused 3HA (three repeats of YPYDVPDYA epitope from hemagglutinin protein) and 13MYC (13 repeats of EQKLISEEDL epitope, corresponding to a stretch of the C-terminal amino acids of the human c-MYC protein) tags to several variants of fluorescent proteins. The authors have argued that the fusion of the fluorescent proteins to the affinity epitopes may enable fluorescence and immunochemical analysis but did not test this idea. Cheeseman and Desai (8) fused the S-peptide and hexahistidine epitopes to the GFP protein to enable additional tandem purification steps. Su and co-workers (15) also fused a hexahistidine tag (His6) to GFP to purify recombinantly produced proteins. Although hexahistidine tag performs well for isolation of overexpressed recombinant proteins, it works poorly for affinity purification of low abundance, endogenously expressed proteins (16). A double affinity tag containing a single MYC epitope and hexahistidine was also used to purify recombinantly produced fluorescent proteins (6).Here we describe the design and implementation of the modular fluorescent and affinity tags. These tags contain a variety of fluorescent proteins, which can be used exclusively for obtaining subcellular visualization, and several small epitope tags that can be utilized to perform two-step affinity purification. To test the performance of the constructs produced, we tagged two yeast proteins, Pil1 and Lsp1, the core components of eisosomes, with a variety of modular tags.Eisosomes are large heterodimeric protein complexes recently discovered in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (17). There are ∼50–100 eisosomes in each mature yeast cell distributed uniformly in a characteristic dotted pattern at the cell surface periphery. Each eisosome contains ∼2000–5000 copies of Pil1 and Lsp1. It was shown that eisosomes serve as portals of endocytosis in yeast. The function of eisosomes is regulated by reversible phosphorylation (18, 19).Among the constructs tested, we found several combinations of fluorescent protein and affinity tags that were optimal for determining subcellular localization and purification of the proteins and protein complexes. We applied these tags to further investigate eisosomes and found several new protein components of the complexes and obtained new insights into molecular mechanisms regulating eisosome integrity by reversible phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. Our results indicate that an approach combining fluorescence microscopy and mass spectrometry into a single method provides a unique perspective into molecular mechanisms regulating composition and dynamic properties of the protein complexes in living cells.  相似文献   

14.
Eisosomes, large protein complexes that are predominantly composed of BAR-domain-containing proteins Pil1 and its homologs, are situated under the plasma membrane of ascomycetes. A successful targeting of Pil1 onto the future site of eisosome accompanies maturation of eisosome. During or after recruitment, Pil1 undergoes self-assembly into filaments that can serve as scaffolds to induce membrane furrows or invaginations. Although a consequence of the invagination is likely to redistribute particular proteins and lipids to a different location, the precise physiological role of membrane invagination and eisosome assembly awaits further investigation. The present review summarizes recent research findings within the field regarding the detailed structural and functional significance of Pil1 on eisosome organization.  相似文献   

15.
Calcofluor is an antifungal compound known to induce structural perturbations of the cell wall by interfering with the synthesis of chitin microfibril. Proteins from a stripped plasma membrane fraction were solubilized with the neutral and non-denaturing detergent, the n-dodecyl beta-D-maltoside. Proteins were then resolved using a recently described ion-exchange chromatography (IEC)/lithium dodecyl sulfate (LDS)-PAGE procedure. Nearly 90 proteins were identified and clustered, based on their pI, molecular weight, abundance and/or hydrophobicity. This method was then applied to profile the plasma membrane response to calcofluor. The LDS-PAGE patterns obtained from whole plasma membrane proteins were similar for the non-treated and calcofluor-treated samples. However, IEC/LDS-PAGE analysis revealed subtle changes in the expression of several proteins of low abundance, in response to calcofluor. These proteins include Pil1p and Lsp1p, two sphingolipid long-chain base-responsive inhibitors of protein kinases involved in signaling pathways for cell wall integrity and Rho1p, a small GTPase. It was recently hypothesized that Pil1p and Lsp1p could associate with, and regulate, the plasma membrane beta-1-3-glucan synthase, responsible for the synthesis of another major microfibril for yeast cell wall. Results are discussed with respect to both calcofluor effects on the plasma membrane proteins and the power of the IEC/LDS-PAGE procedure in the search for new potential therapeutics targets.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The protein and lipid composition of eukaryotic plasma membranes is highly dynamic and regulated according to need. The sphingolipid-responsive Pkh kinases are candidates for mediating parts of this regulation, as they affect a diverse set of plasma membrane functions, such as cortical actin patch organization, efficient endocytosis, and eisosome assembly. Eisosomes are large protein complexes underlying the plasma membrane and help to sort a group of membrane proteins into distinct domains. In this study, we identify Nce102 in a genome-wide screen for genes involved in eisosome organization and Pkh kinase signaling. Nce102 accumulates in membrane domains at eisosomes where Pkh kinases also localize. The relative abundance of Nce102 in these domains compared with the rest of the plasma membrane is dynamically regulated by sphingolipids. Furthermore, Nce102 inhibits Pkh kinase signaling and is required for plasma membrane organization. Therefore, Nce102 might act as a sensor of sphingolipids that regulates plasma membrane function.  相似文献   

18.
Bacterial lipoproteins are a specialised class of membrane proteins that represent a small percentage of the proteome of Gram-positive bacteria, yet these lipoproteins have been reported to play important roles in nutrient scavenging, cell envelope assembly, protein folding, environmental signalling, host cell adhesion and virulence. Upon translocation of lipoproteins, the type II signal peptidase (Lsp) cleaves the signal peptide, leaving the lipoproteins bound to the outer face of the cytoplasmic membrane by means of linking lipid molecule to their +1 cysteine residue. We have studied the role played by Lsp in Streptomyces lividans cellular metabolism, particularly, in secretory protein production, and found that the absence of functional Lsp, apparently produces a translocase blockage, diminishes the synthesis of secretory proteins and triggers a stringent response. These findings could be particularly relevant when optimising S. lividans for the overproduction of secretory proteins of industrial application.  相似文献   

19.
Eisosomes are among the few remaining eukaryotic cellular differentations that lack a defined function(s). These trough-shaped invaginations of the plasma membrane have largely been studied in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, in which their associated proteins, including two BAR domain proteins, have been identified, and homologues have been found throughout the fungal radiation. Using quick-freeze deep-etch electron microscopy to generate high-resolution replicas of membrane fracture faces without the use of chemical fixation, we report that eisosomes are also present in a subset of red and green microalgae as well as in the cysts of the ciliate Euplotes. Eisosome assembly is closely correlated with both the presence and the nature of cell walls. Microalgal eisosomes vary extensively in topology and internal organization. Unlike fungi, their convex fracture faces can carry lineage-specific arrays of intramembranous particles, and their concave fracture faces usually display fine striations, also seen in fungi, that are pitched at lineage-specific angles and, in some cases, adopt a broad-banded patterning. The conserved genes that encode fungal eisosome-associated proteins are not found in sequenced algal genomes, but we identified genes encoding two algal lineage-specific families of predicted BAR domain proteins, called Green-BAR and Red-BAR, that are candidate eisosome organizers. We propose a model for eisosome formation wherein (i) positively charged recognition patches first establish contact with target membrane regions and (ii) a (partial) unwinding of the coiled-coil conformation of the BAR domains then allows interactions between the hydrophobic faces of their amphipathic helices and the lipid phase of the inner membrane leaflet, generating the striated patterns.  相似文献   

20.
Regulation of gene expression on the level of translation and mRNA turnover is widely conserved evolutionarily. We have found that the main mRNA decay enzyme, exoribonuclease Xrn1, accumulates at the plasma membrane-associated eisosomes after glucose exhaustion in a culture of the yeast S. cerevisiae. Eisosomal localization of Xrn1 is not achieved in cells lacking the main component of eisosomes, Pil1, or Sur7, the protein accumulating at the membrane compartment of Can1 (MCC) - the eisosome-organized plasma membrane microdomain. In contrast to the conditions of diauxic shift, when Xrn1 accumulates in processing bodies (P-bodies), or acute heat stress, in which these cytosolic accumulations of Xrn1 associate with eIF3a/Rpg1-containing stress granules, Xrn1 is not accompanied by other mRNA-decay machinery components when it accumulates at eisosomes in post-diauxic cells. It is important that Xrn1 is released from eisosomes after addition of fermentable substrate. We suggest that this spatial segregation of Xrn1 from the rest of the mRNA-decay machinery reflects a general regulatory mechanism, in which the key enzyme is kept separate from the rest of mRNA decay factors in resting cells but ready for immediate use when fermentable nutrients emerge and appropriate metabolism reprogramming is required. In particular, the localization of Xrn1 to the eisosome, together with previously published data, accents the relevance of this plasma membrane-associated compartment as a multipotent regulatory site.  相似文献   

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