| Literature DB >> 22008230 |
Navin Gopaldass1, Devang Patel, Ramona Kratzke, Regis Dieckmann, Stéphanie Hausherr, Monica Hagedorn, Roger Monroy, Julia Krüger, Eva M Neuhaus, Eik Hoffmann, Katja Hille, Sergei A Kuznetsov, Thierry Soldati.
Abstract
The role of actin, class I myosins and dynamin in endocytic uptake processes is well characterized, but their role during endo-phagosomal membrane trafficking and maturation is less clear. In Dictyostelium, knockout of myosin IB (myoB) leads to a defect in membrane protein recycling from endosomes back to the plasma membrane. Here, we show that actin plays a central role in the morphology and function of the endocytic pathway. Indeed, latrunculin B (LatB) induces endosome tubulation, a phenotype also observed in dynamin A (dymA)-null cells. Knockout of dymA impairs phagosome acidification, whereas knockout of myoB delays reneutralization, a phenotype mimicked by a low dose of LatB. As a read out for actin-dependent processes during maturation, we monitored the capacity of purified phagosomes to bind F-actin in vitro, and correlated this with the presence of actin-binding and membrane-trafficking proteins. Phagosomes isolated from myoB-null cells showed an increased binding to F-actin, especially late phagosomes. In contrast, early phagosomes from dymA-null cells showed reduced binding to F-actin while late phagosomes were unaffected. We provide evidence that Abp1 is the main F-actin-binding protein in this assay and is central for the interplay between DymA and MyoB during phagosome maturation.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22008230 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0854.2011.01296.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Traffic ISSN: 1398-9219 Impact factor: 6.215