Literature DB >> 15752136

Core formation and the acquisition of fusion competence are linked during secretory granule maturation in Tetrahymena.

Grant R Bowman1, Nels C Elde, Garry Morgan, Mark Winey, Aaron P Turkewitz.   

Abstract

The formation of dense core secretory granules is a multistage process beginning in the trans Golgi network and continuing during a period of granule maturation. Direct interactions between proteins in the membrane and those in the forming dense core may be important for sorting during this process, as well as for organizing membrane proteins in mature granules. We have isolated two mutants in dense core granule formation in the ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila, an organism in which this pathway is genetically accessible. The mutants lie in two distinct genes but have similar phenotypes, marked by accumulation of a set of granule cargo markers in intracellular vesicles resembling immature secretory granules. Sorting to these vesicles appears specific, since they do not contain detectable levels of an extraneous secretory marker. The mutants were initially identified on the basis of aberrant proprotein processing, but also showed defects in the docking of the immature granules. These defects, in core assembly and docking, were similarly conditional with respect to growth conditions, and therefore are likely to be tightly linked. In starved cells, the processing defect was less severe, and the immature granules could dock but still did not undergo stimulated exocytosis. We identified a lumenal protein that localizes to the docking-competent end of wildtype granules, but which is delocalized in the mutants. Our results suggest that dense cores have functionally distinct domains that may be important for organizing membrane proteins involved in docking and fusion.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15752136      PMCID: PMC4708285          DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0854.2005.00273.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Traffic        ISSN: 1398-9219            Impact factor:   6.215


  65 in total

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5.  Proteolytic processing and Ca2+-binding activity of dense-core vesicle polypeptides in Tetrahymena.

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Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  1998-02       Impact factor: 4.138

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  16 in total

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Review 7.  An evolutionary balance: conservation vs innovation in ciliate membrane trafficking.

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9.  Independent transport and sorting of functionally distinct protein families in Tetrahymena thermophila dense core secretory granules.

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10.  Remodeling the Specificity of an Endosomal CORVET Tether Underlies Formation of Regulated Secretory Vesicles in the Ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila.

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Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2018-02-22       Impact factor: 10.834

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