Yu Haijia, Liu Yinghui, Gulbranson Daniel R, Paine Alex, Rathore Shailendra S, Shen Jingshi
Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309.
Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Apr 19;113(16):4362-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1517259113. Epub 2016 Apr 4.
Organelles are in constant communication with each other through exchange of proteins (mediated by trafficking vesicles) and lipids [mediated by both trafficking vesicles and lipid transfer proteins (LTPs)]. It has long been known that vesicle trafficking can be tightly regulated by the second messenger Ca(2+), allowing membrane protein transport to be adjusted according to physiological demands. However, it remains unclear whether LTP-mediated lipid transport can also be regulated by Ca(2+) In this work, we show that extended synaptotagmins (E-Syts), poorly understood membrane proteins at endoplasmic reticulum-plasma membrane contact sites, are Ca(2+)-dependent LTPs. Using both recombinant and endogenous mammalian proteins, we discovered that E-Syts transfer glycerophospholipids between membrane bilayers in the presence of Ca(2+) E-Syts use their lipid-accommodating synaptotagmin-like mitochondrial lipid binding protein (SMP) domains to transfer lipids. However, the SMP domains themselves cannot transport lipids unless the two membranes are tightly tethered by Ca(2+)-bound C2 domains. Strikingly, the Ca(2+)-regulated lipid transfer activity of E-Syts was fully recapitulated when the SMP domain was fused to the cytosolic domain of synaptotagmin-1, the Ca(2+)sensor in synaptic vesicle fusion, indicating that a common mechanism of membrane tethering governs the Ca(2+)regulation of lipid transfer and vesicle fusion. Finally, we showed that microsomal vesicles isolated from mammalian cells contained robust Ca(2+)-dependent lipid transfer activities, which were mediated by E-Syts. These findings established E-Syts as a novel class of LTPs and showed that LTP-mediated lipid trafficking, like vesicular transport, can be subject to tight Ca(2+)regulation.
细胞器通过蛋白质交换(由运输小泡介导)和脂质交换(由运输小泡和脂质转移蛋白介导)不断地相互通信。长期以来,人们已知小泡运输可受到第二信使Ca(2+)的严格调控,从而使膜蛋白运输能够根据生理需求进行调整。然而,目前尚不清楚LTP介导的脂质运输是否也能受Ca(2+)调控。在这项研究中,我们发现延长突触结合蛋白(E-Syts)是在内质网-质膜接触位点上了解较少的膜蛋白,它们是Ca(2+)依赖性脂质转移蛋白。利用重组和内源性哺乳动物蛋白,我们发现E-Syts在Ca(2+)存在的情况下在膜双层之间转移甘油磷脂。E-Syts利用其容纳脂质的突触结合蛋白样线粒体脂质结合蛋白(SMP)结构域来转移脂质。然而,除非两个膜被Ca(2+)结合的C2结构域紧密拴系,否则SMP结构域本身无法运输脂质。引人注目的是,当SMP结构域与突触结合蛋白-1的胞质结构域融合时,E-Syts的Ca(2+)调节脂质转移活性被完全重现,突触结合蛋白-1是突触小泡融合中的Ca(2+)传感器,这表明膜拴系的共同机制控制着脂质转移和小泡融合的Ca(2+)调节。最后,我们表明从哺乳动物细胞中分离出的微粒体小泡具有强大的Ca(2+)依赖性脂质转移活性,这是由E-Syts介导的。这些发现确立了E-Syts作为一类新型脂质转移蛋白,并表明LTP介导的脂质运输,与小泡运输一样,可受到严格的Ca(2+)调控。