Welte Michael A, Cermelli Silvia, Griner John, Viera Arturo, Guo Yi, Kim Dae-Hwan, Gindhart Joseph G, Gross Steven P
Rosenstiel Biomedical Research Center, Brandeis University, 415 South Street, Waltham, Massachusetts 02454, USA.
Curr Biol. 2005 Jul 26;15(14):1266-75. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2005.06.062.
Motor-driven transport along microtubules is a primary mechanism for moving and positioning organelles. How such transport is regulated remains poorly understood. For lipid droplets in Drosophila embryos, three distinct phases of transport can be distinguished. To identify factors regulating this transport, we biochemically purified droplets from individual phases and used 2D gel analysis to search for proteins whose amount on droplets changes as motion changes.
By mass spectrometry, we identified one such protein as LSD2. Similar to its mammalian counterpart Perilipin, LSD2 is responsible for regulating lipid homeostasis. Using specific antibodies, we confirmed that LSD2 is present on embryonic lipid droplets. We find that lack of LSD2 causes a specific transport defect: Droplet distribution fails to undergo the dramatic changes characteristic of the wild-type. This defect is not due to a complete failure of the core transport machinery--individual droplets still move bidirectionally along microtubules with approximately normal velocities and kinetics. Rather, detailed biophysical analysis suggests that developmental control of droplet motion is lost. We show that LSD2 is multiply phosphorylated in a developmentally controlled manner. LSD2 phosphorylation depends on the transacting signal Halo, and LSD2 can physically interact with the lipid-droplet-associated coordinator Klar, identifying LSD2 as a central player in the mechanisms that control droplet motion.
LSD2 appears to represent a new class of regulators, a protein that transduces regulatory signals to a separable core motor machinery. In addition, the demonstration that LSD2 regulates both transport and lipid metabolism suggests a link between lipid-droplet motion and lipid homeostasis.
沿微管的马达驱动运输是细胞器移动和定位的主要机制。这种运输如何被调控仍知之甚少。对于果蝇胚胎中的脂滴,可以区分出三个不同的运输阶段。为了鉴定调控这种运输的因子,我们从各个阶段生物化学纯化脂滴,并使用二维凝胶分析来寻找其在脂滴上的量随运动变化而改变的蛋白质。
通过质谱分析,我们鉴定出一种这样的蛋白质为LSD2。与其哺乳动物对应物围脂滴蛋白相似,LSD2负责调节脂质稳态。使用特异性抗体,我们证实LSD2存在于胚胎脂滴上。我们发现缺乏LSD2会导致特定的运输缺陷:脂滴分布未能经历野生型特有的剧烈变化。这种缺陷不是由于核心运输机制完全失效——单个脂滴仍以大致正常的速度和动力学沿微管双向移动。相反,详细的生物物理分析表明脂滴运动的发育控制丧失。我们表明LSD2以发育控制的方式被多重磷酸化。LSD2磷酸化依赖于反式作用信号Halo,并且LSD2可以与脂滴相关协调蛋白Klar发生物理相互作用,确定LSD2是控制脂滴运动机制中的核心参与者。
LSD2似乎代表了一类新的调节因子,一种将调节信号传递到可分离的核心马达机制的蛋白质。此外,LSD2调节运输和脂质代谢的证明表明脂滴运动与脂质稳态之间存在联系。