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1.
To investigate the importance of tyrosine recognition by the AP-1B clathrin adaptor subunit mu1B for basolateral sorting of integral membrane proteins in polarized epithelial cells, we have produced and characterized a mutant form of mu1B. The mutant (M-mu1B) contains alanine substitutions of each of the four conserved residues, which in the AP-2 adaptor subunit micro2 are critical for interacting with tyrosine-based endocytosis signals. We show M-mu1B is defective for tyrosine binding in vitro, but is nevertheless incorporated into AP-1 complexes in transfected cells. Using LLC-PK1 cells expressing either wild type or M-mu1B, we find that there is inefficient basolateral expression of membrane proteins whose basolateral targeting signals share critical tyrosines with signals for endocytosis. In contrast, membrane proteins whose basolateral targeting signals are distinct from their endocytosis signals (transferrin and low-density lipoprotein receptors) accumulate at the basolateral domain normally, although in a manner that is strictly dependent on mu1B or M-mu1B expression. Our results suggest that mu1B interacts with different classes of basolateral targeting signals in distinct ways.  相似文献   

2.
To perform vectorial secretory and transport functions that are critical for the survival of the organism, epithelial cells sort plasma membrane proteins into polarized apical and basolateral domains. Sorting occurs post-synthetically, in the trans Golgi network (TGN) or after internalization from the cell surface in recycling endosomes, and is mediated by apical and basolateral sorting signals embedded in the protein structure. Basolateral sorting signals include tyrosine motifs in the cytoplasmic domain that are structurally similar to signals involved in receptor internalization by clathrin-coated pits. Recently, an epithelial-specific adaptor protein complex, AP1B, was identified. AP-1B recognizes a subset of basolateral tyrosine motifs through its mu 1B subunit. Here, we characterized the post-synthetic and post-endocytic sorting of the fast recycling low density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) and transferrin receptor (TfR) in LLC-PK1 cells, which lack mu 1B and mis-sort both receptors to the apical surface. Targeting and recycling assays in LLC-PK1 cells, before and after transfection with mu 1B, and in MDCK cells, which express mu 1B constitutively, suggest that AP1B sorts basolateral proteins post-endocytically.  相似文献   

3.
A dynamic equilibrium between multiple sorting pathways maintains polarized distribution of plasma membrane proteins in epithelia. To identify sorting pathways for plasma membrane delivery of the gastric H,K-ATPase beta subunit in polarized cells, the protein was expressed as a yellow fluorescent protein N-terminal construct in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) and LLC-PK1 cells. Confocal microscopy and surface-selective biotinylation showed that 80% of the surface amount of the beta subunit was present on the apical membrane in LLC-PK1 cells, but only 40% was present in MDCK cells. Nondenaturing gel electrophoresis of the isolated membranes showed that a significant fraction of the H,K-ATPase beta subunits associate with the endogenous Na,K-ATPase alpha(1) subunits in MDCK but not in LLC-PK cells. Hence, co-sorting of the H,K-ATPase beta subunit with the Na,K-ATPase alpha(1) subunit to the basolateral membrane in MDCK cells may determine the differential distribution of the beta subunit in these two cell types. The major fraction of unassociated monomeric H,K-ATPase beta subunits is detected in the apical membrane. Quantitative analysis showed that half of the apical pool of the beta subunit originates directly from the trans-Golgi network and the other half from transcytosis via the basolateral membrane in MDCK cells. A minor fraction of monomeric beta subunits detected in the basolateral membrane represents a transient pool of the protein that undergoes transcytosis to the apical membrane. Hence, the steady state distribution of the H,K-ATPase beta subunit in polarized cells depends on the balance between (a) direct sorting from the trans-Golgi network, (b) secondary associative sorting with a partner protein, and (c) transcytosis.  相似文献   

4.
Expression of the epithelial cell-specific heterotetrameric adaptor complex AP-1B is required for the polarized distribution of many membrane proteins to the basolateral surface of LLC-PK1 kidney cells. AP-1B is distinguished from the ubiquitously expressed AP-1A by exchange of its single 50-kD mu subunit, mu1A, being replaced by the closely related mu1B. Here we show that this substitution is sufficient to couple basolateral plasma membrane proteins, such as a low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR), to the AP-1B complex and to clathrin. The interaction between LDLR and AP-1B is likely to occur in the trans-Golgi network (TGN), as was suggested by the localization of functional, epitope-tagged mu1 by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. Tagged AP-1A and AP-1B complexes were found in the perinuclear region close to the Golgi complex and recycling endosomes, often in clathrin-coated buds and vesicles. Yet, AP-1A and AP-1B localized to different subdomains of the TGN, with only AP-1A colocalizing with furin, a membrane protein that uses AP-1 to recycle between the TGN and endosomes. We conclude that AP-1B functions by interacting with its cargo molecules and clathrin in the TGN, where it acts to sort basolateral proteins from proteins destined for the apical surface and from those selected by AP-1A for transport to endosomes and lysosomes.  相似文献   

5.
Clathrin and the epithelial-specific clathrin adaptor AP-1B mediate basolateral trafficking in epithelia. However, several epithelia lack AP-1B, and mice knocked out for AP-1B are viable, suggesting the existence of additional mechanisms that control basolateral polarity. Here, we demonstrate a distinct role of the ubiquitous clathrin adaptor AP-1A in basolateral protein sorting. Knockdown of AP-1A causes missorting of basolateral proteins in MDCK cells, but only after knockdown of AP-1B, suggesting that AP-1B can compensate for lack of AP-1A. AP-1A localizes predominantly to the TGN, and its knockdown promotes spillover of basolateral proteins into common recycling endosomes, the site of function of AP-1B, suggesting complementary roles of both adaptors in basolateral sorting. Yeast two-hybrid assays detect interactions between the basolateral signal of transferrin receptor and the medium subunits of both AP-1A and AP-1B. The basolateral sorting function of AP-1A reported here establishes AP-1 as a major regulator of epithelial polarity.  相似文献   

6.
Poliovirus receptor (hPVR/CD155) is a cell surface glycoprotein that belongs to the immunoglobulin superfamily but its natural function remains unknown. Two membrane-bound isoforms, hPVRalpha and hPVRdelta, are known to date, and they differ only in the amino acid sequence of their cytoplasmic domains. To gain an insight into the possible function of the cytoplasmic domains, we examined the localization of introduced hPVRalpha and hPVRdelta in polarized epithelial cells deficient of native hPVRs. Basolateral sorting of hPVRalpha was observed in Madine-Darby canine kidney cells expressing mu1B, but not in LLC-PK1 porcine kidney cells deficient in mu1B. Distribution of hPVRdelta, however, occurred both on the apical and basolateral plasma membranes of these two cell lines. Basolateral sorting of hPVRalpha was also seen in LLC-PK1 cells that expressed an intact exogenous mu1B, but not in the cells that expressed a mutant mu1B lacking binding ability to tyrosine-containing signals. These results indicate that mu1B is involved in the distribution of hPVRalpha to the basolateral membrane. Comparative distribution analysis of hPVRalpha using a series of mutants with truncations and substitutions in the cytoplasmic tail demonstrated that determinant for the basolateral sorting resided in the tyrosine-containing motif of the cytoplasmic tail. Furthermore, yeast two hybrid analysis strongly suggested that the tyrosine motif directly interacted with mu1B protein. Thus, basolateral sorting of hPVRalpha appears to involve the interaction with mu1B through a tyrosine motif existing in the cytoplasmic domain.  相似文献   

7.
Epithelial cells accumulate distinct populations of membrane proteins at their two plasmalemmal domains. We have examined the molecular signals which specify the differential subcellular distributions of two closely related ion pumps. The Na,K-ATPase is normally restricted to the basolateral membranes of numerous epithelial cell types, whereas the H,K-ATPase is a component of the apical surfaces of the parietal cells of the gastric epithelium. We have expressed full length and chimeric H,K-ATPase/Na,K-ATPase cDNAs in polarized renal proximal tubular epithelial cells (LLC-PK1). We find that both the alpha and beta subunits of the H,K-ATPase encode independent signals that specify apical localization. Furthermore, the H,K-ATPase beta-subunit possesses a sequence which mediates its participation in the endocytic pathway. The interrelationship between epithelial sorting and endocytosis signals suggested by these studies supports the redefinition of apical and basolateral as functional, rather than simply topographic domains.  相似文献   

8.
The heterotetrameric AP-1A adaptor complex of clathrin-coated vesicles is ubiquitously expressed. The µ1-adaptin subunit of the complex exists as the ubiquitous µ1A and the polarized epithelia-specific µ1B, which are 80% identical. In polarized epithelia, µ1B is incorporated into the AP-1B complex, which is required for basolateral plasma membrane sorting of the low-density lipoprotein receptor. Binding of AP-1B to subdomains of the trans-Golgi network (TGN) appears to be part of the mechanism by which protein sorting is mediated. We expressed µ1B in µ1A-deficient fibroblasts to test for µ1B function in non-polarized cells. AP-1B complexes were formed and bound to the TGN and to endosomes. Moreover, AP-1B restored the AP-1A-dependent sorting of mannose 6-phosphate receptors between endosomes and the TGN. This demonstrates that µ1A and µ1B do have overlapping sorting functions and indicates that AP-1A and AP-1B mediate protein sorting along parallel pathways between the TGN and endosomes in polarized epithelia.  相似文献   

9.
The epithelial cell-specific adaptor complex AP-1B is crucial for correct delivery of many transmembrane proteins from recycling endosomes to the basolateral plasma membrane. Subsequently, membrane fusion is dependent on the formation of complexes between SNARE proteins located at the target membrane and on transport vesicles. Although the t-SNARE syntaxin 4 has been localized to the basolateral membrane, the v-SNARE operative in the AP-1B pathway remained unknown. We show that the ubiquitously expressed v-SNARE cellubrevin localizes to the basolateral membrane and to recycling endosomes, where it colocalizes with AP-1B. Furthermore, we demonstrate that cellubrevin coimmunoprecipitates preferentially with syntaxin 4, implicating this v-SNARE in basolateral fusion events. Cleavage of cellubrevin with tetanus neurotoxin (TeNT) results in scattering of AP-1B localization and missorting of AP-1B-dependent cargos, such as transferrin receptor and a truncated low-density lipoprotein receptor, LDLR-CT27. These data suggest that cellubrevin and AP-1B cooperate in basolateral membrane trafficking.  相似文献   

10.
We have evaluated transcytotic routes in MDCK cells for their ability to generate a polarized surface distribution of trafficking proteins by following the intracellular sorting of transferrin receptors (TRs). We find that the selective basolateral expression of TRs is maintained in the face of extensive trafficking between the apical and basolateral surfaces. Biochemical studies of receptors loaded with tracer under conditions approaching steady state indicate that TRs internalized from the two surfaces are extensively colocalized within MDCK cells and that both populations of receptors are selectively delivered to the basolateral surface. Tailless TRs in which the cytoplasmic domain has been deleted display an unpolarized cell surface distribution and recycle in an unpolarized fashion. We show by EM that wild-type receptors internalized from each surface are colocalized within endosomal elements distributed throughout the cytoplasm. By preloading endosomal elements directly accessible from the basolateral surface with transferrin (Tf)-HRP, we show that apically internalized TRs rapidly enter the same compartment. We also show that both transcytosing (apically internalized) and recycling (basolaterally internalized) TRs are delivered to the basolateral border by a distinctive subset of exocytotic, 60-nm-diam vesicles. Together, the biochemical and morphological data show that apical and basolateral endosomes of MDCK cells are interconnected and contain a signal- dependent polarized sorting mechanism. We propose a dynamic model of polarized sorting in MDCK cells in which a single endosome-based, signal-dependent sorting step is sufficient to maintain the polarized phenotype.  相似文献   

11.
The autosomal recessive hypercholesterolemia protein (ARH) is well known for its role in clathrin-mediated endocytosis of low-density lipoprotein receptors (LDLRs). During uptake, ARH directly binds to the FxNPxY signal in the cytoplasmic tail of LDLR. Interestingly, the same FxNPxY motif is used in basolateral exocytosis of LDLR from recycling endosomes (REs), which is facilitated by the epithelial-specific clathrin adaptor AP-1B. However, AP-1B directly interacts with neither the FxNPxY motif nor the second more distally located YxxØ sorting motif of LDLR. Here, we show that ARH colocalizes and cooperates with AP-1B in REs. Knockdown of ARH in polarized epithelial cells leads to specific apical missorting of truncated LDLR, which encodes only the FxNPxY motif (LDLR-CT27). Moreover, a mutation in ARH designed to disrupt the interaction of ARH with AP-1B specifically abrogates exocytosis of LDLR-CT27. We conclude that in addition to its role in endocytosis, ARH cooperates with AP-1B in basolateral exocytosis of LDLR from REs.  相似文献   

12.
Aquaporin 4 (AQP4) is the predominant water channel in the brain. It is targeted to specific membrane domains of astrocytes and plays a crucial role in cerebral water balance in response to brain edema formation. AQP4 is also specifically expressed in the basolateral membranes of epithelial cells. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in its polarized targeting and membrane trafficking remain largely unknown. Here, we show that two independent C-terminal signals determine AQP4 basolateral membrane targeting in epithelial MDCK cells. One signal involves a tyrosine-based motif; the other is encoded by a di-leucine-like motif. We found that the tyrosine-based basolateral sorting signal also determines AQP4 clathrin-dependent endocytosis through direct interaction with the mu subunit of AP2 adaptor complex. Once endocytosed, a regulated switch in mu subunit interaction changes AP2 adaptor association to AP3. We found that the stress-induced kinase casein kinase (CK)II phosphorylates the Ser276 immediately preceding the tyrosine motif, increasing AQP4-mu 3A interaction and enhancing AQP4-lysosomal targeting and degradation. AQP4 phosphorylation by CKII may thus provide a mechanism that regulates AQP4 cell surface expression.  相似文献   

13.
In polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, the transferrin receptor (TR) is selectively delivered to the basolateral surface, where it internalizes transferrin via clathrin-coated pits and recycles back to the basolateral border. Mutant tailless receptors are sorted randomly in both the biosynthetic and endocytic pathways, indicating that the basolateral sorting of TR is dependent upon a signal located within the 61–amino acid cytoplasmic domain. To identify the basolateral sorting signal of TR, we have analyzed a series of mutant human TR expressed in MDCK cells. We find that residues 19–41 are sufficient for basolateral sorting from both the biosynthetic and endocytic pathways and that this is the only region of the TR cytoplasmic tail containing basolateral sorting information. The basolateral sorting signal is distinct from the YTRF internalization signal contained within this region and is not tyrosine based. Detailed functional analyses of the mutant TR indicate that residues 29–35 are the most important for basolateral sorting from the biosynthetic pathway. The structural requirements for basolateral sorting of internalized receptors from the endocytic pathway are not identical. The most striking difference is that alteration of G31DNS34 to YTRF impairs basolateral sorting of newly synthesized receptors from the biosynthetic pathway but not internalized receptors from the endocytic pathway. Also, mutations have been identified that selectively impair basolateral sorting of internalized TRs from the endocytic pathway without affecting basolateral sorting of newly synthesized receptors. These results imply that there are subtle differences in the recognition of the TR basolateral sorting signal by separate sorting machinery located within the biosynthetic and endocytic pathways.  相似文献   

14.
Most epithelial cells contain two AP-1 clathrin adaptor complexes. AP-1A is ubiquitously expressed and involved in transport between the TGN and endosomes. AP-1B is expressed only in epithelia and mediates the polarized targeting of membrane proteins to the basolateral surface. Both AP-1 complexes are heterotetramers and differ only in their 50-kD mu1A or mu1B subunits. Here, we show that AP-1A and AP-1B, together with their respective cargoes, define physically and functionally distinct membrane domains in the perinuclear region. Expression of AP-1B (but not AP-1A) enhanced the recruitment of at least two subunits of the exocyst complex (Sec8 and Exo70) required for basolateral transport. By immunofluorescence and cell fractionation, the exocyst subunits were found to selectively associate with AP-1B-containing membranes that were both distinct from AP-1A-positive TGN elements and more closely apposed to transferrin receptor-positive recycling endosomes. Thus, despite the similarity of the two AP-1 complexes, AP-1A and AP-1B exhibit great specificity for endosomal transport versus cell polarity.  相似文献   

15.
We have characterized the polarity of the transferrin receptor in the epithelial Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cell line. The receptor is present in approximately 165,000 copies per cell, migrates as a diffuse band upon SDS gel electrophoresis with Mr 90,000, displays a dissociation constant for diferritransferrin at neutral pH of approximately 2 nM, and is active in essentially all of the cells of the population. Transferrin-mediated 55Fe uptake was used to measure the polarity of active transferrin receptors in filter-grown MDCK cells. The ratio of basolateral to apical receptors was approximately 800:1 for the high resistance strain I MDCK cells (typically greater than 2,000 ohm X cm2) and approximately 300:1 for the lower resistance strain II cells (less than 350 ohm X cm2). In combination with morphometric data this shows that a difference in resistance between these two strains is not reflected in a significant difference in cell surface polarity. We used the recycling of transferrin receptor in filter-grown MDCK cells to evaluate the accuracy of the sorting of a basolateral protein during endocytosis. Monitoring the amount of apically released 125I-labeled transferrin after application of 55Fe- and 125I-labeled transferrin to the basolateral surface provided a sensitive assay of the accuracy of sorting during recycling of the receptor from endosomes to the plasma membrane. The accuracy of transferrin receptor sorting (greater than 99.88%) during a single cycle of transit between the endosome and the plasma membrane is sufficient to maintain the high level of polarity of the cell.  相似文献   

16.
EMBO J 32 15, 2125–2139 doi:10.1038/emboj.2013.130; published online June072013Protein sorting pathways control correct delivery of membrane proteins to specific compartments of the plasma membrane and are required to maintain the physiological functions in all epithelia. Most clathrin-dependent cargoes require the adaptor protein complexes AP-1A and AP-1B for proper sorting to the basolateral plasma membrane. In this issue of The EMBO Journal, Perez Bay et al (2013) shed light on the mechanism of basal-to-apical protein transport, or transcytosis, of the transferrin receptor in natively AP-1B-deficient epithelia. In AP-1B-deficient epithelia, the transferrin receptor transcytoses through the apical recycling endosome, and requires Rab11. Furthermore, they characterize a novel and specific role for the endosomal microtubule motor Kinesin KIF16B in transferrin receptor apical transport. These findings constitute the first characterization of a specific microtubule motor involved in basal-to-apical transcytosis in epithelia.Epithelial cells present a compartmentalized plasma membrane, where the composition of each compartment is tightly controlled by a precise protein and lipid sorting machinery (Folsch, 2008). The two most conspicuous compartments are the apical and basolateral domains, which generate and segregate from each other through the formation of apically localized junctional complexes. Protein sorting mechanisms ensure delivery of newly synthesized or recycled, protein components to their proper localization in either the apical or basolateral plasma membrane domains. Vectorial transport of proteins requires sorting determinants that are present in the cytoplasmic, transmembrane or extracellular domains. Most of the information that we have about these sorting determinants comes from the basolateral traffic, which depends on clathrin adaptor proteins (APs) AP-1A/B, AP-3 and AP-4 (Gonzalez and Rodriguez-Boulan, 2009). Specific APs bind to cytoplasmic sorting motifs in transmembrane proteins and recruit clathrin-coat components, which sequentially induce membrane curvature, clathrin oligomerization, vesicle budding and fission (Ohno, 2006; Hirst et al, 2011). Mammalian cells present five different AP complexes (AP1–5), each constituted by a heterotetramer of one α-, γ-, δ-, ɛ- or ζ-subunit, one β(1–5) subunit, one σ(1–5) subunit and one μ(1–5) subunit. How these clathrin-coated vesicles deliver membranes to precise compartments in the cell to regulate protein sorting is still poorly understood. The AP1 complex is a key regulator of basolateral polarity (Folsch et al, 1999; Gan et al, 2002; Gravotta et al, 2012). The AP1 complex μ-subunit presents two isoforms μ1A and μ1B, which define the formation of two different complexes, AP-1A and AP-1B, both required for basolateral polarity. AP-1A is ubiquitously expressed in different tissues and localizes mainly to the trans-Golgi network. In contrast, AP-1B is primarily localized to common recycling endosomes (CRE) and is specifically expressed in the majority of epithelial tissues, with the remarkable exception of retinal pigment epithelium and the proximal convoluted tubule in the nephron, which sort most of the basolateral cargo to the apical surface.A wide array of model membrane proteins requires AP-1B to properly localize to the basolateral membrane, including the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR), the VSV-G protein and the transferrin receptor (TfR). Furthermore, the expression of μ1B in μ1B-deficient epithelial cell line LLC-PK1 is sufficient to prevent apical sorting of TfR, indicating that AP-1B is a main player in this clathrin-mediated basolateral sorting pathway. Interestingly, the results of the present study suggest that transcytosis (a membrane trafficking pathway that transports apical or basolateral proteins to the opposite domain in the plasma membrane) is the main mechanism for apical transport of clathrin-dependent cargoes in AP-1B-deficient cells. Basal-to-apical transcytosis of the polymeric IgA receptor (pIgAR) is the best-known transcytotic pathway, and requires several steps in which the receptor complex traverses multiple compartments before reaching a Rab11-positive apical recycling compartment, from where it is sorted to the apical plasma membrane (Golachowska et al, 2010). Polymeric IgA receptor transcytosis requires the function of cytoskeletal proteins for its correct delivery to the apical membrane, including microtubules and actin binding motors. However, no specific microtubule motor has ever been described associated with transcytosis.In the present study, Perez Bay et al (2013) analyse how the TfR is transported to the apical membrane in μ1B-deficient epithelia using as model system the retinal pigment epithelium cell line, which lacks AP-1B, and MDCK cells. They show that basolateral administration of labelled Tf results in its endocytosis and transcytosis towards the apical membrane in AP-1B-depleted MDCK cells, following a pathway that involves Rab11-positive apical recycling endosomes (AREs), and requires Rab11 for its correct delivery. Additionally, they find that TfR transport into AREs depends on microtubules and the kinesin KIF16B, a specific microtubule motor present in the CRE (Figure 1). KIF16B is a plus-end microtubule motor that binds to PtdIns(3)P and GTP-bound Rab14 and regulates the distribution of early endosomes (Hoepfner et al, 2005; Ueno et al, 2011). Surprisingly though, apical transport of pIgAR is not affected by the expression of a KIF16B-dominant negative mutant, which suggests that assembly of KIF16B/TfR carriers occurs downstream of cargo separation during transcytosis. It is also tempting to speculate that more than one transcytosis pathways are at play, and while TfR uses the KIF16B-dependent pathway, pIgAR is transported through a KIF16B independent mechanism. This article is the first study of KIF16B in epithelial cells, and the first showing involvement of a microtubule motor in transcytosis, more than 20 years after the pioneering studies that characterized the role of microtubules in this process (Hunziker et al, 1990).Open in a separate windowFigure 1KIF16B controls basal-to-apical transcytosis of transferrin receptor in AP-1B-deficient epithelia. In AP-1B-expressing epithelia (such as MDCK cells), transferrin receptor (TfR) is endocytosed and sorted to common recycling endosomes, where AP-1B-clathrin-vesicles assemble and transport the protein to the basolateral plasma membrane. In AP-1B-deficient epithelia (such as RPE cells), internalized TfR is instead sorted by the plus-end directed microtubule motor KIF16B towards the ARE, and then transcytosed to the apical plasma membrane through a Rab11-regulated pathway. Polymeric IgA receptor is internalized into the same basolateral endosomes, but it uses a KIF16B-independent pathway to reach the apical membrane.As a whole, this paper represents a significant advance in our understanding of the protein sorting machinery in epithelial cells, and importantly, opens new questions that will be addressed in future studies. First, is the KIF16B-dependent recycling/sorting pathway required for other cargoes, especially in AP-1B-positive epithelia? Second, why TfR, but not pIgAR, requires KIF16B for correct sorting? Although KIF16B is not required for pIgAR transcytosis, its transport route still requires microtubules, thus opening the possibility for discovery of additional microtubule motors involved in transcytosis. And finally, what is the mechanism of KIF16B binding to TfR-positive recycling endosomes? It is possible that the mechanism depends on the activation of Rab14, which has been characterized as a regulator of lipid-raft transport from the Golgi apparatus to recycling endosomes (Ueno et al, 2011).  相似文献   

17.
ERBB2 is a receptor tyrosine kinase present on the basolateral membrane of polarized epithelia and has important functions in organ development and tumorigenesis. Using mutagenic analyses and Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells, we have investigated the signals that regulate basolateral targeting of ERBB2. We show that basolateral delivery of ERBB2 is dependent on a novel bipartite juxtamembrane sorting signal residing between Gln-692 and Thr-701. The signal shows only limited sequence homology to known basolateral targeting signals and is both necessary and sufficient for correct sorting of ERBB2. In addition we demonstrate that this motif can function as a dominant basolateral targeting signal by its ability to redirect the apically localized P75 neurotrophin receptor to the basolateral membrane domain of polarized epithelial cells. Interestingly, LLC-PK1 cells, which are deficient for the micro 1B subunit of the AP1B adaptor complex, missort a large proportion of ERBB2 to the apical membrane domain. This missorting can be partially corrected by the introduction of micro 1B, suggesting a possible role for AP1B in ERBB2 endosomal trafficking. Furthermore, we find that the C-terminal ERBIN binding domain of ERBB2 is not necessary for its basolateral targeting in MDCK cells.  相似文献   

18.
CD147, a type I integral membrane protein of the immunoglobulin superfamily, exhibits reversed polarity in retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). CD147 is apical in RPE in contrast to its basolateral localization in extraocular epithelia. This elicited our interest in understanding the basolateral sorting signals of CD147 in prototypic Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. The cytoplasmic domain of CD147 has basolateral sorting information but is devoid of well-characterized basolateral signals, such as tyrosine and di-leucine motifs. Hence, we carried out systematic site-directed mutagenesis to delineate basolateral targeting information in CD147. Our detailed analysis identified a single leucine (252) as the basolateral targeting motif in the cytoplasmic tail of CD147. Four amino acids (243-246) N-terminal to leucine 252 are also critical basolateral determinants of CD147, because deletion of these amino acids leads to mistargeting of CD147 to the apical membranes. We ruled out the involvement of adaptor complex 1B (AP1B) in the basolateral trafficking of CD147, because LLC-PK1 cells lacking AP1B, target CD147 basolaterally. At variance with MDCK cells, the human RPE cell line ARPE-19 does not distinguish between CD147 (WT) and CD147 with leucine 252 mutated to alanine and targets both proteins apically. Thus, our study identifies an atypical basolateral motif of CD147, which comprises a single leucine and is not recognized by RPE cells. This unusual basolateral sorting signal will be useful in unraveling the specialized sorting machinery of RPE cells.  相似文献   

19.
Human transferrin receptors (TR) and receptors for polymeric immunoglobulins (pIgR) expressed in polarized MDCK cells maintain steady-state, asymmetric distributions on the separate basolateral and apical surfaces even though they are trafficking continuously into and across these cells. The intracellular mechanisms required to maintain these asymmetric distributions have not been located. Here we show that TR and pIgR internalize from both surfaces to a common interconnected endosome compartment that includes tubules with buds coated with clathrin lattices. These buds generate vesicles that carry TR to the basolateral border. The lattices contain γ-adaptin and are dispersed by treatment with brefeldin A (BFA). Since BFA treatment abrogates the vectorial trafficking of TR in polarized MDCK cells, we propose that the clathrin-coated domains of the endosome tubules contain the polarized sorting mechanism responsible for their preferential basolateral distribution.  相似文献   

20.
Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein (APP) is the precursor for the Abeta peptide involved in pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. The soluble ectodomain fragment of APP (sAPP) functions as a growth factor for epithelial cells, suggesting an important function for APP outside neuronal tissue. Previous studies have shown that in polarized epithelial cells, APP is targeted to the basolateral domain. Tyr653 within the cytoplasmic tail of APP mediates the basolateral targeting of APP, but the sorting machinery that binds to this residue has largely remained unknown. In this study, we analyzed the role of adaptor complexes in the polarized sorting of APP. We show that the medium subunit mu1B of the epithelia-specific adaptor protein (AP)-1B binds onto the cytoplasmic tail of APP in a Tyr653-dependent way. Moreover, ectopic expression of mu1B in cells lacking AP-1B resulted in correction of apical missorting of wild-type but not Tyr653Ala APP. Basolateral secretion of sAPP was found to be independent of Tyr653. We propose a model for polarized targeting of APP according to which sorting of APP to basolateral domain is dependent on binding of AP-1B on Tyr653 in basolateral endosomes. This model is in accordance with the current understanding of sorting mechanisms mediating polarized targeting of membrane proteins.  相似文献   

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