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1.
真核细胞内膜泡运输的分子机制   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
真核细胞内一些蛋白质需靠膜泡进行定向运输,膜泡是在外衣蛋白的作用下形成的,根据外衣蛋白的不同,膜泡分为笼蛋白,COPⅠ和COPⅡ外衣膜泡,这些外衣膜泡分别在细胞内不同供膜(donor membrane)处形成,因为被运输蛋白具有分选信号可与供膜上相应的受体结合,所以能被包裹在特异的膜泡之中,在膜泡形成过程中,外衣蛋白在“芽生”膜泡的细胞质侧组装成笼状外衣,帮助“芽生”膜泡从供膜处脱落,一旦笼状外衣膜泡脱离供膜,笼状外衣蛋白便发生解聚而成为无衣膜泡,无衣膜泡在Rab蛋白的调控下可定向运输蛋白质,而解聚后的外衣蛋白可重新介导新的外衣膜泡形成。  相似文献   

2.
COPII coat assembly and selective export from the endoplasmic reticulum   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The coat protein complex II (COPII) generates transport vesicles that mediate protein transport from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Recent structural and biochemical studies have suggested that the COPII coat is responsible for direct capture of membrane cargo proteins and for the physical deformation of the ER membrane that drives the transport vesicle formation. The COPII-coated vesicle formation at the ER membrane is triggered by the activation of the Ras-like small GTPase Sar1 by GDP/GTP exchange, and activated Sar1 in turn promotes COPII coat assembly. Subsequent GTP hydrolysis by Sar1 leads to disassembly of the coat proteins, which are then recycled for additional rounds of vesicle formation. Thus, the Sar1 GTPase cycle is thought to regulate COPII coat assembly and disassembly. Emerging evidence suggests that the cargo proteins modulate the Sar1 GTP hydrolysis to coordinate coat assembly with cargo selection. Here, I discuss the possible roles of the GTP hydrolysis by Sar1 in COPII coat assembly and selective uptake of cargo proteins into transport vesicles.  相似文献   

3.
The budding and fission of vesicles during membrane trafficking requires many proteins, including those that coat the vesicles, adaptor proteins that recruit components of the coat, and small GTPases that initiate vesicle formation. In addition, vesicle formation in vitro is promoted by the hydrolysis of acyl-CoA lipid esters. The mechanisms by which these lipid esters are directed to the appropriate membranes in vivo, and their precise roles in vesicle biogenesis, are not yet understood. Here, we present the first report on membrane associated ACBP domain-containing protein-1 (MAA-1), a novel membrane-associated member of the acyl-CoA-binding protein family. We show that in Caenorhabditis elegans, MAA-1 localizes to intracellular membrane organelles in the secretory and endocytic pathway and that mutations in maa-1 reduce the rate of endosomal recycling. A lack of maa-1 activity causes a change in endosomal morphology. Although in wild type, many endosomal organelles have long tubular protrusions, loss of MAA-1 activity results in loss of the tubular domains, suggesting the maa-1 is required for the generation or maintenance of these domains. Furthermore, we demonstrate that MAA-1 binds fatty acyl-CoA in vitro and that this ligand-binding ability is important for its function in vivo. Our results are consistent with a role for MAA-1 in an acyl-CoA-dependent process during vesicle formation.  相似文献   

4.
Bauer M  Pelkmans L 《FEBS letters》2006,580(23):5559-5564
The clathrin, COPI and COPII scaffolds are paradigm vesicle coats in membrane trafficking. Recent advances in our understanding of the caveolar coat have generated a new paradigm. It represents those membrane coats, where a considerable part of the protein component is lipid modified, and integrated into the cytosolic leaflet of the vesicle membrane by a hairpin-like hydrophobic structure. Such coat proteins are permanently associated with membranes, and form oligomers early after synthesis. These oligomers assemble into a coat that has high affinity for particular lipids, creating lipid microdomains within the membrane. The combined protein-lipid structure should be considered as the scaffold that entraps ligands, either through affinity with the protein or with the lipid component, and that has the ability to shape membranes. Besides scaffolds assembled by caveolins, scaffolds assembled by reticulons and PHB domain-containing proteins such as the reggie/flotillin proteins fit this paradigm.  相似文献   

5.
Coats and vesicle budding   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Transport vesicles need coat proteins in order to form. The coat proteins are recruited from the cytosol onto a particular membrane, where they drive vesicle budding and select the vesicle cargo. So far, three types of coated transport vesicles have been purified and characterized, and candidates for components of other types of coats have been identified. This review gives a brief overview of what is known about the various coats and their role in transport vesicle formation.  相似文献   

6.
The role of GTPase-activating protein (GAP) that deactivates ADP-ribosylation factor 1 (ARF1) during the formation of coat protein I (COPI) vesicles has been unclear. GAP is originally thought to antagonize vesicle formation by triggering uncoating, but later studies suggest that GAP promotes cargo sorting, a process that occurs during vesicle formation. Recent models have attempted to reconcile these seemingly contradictory roles by suggesting that cargo proteins suppress GAP activity during vesicle formation, but whether GAP truly antagonizes coat recruitment in this process has not been assessed directly. We have reconstituted the formation of COPI vesicles by incubating Golgi membrane with purified soluble components, and find that ARFGAP1 in the presence of GTP promotes vesicle formation and cargo sorting. Moreover, the presence of GTPgammaS not only blocks vesicle uncoating but also vesicle formation by preventing the proper recruitment of GAP to nascent vesicles. Elucidating how GAP functions in vesicle formation, we find that the level of GAP on the reconstituted vesicles is at least as abundant as COPI and that GAP binds directly to the dilysine motif of cargo proteins. Collectively, these findings suggest that ARFGAP1 promotes vesicle formation by functioning as a component of the COPI coat.  相似文献   

7.
Protein transport between the membranous compartments of the eukaryotic cells is mediated by the constant fission and fusion of the membrane-bounded vesicles from a donor to an acceptor membrane. While there are many membrane remodelling complexes in eukaryotes, COPII, COPI, and clathrin-coated vesicles are the three principal classes of coat protein complexes that participate in vesicle trafficking in the endocytic and secretory pathways. These vesicle-coat proteins perform two key functions: deforming lipid bilayers into vesicles and encasing selective cargoes. The three trafficking complexes share some commonalities in their structural features but differ in their coat structures, mechanisms of cargo sorting, vesicle formation, and scission. While the structures of many of the proteins involved in vesicle formation have been determined in isolation by X-ray crystallography, elucidating the proteins' structures together with the membrane is better suited for cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM). In recent years, advances in cryo-EM have led to solving the structures and mechanisms of several vesicle trafficking complexes and associated proteins.  相似文献   

8.
The coordinate fusion of the prespore vesicles (PSVs) with the plasma membrane at the terminal stage of spore differentiation in Dictyostelium discoideum is an important example of developmentally regulated protein secretion. However, little is known about the composition of the vesicles, the molecular signals regulating secretion, or the mechanics of the membrane fusion. Taking a biochemical approach, we purified PSVs from different developmental stages. These preparations are highly enriched for their specific cargo of spore coat proteins while devoid of markers for other cellular compartments. Electron microscopic observations show that the PSV preparations are homogenous, with the soluble spore coat protein PsB/SP85 distributed throughout the lumen and the acid mucopolysaccharide localized in the central core. During development the PSVs increase in size and density concomitant with an increase in their protein cargo. The PSVs contain approximately 80 proteins, and we have identified a PSV-specific GTP-binding protein that may be involved in regulating vesicle fusion. The PSVs are not clathrin-coated and do not contain the SpiA spore coat protein. The PSV preparations are ideal for a global proteome analysis to identify proteins involved in signal reception, vesicle movement, docking, and fusion in this developmentally regulated organelle.  相似文献   

9.
Clathrin-mediated endocytosis is a special form of vesicle budding important for the internalization of receptors and extracellular ligands, for the recycling of plasma membrane components, and for the retrieval of surface proteins destined for degradation. In nerve terminals, clathrin-mediated endocytosis is crucial for synaptic vesicle recycling. Recent structural studies have provided molecular details of coat assembly. In addition, biochemical and genetic studies have identified numerous accessory proteins that assist the clathrin coat in its function at synapses and in other systems. This review summarizes these advances with a special focus on accessory factors and highlights new aspects of clathrin-mediated endocytosis revealed by the study of these factors.  相似文献   

10.
As a consequence of the acrosomal reaction during fertilization, the inner acrosomal membrane (IAM) becomes exposed and forms the leading edge of the sperm for adhesive binding to and subsequent penetration of the zona-pellucida (ZP) of the metaphase-II-arrested oocyte. A premise of this review is that the IAM of spermatozoa anchors receptors and enzymes (on its extracellular side) that are required for sperm attachment to and penetration of the ZP. We propose a sperm cell fractionation strategy that allows for direct access to proteins bound to the extracellular side of the IAM. We review the types of integral and peripheral IAM proteins that have been found by this approach and that have been implicated in ZP recognition and lysis. We also propose a scheme for the origin and assembly of these proteins within the developing acrosome during spermiogenesis. During development, the extravesicular side of the membrane of the acrosomic vesicle is coated by peripheral proteins that transport and bind this secretory vesicle to the spermatid nucleus. The part of the membrane that binds to the nucleus becomes the IAM, while its extravesicular protein coat, which is retained between the IAM and the nuclear envelope of spermatozoa becomes the subacrosomal layer of the perinuclear theca (SAL-PT). Another premise of this review is that the IAM of spermatozoa is bound with proteins (on its intracellular side), namely the SAL-PT proteins, which hold the clue to the mechanism of acrosomal-nuclear docking. We propose a sperm cell fractionation strategy that allows for direct access to SAL-PT proteins. We then review the types of SAL-PT proteins that have been found by this approach and that have been implicated in transporting and binding the acrosome to the sperm nucleus.  相似文献   

11.
Sato K  Nakano A 《FEBS letters》2007,581(11):2076-2082
The evolutionarily conserved coat protein complex II (COPII) generates transport vesicles that mediate protein transport from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). COPII coat is responsible for direct capture of cargo proteins and for the physical deformation of the ER membrane that drives the COPII vesicle formation. In addition to coat proteins, recent data have indicated that the Ras-like small GTPase Sar1 plays multiple roles, such as COPII coat recruitment, cargo sorting, and completion of the final fission. In the present review, we summarize current knowledge of COPII-mediated vesicle formation from the ER, as well as highlighting non-canonical roles of COPII components.  相似文献   

12.
Coat proteins orchestrate membrane budding and molecular sorting during the formation of transport intermediates. Coat protein complex I (COPI) vesicles shuttle between the Golgi apparatus and the endoplasmic reticulum and between Golgi stacks. The formation of a COPI vesicle proceeds in four steps: coat self-assembly, membrane deformation into a bud, fission of the coated vesicle and final disassembly of the coat to ensure recycling of coat components. Although some issues are still actively debated, the molecular mechanisms of COPI vesicle formation are now fairly well understood. In this review, we argue that physical parameters are critical regulators of COPI vesicle formation. We focus on recent real-time in vitro assays highlighting the role of membrane tension, membrane composition, membrane curvature and lipid packing in membrane remodelling and fission by the COPI coat.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract

Coat proteins orchestrate membrane budding and molecular sorting during the formation of transport intermediates. Coat protein complex I (COPI) vesicles shuttle between the Golgi apparatus and the endoplasmic reticulum and between Golgi stacks. The formation of a COPI vesicle proceeds in four steps: coat self-assembly, membrane deformation into a bud, fission of the coated vesicle and final disassembly of the coat to ensure recycling of coat components. Although some issues are still actively debated, the molecular mechanisms of COPI vesicle formation are now fairly well understood. In this review, we argue that physical parameters are critical regulators of COPI vesicle formation. We focus on recent real-time in vitro assays highlighting the role of membrane tension, membrane composition, membrane curvature and lipid packing in membrane remodelling and fission by the COPI coat.  相似文献   

14.
The recycling of synaptic vesicles in nerve terminals is thought to involve clathrin-coated vesicles. However, the properties of nerve terminal coated vesicles have not been characterized. Starting from a preparation of purified nerve terminals obtained from rat brain, we isolated clathrin-coated vesicles by a series of differential and density gradient centrifugation steps. The enrichment of coated vesicles during fractionation was monitored by EM. The final fraction consisted of greater than 90% of coated vesicles, with only negligible contamination by synaptic vesicles. Control experiments revealed that the contribution by coated vesicles derived from the axo-dendritic region or from nonneuronal cells is minimal. The membrane composition of nerve terminal-derived coated vesicles was very similar to that of synaptic vesicles, containing the membrane proteins synaptophysin, synaptotagmin, p29, synaptobrevin and the 116-kD subunit of the vacuolar proton pump, in similar stoichiometric ratios. The small GTP-binding protein rab3A was absent, probably reflecting its dissociation from synaptic vesicles during endocytosis. Immunogold EM revealed that virtually all coated vesicles carried synaptic vesicle proteins, demonstrating that the contribution by coated vesicles derived from other membrane traffic pathways is negligible. Coated vesicles isolated from the whole brain exhibited a similar composition, most of them carrying synaptic vesicle proteins. This indicates that in nervous tissue, coated vesicles function predominantly in the synaptic vesicle pathway. Nerve terminal-derived coated vesicles contained AP-2 adaptor complexes, which is in agreement with their plasmalemmal origin. Furthermore, the neuron-specific coat proteins AP 180 and auxilin, as well as the alpha a1 and alpha c1-adaptins, were enriched in this fraction, suggesting a function for these coat proteins in synaptic vesicle recycling.  相似文献   

15.
Clathrin-coated vesicles mediate vesicular traffic in cells. Three-dimensional image reconstructions of homogenous populations of in vitro assembled clathrin coats have yielded a molecular model for clathrin and its interactions with some of its partners. The intrinsic averaging required for those calculations has precluded detailed analysis of heterogeneous populations of clathrin-coated vesicles isolated from cells. We have therefore used cryo-electron tomography to study the lattice organization of individual clathrin-coated vesicles and the disposition of the captured vesicle with respect to the surrounding coat. We find a wide range of designs for the clathrin lattice, with different patterns of pentagonal, hexagonal, and occasionally heptagonal facets. Many coats, even smaller ones, enclose membrane vesicles, which are generally offset from the center of the clathrin shell. The electron density distribution between the coat and the underlying vesicle is not uniform, and the number of apparent contacts that anchor the clathrin lattice to the vesicle membrane is significantly less than the number of clathrin heavy chains in the assembly. We suggest that the eccentric position of the vesicle reflects the polarity of assembly, from initiation of coat formation to membrane pinching.  相似文献   

16.
Lee MC  Orci L  Hamamoto S  Futai E  Ravazzola M  Schekman R 《Cell》2005,122(4):605-617
Secretory proteins traffic from the ER to the Golgi via COPII-coated transport vesicles. The five core COPII proteins (Sar1p, Sec23/24p, and Sec13/31p) act in concert to capture cargo proteins and sculpt the ER membrane into vesicles of defined geometry. The molecular details of how the coat proteins deform the lipid bilayer into vesicles are not known. Here we show that the small GTPase Sar1p directly initiates membrane curvature during vesicle biogenesis. Upon GTP binding by Sar1p, membrane insertion of the N-terminal amphipathic alpha helix deforms synthetic liposomes into narrow tubules. Replacement of bulky hydrophobic residues in the alpha helix with alanine yields Sar1p mutants that are unable to generate highly curved membranes and are defective in vesicle formation from native ER membranes despite normal recruitment of coat and cargo proteins. Thus, the initiation of vesicle budding by Sar1p couples the generation of membrane curvature with coat-protein assembly and cargo capture.  相似文献   

17.
Coat protein complex I (COPI) vesicles play a central role in the recycling of proteins in the early secretory pathway and transport of proteins within the Golgi stack. Vesicle formation is initiated by the exchange of GDP for GTP on ARF1 (ADP-ribosylation factor 1), which, in turn, recruits the coat protein coatomer to the membrane for selection of cargo and membrane deformation. ARFGAP1 (ARF1 GTPase-activating protein 1) regulates the dynamic cycling of ARF1 on the membrane that results in both cargo concentration and uncoating for the generation of a fusion-competent vesicle. Two human orthologues of the yeast ARFGAP Glo3p, termed ARFGAP2 and ARFGAP3, have been demonstrated to be present on COPI vesicles generated in vitro in the presence of guanosine 5′-3-O-(thio)triphosphate. Here, we investigate the function of these two proteins in living cells and compare it with that of ARFGAP1. We find that ARFGAP2 and ARFGAP3 follow the dynamic behavior of coatomer upon stimulation of vesicle budding in vivo more closely than does ARFGAP1. Electron microscopy of ARFGAP2 and ARFGAP3 knockdowns indicated Golgi unstacking and cisternal shortening similarly to conditions where vesicle uncoating was blocked. Furthermore, the knockdown of both ARFGAP2 and ARFGAP3 prevents proper assembly of the COPI coat lattice for which ARFGAP1 does not seem to play a major role. This suggests that ARFGAP2 and ARFGAP3 are key components of the COPI coat lattice and are necessary for proper vesicle formation.  相似文献   

18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,127(6):1815-1827
Mastoparan is a cationic amphipathetic peptide that activates trimeric G proteins, and increases binding of the coat protein beta-COP to Golgi membranes. ARFp13 is a cationic amphipathic peptide that is a putative specific inhibitor of ARF function, and inhibits coat protein binding to Golgi membranes. Using a combination of high resolution, three- dimensional electron microscopy and cell-free Golgi transport assays, we show that both of these peptides inhibit in vitro Golgi transport, not by interfering in the normal functioning of GTP-binding proteins, but by damaging membranes. Inhibition of transport is correlated with inhibition of nucleotide sugar uptake and protein glycoslation, a decrease in the fraction of Golgi cisternae exhibiting normal morphology, and a decrease in the density of Golgi-coated buds and vesicles. At peptide concentrations near the IC50 for transport, those cisternae with apparently normal morphology had a higher steady state level of coated buds and vesicles. Kinetic analysis suggests that this increase in density was due to a decrease in the rate of vesicle fission. Pertussis toxin treatment of the membranes appeared to increase the rate of vesicle formation, but did not prevent the membrane damage induced by mastoparan. We conclude that ARFp13 is not a specific inhibitor of ARF function, as originally proposed, and that surface active peptides, such as mastoparan, have the potential for introducing artifacts that complicate the analysis of trimeric G protein involvement in regulation of Golgi vesicle dynamics.  相似文献   

19.
The superfamily of small, monomeric GTP-binding proteins, in Arabidopsis thaliana comprising 93 members, is classified into four families: Arf/Sar, Rab, Rop/Rac, and Ran families. All monomeric G proteins function as molecular switches that are activated by GTP and inactivated by the hydrolysis of GTP to GDP. GTP/GDP cycling is controlled by three classes of regulatory protein: guanine-nucleotide-exchange factors (GEFs), GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs), and guanine-nucleotide-dissociation inhibitors (GDIs). Proteins of Arf family are primarily involved in regulation of membrane traffic and organization of the cytoskeleton. Arf1/Sar1 proteins regulate the formation of vesicle coat at different steps in the exocytic and endocytic pathways. Rab GTPases are regulators of vesicular transport. They are involved in vesicle formation, recruitment of cytoskeletal motor proteins, and in vesicle tethering and fusion. Rop proteins serve as key regulators of cytoskeletal reorganization in response to extracellular signals. Several data have also shown that Rop proteins play additional roles in membrane trafficking and regulation of enzymes activity. Ran proteins are involved in nucleocytoplasmic transport.  相似文献   

20.
Conibear E 《Current biology : CB》2011,21(13):R506-R508
When a coated transport vesicle docks with its target membrane, the coat proteins and docking machinery must be released before the membranes can fuse. A recent paper shows how this disassembly is triggered at precisely the right time.  相似文献   

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