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1.
An early event in the action of brefeldin A (BFA) is the dissociation of beta-coat protein (beta-COP) from the Golgi membrane. We have recently shown that staphylococcal ADP-ribosyltransferase (epidermal cell differentiation inhibitor (EDIN)), which specifically modifies a small G protein, rho, mimics the action of BFA and disassembles the Golgi apparatus in Vero cells (Sugai, M., Chen, C-h., and Wu, H. C. (1992) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 89, 8903-8907). Three independent BFA-resistant cell lines (BER-40 from Vero cells, PtK1, and MDCK) showed cross-resistance to EDIN regarding the release of the beta-COP from the Golgi membrane by EDIN or BFA. BFA as well as EDIN induced disassembly of the actin microfilaments in Vero cells, and they both failed to induce the disassembly of actin microfilaments in BER-40, PtK1, and MDCK cells. BFA inhibited protein secretion in Vero cells but not in BFA-resistant cell lines, whereas EDIN did not inhibit protein secretion in either Vero or other cell lines. AlF-4 inhibited the effect of EDIN as well as that of BFA on the distribution of the beta-COP. These results suggest that an EDIN-sensitive rho protein together with trimeric and other small G protein(s) is involved in the regulation of the assembly of coated vesicles and vesicular transport in the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

2.
A mAb AD7, raised against canine liver Golgi membranes, recognizes a novel, 200-kD protein (p200) which is found in a wide variety of cultured cell lines. Immunofluorescence staining of cultured cells with the AD7 antibody produced intense staining of p200 in the juxtanuclear Golgi complex and more diffuse staining of p200 in the cytoplasm. The p200 protein in the Golgi complex was colocalized with other Golgi proteins, including mannosidase II and beta-COP, a coatomer protein. Localization of p200 by immunoperoxidase staining at the electron microscopic level revealed concentrations of p200 at the dilated rims of Golgi cisternae. Biochemical studies showed that p200 is a peripheral membrane protein which partitions to the aqueous phase of Triton X-114 solutions and is phosphorylated. The p200 protein is located on the cytoplasmic face of membranes, since it was accessible to trypsin digestion in microsomal preparations, and is recovered in approximately equal amounts in membrane pellets and in the cytosol of homogenized cells. Immunofluorescence staining of normal rat kidney cells exposed to the toxin brefeldin A (BFA), showed that there was very rapid redistribution of p200, which was dissociated from Golgi membranes in the presence of this drug. The effect of BFA was reversible, since upon removal of the toxin, AD7 rapidly reassociated with the Golgi complex. In the BFA-resistant cell line PtK1, BFA failed to cause redistribution of p200 from Golgi membranes. Taken together, these results indicate that the p200 Golgi membrane-associated protein has many properties in common with the coatomer protein, beta-COP.  相似文献   

3.
The 100-110-kD proteins (alpha-, beta-, beta'-, and gamma-adaptins) of clathrin-coated vesicles and the 110-kD protein (beta-COP) of the nonclathrin-coated vesicles that mediate constitutive transport through the Golgi have homologous protein sequences. To determine whether homologous processes are involved in assembly of the two types of coated vesicles, the membrane binding properties of their coat proteins were compared. After treatment of MDBK cells with the fungal metabolite Brefeldin A (BFA), beta-COP was redistributed to the cytoplasm within 15 s, gamma-adaptin and clathrin in the trans-Golgi network (TGN) dispersed within 30 s, but the alpha-adaptin and clathrin present on coated pits and vesicles derived from the plasma membrane remained membrane associated even after a 15-min exposure to BFA. In PtK1 cells and MDCK cells, BFA did not affect beta-COP binding or Golgi morphology but still induced redistribution of gamma-adaptin and clathrin from TGN membranes to the cytoplasm. Thus BFA affects the binding of coat proteins to membranes in the Golgi region (Golgi apparatus and TGN) but not plasma membranes. However, the Golgi binding interactions of beta-COP and gamma-adaptin are distinct and differentially sensitive to BFA. BFA treatment did not release gamma-adaptin or clathrin from purified clathrin-coated vesicles, suggesting that their distribution to the cytoplasm after BFA treatment of cells was due to interference with their rebinding to TGN membranes after a normal cycle of disassembly. This was confirmed using an in vitro assay in which gamma-adaptin binding to TGN membranes was blocked by BFA and enhanced by GTP gamma S, similar to the binding of beta-COP to Golgi membranes. These results suggest the involvement of GTP-dependent proteins in the association of the 100-kD coat proteins with membranes in the Golgi region of the cell.  相似文献   

4.
P H Fishman  P K Curran 《FEBS letters》1992,314(3):371-374
The fungal metabolite brefeldin A (BFA) is known to disrupt the Golgi apparatus resulting in redistribution of Golgi proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum and inhibition of protein secretion. BFA was found to inhibit protein synthesis in rat glioma C6 cells by up to 70% between 0.1 and 1 microgram/ml. Inhibition was both time-dependent and reversible. BFA inhibited protein synthesis to varying degrees in a number of other cell lines but not in BFA-resistant marsupial kidney cells. The same concentrations of BFA which inhibited protein synthesis, also blocked the inhibitory effects of Pseudomonas exotoxin and ricin on BFA-sensitive cells. BFA, however, was unable to block the inhibition of protein synthesis by the toxins in the resistant marsupial kidney cells.  相似文献   

5.
Madin-Darby canine kidney cells are more resistant than most other cell types to the classical effects of brefeldin A (BFA) treatment, the induction of retrograde transport of Golgi cisternae components to the endoplasmic reticulum. Here we show that sulfation of heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs), chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs), and proteins in the Golgi apparatus is dramatically reduced by low concentrations of BFA in which Golgi morphology is unaffected and secretion still takes place. BFA treatment seems to reduce sulfation by inhibition of the uptake of adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) into the Golgi lumen, and the inhibitory effect of BFA was similar for HSPGs, CSPGs, and proteins. This was different from the effect of chlorate, a well known inhibitor of PAPS synthesis in the cytoplasm. Low concentrations of chlorate (2-5 mm) inhibited sulfation of CSPGs and proteins only, whereas higher concentrations (15-30 mm) were required to inhibit sulfation of HSPGs. Golgi fractions pretreated with BFA had a reduced capacity for the synthesis of glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), but control level capacity could be restored by the addition of cytosol from various sources. This indicates that the PAPS pathway to the Golgi lumen depends on a BFA-sensitive factor that is present both on Golgi membranes and in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

6.
When transport between the rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and Golgi complex is blocked by Brefeldin A (BFA) treatment or ATP depletion, the Golgi apparatus and associated transport vesicles undergo a dramatic reorganization. Because recent studies suggest that coat proteins such as beta-COP play an important role in the maintenance of the Golgi complex, we have used immunocytochemistry to determine the distribution of beta-COP in pancreatic acinar cells (PAC) in which ER to Golgi transport was blocked by BFA treatment or ATP depletion. In controls, beta-COP was associated with Golgi cisternae and transport vesicles as expected. Upon BFA treatment, PAC Golgi cisternae are dismantled and replaced by clusters of remnant vesicles surrounded by typical ER transitional elements that are generally assumed to represent the exit site of vesicular carriers for ER to Golgi transport. In BFA-treated PAC, beta-COP was concentrated in large (0.5-1.0 micron) aggregates closely associated with remnant Golgi membranes. In addition to typical ER transitional elements, we detected a new type of transitional element that consists of specialized regions of rough ER (RER) with ribosome-free ends that touched or extended into the beta-COP containing aggregates. In ATP-depleted PAC, beta-COP was not detected on Golgi membranes but was concentrated in similar large aggregates found on the cis side of the Golgi stacks. The data indicate that upon arrest of ER to Golgi transport by either BFA treatment or energy depletion, beta-COP dissociates from PAC Golgi membranes and accumulates as large aggregates closely associated with specialized ER elements. The latter may correspond to either the site of entry or exit for vesicles recycling between the Golgi and the RER.  相似文献   

7.
This paper examines the molecular machinery involved in membrane exchange within the plant endomembrane system. A study has been undertaken on beta-COP-like proteins in plant cells using M3A5, an antibody raised against the conserved sequence of mammalian beta-COP proteins. In mammalian cells, beta-COP proteins are part of a complex named the coatomer, which probably recruits some specific areas of the endomembrane system. Immunofluorescence analyses by confocal laser scanning microscopy showed that beta-COP-like proteins marked predominantly the plant Golgi apparatus. Other proteins known to be part of a potential machinery for COPI vesicle formation (gamma-COP, beta'-COP and Arf1 proteins) were immunolocalized on the same membraneous structures as beta-COP. Moreover, beta-COP and other COPI antibodies stained the cell plate in dividing cells. It is further shown that, in maize root cells, and in contrast to observations upon mammalian cells, the drug Brefeldin A (BFA) does not induce the release of beta-COP and Arf1 proteins from the Golgi membrane into the cytosol. These data clearly demonstrate that the antibody M3A5 is a valuable marker for studies on trafficking events in plant cells. They also report for the first time the location of COP components in plant tissue at the light level, especially on a model well known for secretion, i.e. the maize root cells. They also suggest that the membrane recruitment machinery may function in a plant-specific way.  相似文献   

8.
Recent in vivo studies with the fungal metabolite, brefeldin A (BFA), have shown that in the absence of vesicle formation, membranes of the Golgi complex and the trans-Golgi network (TGN) are nevertheless able to extend long tubules which fuse with selected target organelles. We report here that the ability to form tubules (> 7 microns long) could be reproduced in vitro by treatment of isolated, intact Golgi membranes with BFA under certain conditions. Surprisingly, an even more impressive degree of tubulation could be achieved by incubating Golgi stacks with an ATP-reduced cytosolic fraction, without any BFA at all. Similarly, tubulation of Golgi membranes in vivo occurred after treatment of cells with intermediate levels of NaN3 and 2-deoxyglucose. The formation of tubules in vitro, either by BFA treatment or low-ATP cytosol, correlated precisely with a loss of the vesicle-associated coat protein beta-COP from Golgi membranes. After removal of BFA or addition of ATP, membrane tubules served as substrates for the rebinding of beta-COP and for the formation of vesicles in vitro. These results provide support for the idea that a reciprocal relationship exists between tubulation and vesiculation (Klausner, R. D., J. G. Donaldson, and J. Lippincott-Schwartz. 1992. J. Cell Biol. 116:1071- 1080). Moreover, they show that tubulation is an inherent property of Golgi membranes, since it occurs without the aid of microtubules or BFA treatment. Finally the results indicate the presence of cytosolic factors, independent of vesicle-associated coat proteins, that mediate the budding/tubulation of Golgi membranes.  相似文献   

9.
V W Hsu  N Shah  R D Klausner 《Cell》1992,69(4):625-635
Brefeldin A (BFA) is a unique drug affecting the molecular mechanisms that regulate membrane traffic and organelle structure. BFA's ability to alter retrograde traffic from the Golgi to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) led us to ask whether the ERD-2 retrieval receptor, proposed to return escaped ER resident proteins from the Golgi, might either interfere with or mimic the effects of the drug. When either human ERD-2 or a novel human homolog (referred to as ELP-1) is overexpressed in a variety of cell types, the effects are phenotypically indistinguishable from the addition of BFA. These include the redistribution of the Golgi coat protein, beta-COP, to the cytosol, the loss of the Golgi apparatus as a distinct organelle, the mixing of this organelle with the ER, the addition of complex oligosaccharides to resident ER glycoproteins, and the block of anterograde traffic. Thus, these receptors may provide signals that regulate retrograde traffic between the Golgi and the ER.  相似文献   

10.
We examined the effects of specific inhibitors, brefeldin A (BFA) and okadaic acid (OA), on the ultrastructural organization of the Golgi apparatus and distributions of amylase, Golgi-associated proteins, and cathepsin D in the rat parotid acinar cells. BFA induced a rapid regression of the Golgi stack into rudimentary Golgi clusters composed of tubulovesicules, in parallel with a redistribution of the Golgi-resident proteins and a coat protein (beta-COP) into the region of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (rER) or cytosol. The rapid disruption of the Golgi stack could also be induced by the effect of OA. However, redistribution of the Golgi proteins in rER or cytosol could not be observed and beta-COP was not dispersed but was retained on the rudimentary Golgi apparatus. These findings suggested that the mechanism of OA in inducing degeneration of the Golgi stack was markedly different from that of BFA. In addition, missorting of amylase, a Golgi protein, and cathepsin D into incorrect transport pathways is apparent in the course of the disruption of the Golgi stack by OA. These Golgi-disrupting effects are reversible and the reconstruction of the stacked structure of the Golgi apparatus started immediately after the removal of inhibitors. In the recovery processes, missorting was also observed until the integrated structure of the Golgi apparatus was completely reconstructed. This suggested that the integrated structure of the Golgi apparatus was quite necessary for the occurrence of normal secretory events, including proper sorting of molecules.  相似文献   

11.
M S Robinson  T E Kreis 《Cell》1992,69(1):129-138
Brefeldin A (BFA) causes a rapid redistribution of coat proteins (e.g., gamma-adaptin) associated with the clathrin-coated vesicles that bud from the trans-Golgi network (TGN), while the clathrin-coated vesicles that bud from the plasma membrane are unaffected. gamma-Adaptin redistributes with the same kinetics as beta-COP, a coat protein associated with the non-clathrin-coated vesicles that bud from the Golgi complex. Upon removal of BFA, however, gamma-adaptin recovers its perinuclear distribution more rapidly. Redistribution of both proteins can be prevented by pretreating cells with AlF4-. Recruitment of adaptors from the cytosol onto the TGN membrane has been reconstituted in a permeabilized cell system and is increased by addition of GTP gamma S and blocked by addition of BFA. These results suggest a role for G proteins in the control of the clathrin-coated vesicle cycle at the TGN and further extend the similarities between clathrin-coated vesicles and non-clathrin-coated vesicles.  相似文献   

12.
The intracellular pathway following receptor-mediated endocytosis of cholera toxin was studied using brefeldin A (BFA), which inhibited protein secretion and induced dramatic morphological changes in the Golgi region. In both mouse Y1 adrenal cells and CHO cells, BFA at 1 μg/ml caused a 80–90% inhibition of the cholera toxin (CT)-elevation of intracellular cAMP. The inhibition of the cytotoxicity of CT by BFA was also observed in a rounding assay of Y1 adrenal cells. The inhibition of CT cytotoxicity by BFA was dose dependent, with the ID50 value similar to the LD50 of BFA in Y1 adrenal cells. Binding and internalization of [125I]-cholera toxin in Y1 adrenal cells was not affected by BFA. Unlike the BFA-sensitive cell lines such as Y1 adrenal and CHO cells, BFA at 1 μg/ml did not inhibit the cytotoxicity of CT in PtK1 cells, of which the Golgi structure was BFA-resistant. These results strongly suggest that a BFA-sensitive Golgi is required for the protection of CT cytotoxicity by BFA. In contrast, elevation of the intracellular cAMP by forskolin, which acts directly on the plasma membrane adenylate cyclase, was not affected by BFA. These observations indicate that the intoxication of target cells by CT requires an intact Golgi region for its intracellular trafficking and/or processing. In this respect, CT shares a common intracellular pathway with ricin, Pseudomonas toxin, and modeccin, even though their structures and modes of action are very different. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
The small GTPase Rab1b is essential for endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to Golgi transport, but its exact function remains unclear. We have examined the effects of wild-type and three mutant forms of Rab1b in vivo. We show that the inactive form of Rab1b (the N121I mutant with impaired guanine nucleotide binding) blocks forward transport of cargo and induces Golgi disruption. The phenotype is analogous to that induced by brefeldin A (BFA): it causes resident Golgi proteins to relocate to the ER and induces redistribution of ER-Golgi intermediate compartment proteins to punctate structures. The COPII exit machinery seems to be functional in cells expressing the N121I mutant, but COPI is compromised, as shown by the release of beta-COP into the cytosol. Our results suggest that Rab1b function influences COPI recruitment. In support of this, we show that the disruptive effects of N121I can be reversed by expressing known mediators of COPI recruitment, the GTPase ARF1 and its guanine nucleotide exchange factor GBF1. Further evidence is provided by the finding that cells expressing the active form of Rab1b (the Q67L mutant with impaired GTPase activity) are resistant to BFA. Our data suggest a novel role for Rab1b in ARF1- and GBF1-mediated COPI recruitment pathway.  相似文献   

14.
The fungal toxin brefeldin A (BFA) dissociates coat proteins from Golgi membranes, causes the rapid disassembly of the Golgi complex and potently stimulates the ADP-ribosylation of two cytosolic proteins of 38 and 50 kDa. These proteins have been identified as the glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and a novel guanine nucleotide binding protein (BARS-50), respectively. The role of ADP-ribosylation in mediating the effects of BFA on the structure and function of the Golgi complex was analyzed by several approaches including the use of selective pharmacological blockers of the reaction and the use of ADP-ribosylated cytosol and/or enriched preparations of the BFA-induced ADP-ribosylation substrates, GAPDH and BARS-50.A series of blockers of the BFA-dependent ADP-ribosylation reaction identified in our laboratory inhibited the effects of BFA on Golgi morphology and, with similar potency, the ADP-ribosylation of BARS-50 and GAPDH. In permeabilized RBL cells, the BFA-dependent disassembly of the Golgi complex required NAD+ and cytosol. Cytosol that had been previously ADP-ribosylated (namely, it contained ADP-ribosylated GAPDH and BARS-50), was instead sufficient to sustain the Golgi disassembly induced by BFA.Taken together, these results indicate that an ADP-ribosylation reaction is part of the mechanism of action of BFA and it might intervene in the control of the structure and function of the Golgi complex.  相似文献   

15.
Brefeldin A (BFA) has previously been shown to block protein transport from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), to cause the redistribution of Golgi components to the ER, and to change profoundly the morphology of the Golgi apparatus. In order to quantitate the effects of this drug on the morphology of the ER and the Golgi apparatus in HeLa cells, the numerical, surface and volume densities of these organelles were determined by stereological means. We found that in cells treated with BFA (5 micrograms/ml) clusters of vesicles and tubules, often located near transitional elements of the ER, replaced the Golgi apparatus. The numerical density of these clusters in cells treated with BFA for 30 min or 4.5 h is similar to that of Golgi complexes and Golgi-related clusters in control cells. The surface density of the vesicles and tubules contained in these clusters is about 50% of that represented by Golgi elements in control cells. Concomitantly, a corresponding increase in the surface density of the ER-Golgi hybrid compartment was observed. This hybrid compartment contained Golgi-specific enzymes effecting modifications of N-linked oligosaccharides and the transfer of O-linked sugars. Antibodies recognizing different subcompartments of the Golgi apparatus or the intermediate compartment, labeled vesicles and tubules of the Golgi-related clusters. Applying low doses of BFA allowed for the dissection of the disassembly of the Golgi apparatus into at least two phases. At very low doses (10-20 ng/ml) the numerical density of vesicles in the clusters increased up to 4-fold above control, while the surface density did not markedly change, suggesting that vesiculation of the Golgi cisternae had occurred. Fusion of Golgi elements with the ER seemed to occur only at doses of BFA higher than 20 ng/ml. Contrary to observations on other cell types, removal of BFA from HeLa cell cultures resulted in a rather slow reformation (1-2 h) of the Golgi complex, which allowed us to observe several intermediate stages in this process. During this time period an ER was restored which no longer contained Golgi-specific O-glycosylation functions. Our results demonstrate that BFA does not simply cause the disappearance of the Golgi apparatus by fusion with the ER, but instead clusters of vesicles and tubules remain that contain Golgi-specific markers.  相似文献   

16.
Brefeldin A (BFA) is a fungal antibiotic which disrupts protein transport between the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi. A BFA-resistant mutant of monkey kidney Vero cells, BER-40, which exhibited about a 90-fold increase in the LD50 of BFA (5.2 ng/ml for Vero cells versus 460 ng/ml for BER-40 cells), has been isolated. The increased resistance of BER-40 cells toward BFA was also manifested in a greatly reduced inhibition of protein secretion by BFA in the mutant and a lack of protection by BFA of the mutant cells from ricin cytotoxicity. Somatic cell hybridization between the Vero and BER-40 cells showed that the BFA-resistance in BER-40 behaved as a codominant trait. The structure of the Golgi region, as examined by immunofluorescence microscopy with antibodies against Golgi markers (the 110-kDa protein and mannosidase II) or with fluorescent lipid NBD-ceramide, was unchanged in the mutant cells as compared to that in the wild-type cells. Treatment of Vero cells with BFA (1 micrograms/ml) or with 2-deoxyglucose plus sodium azide resulted in a rapid release of the 110-kDa protein, mannosidase II, and NBD-ceramide from the Golgi membrane to a more diffuse distribution in the cytosol. In contrast, these three Golgi markers remained to be Golgi-associated following treatment of BER-40 cells with BFA or with 2-deoxyglucose plus sodium azide. Immunoblotting of cell extracts from Vero and BER-40 cells with monoclonal antibody against the 110-kDa protein did not reveal any significant difference in the level of this Golgi marker in the mutant cells. These data suggest that the BFA-resistance mutation in BER-40 has rendered the cyclic pathway of the 110-kDa protein assembly to the Golgi membrane resistant to both BFA and 2-deoxyglucose plus sodium azide.  相似文献   

17.
Chick-mouse heterokaryons were obtained by UV-Sendai virus-induced fusion of chick erythrocytes with thymidine (dT) kinase-deficient mouse fibroblast [LM(TK-)] cells. Autoradiographic studies demonstrated that 1 day after fusion, [3H]dT was incorporated into both red blood cell and LM(TK-) nuclei of 23% of the heterokaryons. Self-fused LM(TK-) cells failed to incorporate [3H]dT into nuclear DNA. 15 clonal lines of chick-mouse somatic cell hybrids [LM(TK-)/CRB] were isolated from the heterokaryons by cultivating them in selective hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine-glycine medium. LM(TK-) and chick erythrocytes exhibited little, if any, cytosol dT kinase activity. In contrast, all 15 LM(TK-)/CRB lines contained levels of cytosol dT kinase activity comparable to that found in chick embryo cells. Disk polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing analyses demonstrated that the LM(TK-)/CRB cells contained chick cytosol, but not mouse cytosol dT kinase. The LM(TK-)/CRB cells also contained mouse mitochondrial, but not chick mitochondrial dT kinase. Hence, the clonal lines were somatic cell hybrids and not LM(TK-) cell revertants. The experiments demonstrate that chick erythrocyte cytosol dT kinase can be activated in heterokaryons and in hybrid cells, most likely as a result of functions supplied by mouse fibroblast cells.  相似文献   

18.
Brefeldin A (BFA) is a fungal metabolite that disassembles the Golgi apparatus into tubular networks and causes the dissociation of coatomer proteins from Golgi membranes. We have previously shown that an additional effect of BFA is to stimulate the ADP-ribosylation of two cytosolic proteins of 38 and 50 kDa (brefeldin A-ADP-riboslyated substrate (BARS)) and that this effect greatly facilitates the Golgi-disassembling activity of the toxin. In this study, BARS has been purified from rat brain cytosol and microsequenced, and the BARS cDNA has been cloned. BARS shares high homology with two known proteins, C-terminal-binding protein 1 (CtBP1) and CtBP2. It is therefore a third member of the CtBP family. The role of BARS in Golgi disassembly by BFA was verified in permeabilized cells. In the presence of dialyzed cytosol that had been previously depleted of BARS or treated with an anti-BARS antibody, BFA potently disassembled the Golgi. However, in cytosol complemented with purified BARS, or even in control cytosols containing physiological levels of BARS, the action of BFA on Golgi disassembly was strongly inhibited. These results suggest that BARS exerts a negative control on Golgi tubulation, with important consequences for the structure and function of the Golgi complex.  相似文献   

19.
We demonstrate that the major in vivo targets of brefeldin A (BFA) in the secretory pathway of budding yeast are the three members of the Sec7 domain family of ARF exchange factors: Gea1p and Gea2p (functionally interchangeable) and Sec7p. Specific residues within the Sec7 domain are important for BFA inhibition of ARF exchange activity, since mutations in these residues of Gea1p (sensitive to BFA) and of ARNO (resistant to BFA) reverse the sensitivity of each to BFA in vivo and in vitro. We show that the target of BFA inhibition of ARF exchange activity is an ARF-GDP-Sec7 domain protein complex, and that BFA acts to stabilize this complex to a greater extent for a BFA-sensitive Sec7 domain than for a resistant one.  相似文献   

20.
Stable subsets of microtubules (MTs) are often enriched in detyrosinated alpha-tubulin. Recently it has been found that the Golgi apparatus is associated with a subset of relatively stable MTs and that detyrosinated MTs colocalize spatially and temporally with the Golgi apparatus in several cell lines. To determine whether the Golgi apparatus actively stabilizes associated MTs and thus allows their time-dependent detyrosination, we have used the drug brefeldin A (BFA) to disrupt the Golgi apparatus and have monitored changes in the Golgi apparatus and MT populations using simultaneous immunofluorescence and fluorescent lectin microscopy. We found that although BFA caused the Golgi apparatus to completely redistribute to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), the detyrosinated MTs were not disrupted and remained in a juxtanuclear region. By Western blot analysis we found that even after 6 h of continuous exposure of cells to BFA, there was no detectable reduction in the level of detyrosinated alpha-tubulin. Simultaneous treatment with nocodazole and BFA led to a complete disruption of all MTs and normal Golgi structure/organization. Upon removal of nocodazole in the continued presence of BFA, we found that the detyrosinated MTs reformed in a compact juxtanuclear location in the absence of an intact Golgi complex. Finally, we found that the detyrosinated MTs colocalized precisely with a BFA-resistant structure that binds to the lectin, wheat germ agglutinin. We conclude that the juxtanuclear detyrosinated MTs are not actively stabilized by association with BFA-sensitive Golgi membranes. However, another closely associated structure which binds wheat germ agglutinin may serve to stabilize the juxtanuclear MTs. Alternatively, the MT organizing center (MTOC) and/or MT-associated proteins (MAPs) may organize and stabilize the juxtanuclear detyrosinated MTs.  相似文献   

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