| Literature DB >> 20976261 |
Cathal Wilson1, Antonella Ragnini-Wilson.
Abstract
The Golgi complex performs a central function in the secretory pathway in the sorting and sequential processing of a large number of proteins destined for other endomembrane organelles, the plasma membrane, or secretion from the cell, in addition to lipid metabolism and signaling. The Golgi apparatus can be regarded as a self-organizing system that maintains a relatively stable morphofunctional organization in the face of an enormous flux of lipids and proteins. A large number of the molecular players that operate in these processes have been identified, their functions and interactions defined, but there is still debate about many aspects that regulate protein trafficking and, in particular, the maintenance of these highly dynamic structures and processes. Here, we consider how an evolutionarily conserved underlying mechanism based on retrograde trafficking that uses lipids, COPI, SNAREs, and tethers could maintain such a homeodynamic system.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20976261 PMCID: PMC2952910 DOI: 10.1155/2010/758230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cell Biol ISSN: 1687-8876
Figure 1The vesicular transport model (top) versus the cisternal maturation model (bottom). In the vesicular transport model, cargo (red boxes) is transferred between stable Golgi compartments (coloured barrels) via vesicle carriers (circles with boxes) until it exits the Golgi (top right). Some proteins (e.g., SNAREs) and/or lipids could be returned via retrograde trafficking (curved downward-pointing arrows, unfilled circles). In the cisternal maturation model, the cargo can be considered to be stably located within a membrane compartment that changes identity via the retrograde trafficking (curved downward-pointing arrows, unfilled circles) of Golgi identity determinants (coloured barrels). As cargo leaves the Golgi in membrane carriers, the trans-Golgi is “consumed” (dashed vertical arrows) while new cisternae are forming by input from the ER (solid vertical arrows). Retrograde transport has a much greater role in maintaining an apparently stable system in the case of cisternal maturation. Under steady state conditions, both situations would appear to be the same. Large horizontal arrow: time of transport.
Golgins and tethers in Golgi structure and maintenance. Potential homologues in mammals, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Arabidopsis thaliana, and Drosophila melanogaster. For a detailed description see [2, 3, 15]. Others not reported in these reviews are from [16, 17] or were searched for directly by BLAST searches at http://flybase.org/; http://www.arabidopsis.org/; http://www.yeastgenome.org/. *Trs65, Trs85 subunits of TRAPPII present only in fungi.
| Mammal | Yeast | Arabidopsis | Drosophila | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| p115 | + | + | + | + |
| GM130 | + | + | − | + |
| Golgin245 | + | + | + | + |
| GMAP210 | + | + | + | + |
| CASP | + | + | + | − |
| GRASP65 | + | + | − | + |
| Golgin84 | + | − | + | + |
| TMF | + | + | + | + |
| GCC88 | + | − | − | + |
| GCC185 | + | − | − | + |
| GCP60 | + | − | − | + |
| Giantin | + | − | − | − |
| Golgin45 | + | − | − | + |
| Golgin97 | + | − | − | + |
| GRASP55 | + | − | − | + |
| Golgin160 | + | − | − | − |
| TRAPPI,II* | + | + | + | + |
| COG1-8 | + | + | + | + |
Evolutionarily conserved molecules, machineries, and principles involved in intra-Golgi transport that could underlie the homeostasis of the Golgi complex.
| Mammals | Yeast | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Lipid metabolism Cholesterol/sphingolipids | Lipid metabolism Ergosterol/sphingolipids | Protein organization due to affinity for lipid subdomains |
|
| ||
| PI4KIII | Pik1 | Same regulatory mechanism underlying PI(4)P metabolism |
| Sac1 | Sac1 | |
|
| ||
| GOLPH3 | VPS74 | Coincidence detector for Golgi resident localisation |
| PI(4)P | PI(4)P | |
| (COPI) | COPI | |
|
| ||
| COPI | COPI | Different isoforms distributed over the Golgi |
|
| ||
| ArfGAPs | ArfGAPs | Different isoforms distributed over the Golgi |
| ArfGEFs | ArfGEFs | |
|
| ||
| Arf1 | Arf1 | Distributed over the Golgi |
|
| ||
| GOG1-4, GOG5-8 | GOG1-4, GOG5-8 | Two conserved COG subcomplexes |
|
| ||
| Rab6 | Ypt6 | Small GTPase governing retrograde transport |
|
| ||
| SNAREs | SNAREs | Same basic distribution in the Golgi |
Figure 2A model for maintaining Golgi structure during cisternal maturation by retrograde transport. Incoming cargo is modified by Golgi enzymes and then lipid partitioning separates cargo from enzymes (divergent arrows). Intra-Golgi transport could be controlled via COPI vesicles that regulate the composition and concentration of SNARE proteins and lipids in the cisternae. During anterograde transport the cargo molecules are maintained within a cisterna that changes identity by the retrograde recycling of SNAREs, Golgi resident proteins, and lipids via intercisternal tubules, with the COG complex acting as a tethering factor. Arf1 is present across the Golgi and regulates COPI vesicle formation but distinct domains are conferred by the ArfGEFs and ArfGAPs, all of which associate and dissociate rapidly from the Golgi membranes according to the changing lipid/protein identity (see text for details).