| Literature DB >> 19841135 |
Aparna Lakkaraju1, Jose Maria Carvajal-Gonzalez, Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan.
Abstract
The role of clathrin adaptor proteins in sorting cargo in the biosynthetic and recycling routes is an area of intense research. In this issue, Delevoye et al. (2009. J. Cell Biol. doi:10.1083/jcb.200907122) show that a close interaction between the clathrin adaptor AP-1 and a kinesin motor KIF13A is essential for delivering melanogenic enzymes from recycling endosomes to nascent melanosomes and for organelle biogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19841135 PMCID: PMC2768836 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200909100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
Figure 1.Role of clathrin adaptor proteins in melanosome biogenesis. Post-Golgi trafficking routes of three melanosome cargoes (Pmel17, tyrosinase, and Tyrp1) in melanocytes are shown. Newly synthesized Pmel17 is transported to the limiting membrane and intraluminal vesicles of stage I melanosomes/early sorting endosomes via the plasma membrane. This process (depicted by a question mark) might involve clathrin and AP-2. From these EEA1-positive vacuolar endosomes, Pmel17 is sorted away from the late endosome/multivesicular body pathway into stage II melanosomes. Little is known as to how the enzymes essential for melanin synthesis, tyrosinase and Tyrp1, are sorted from the TGN to early REs, and it is likely that clathrin and its adaptors are involved in this process. Tyrosinase, which binds both AP-1 and -3, is transported to stage III melanosomes from tubular regions of REs, containing Tf/TfR and Rab11, by two distinct routes: one regulated by AP-3 and the other regulated by BLOC-1, BLOC-2, and perhaps AP-1. However, Tyrp1 binds only AP-1 and not AP-3, indicating a divergence of sorting mechanisms between tyrosinase and Tyrp1. Delevoye et al. (2009) now show that AP-1 interacts with the kinesin motor KIF13A to transport recycling endosomal domains to the melanocytic cell periphery. The close apposition of Tyrp1-containing tubules with melanosomes allows cargo transfer and biogenesis of stage III and IV melanosomes. Although Tf is found in these peripheral endosomal tubules, there appears to be a filtering mechanism that sorts it out before the tubules fuse with melanosomes. It is likely, although not yet confirmed, that BLOC-1 and -2 act in concert with AP-1 to transport Tyrp1. The tissue-specific Rabs, Rab32 and Rab38, might function in any or all of these pathways.