| Literature DB >> 25517096 |
Henri-François Renard1, Mijo Simunovic2, Joël Lemière3, Emmanuel Boucrot4, Maria Daniela Garcia-Castillo1, Senthil Arumugam1, Valérie Chambon1, Christophe Lamaze5, Christian Wunder1, Anne K Kenworthy6, Anne A Schmidt7, Harvey T McMahon8, Cécile Sykes9, Patricia Bassereau10, Ludger Johannes1.
Abstract
During endocytosis, energy is invested to narrow the necks of cargo-containing plasma membrane invaginations to radii at which the opposing segments spontaneously coalesce, thereby leading to the detachment by scission of endocytic uptake carriers. In the clathrin pathway, dynamin uses mechanical energy from GTP hydrolysis to this effect, assisted by the BIN/amphiphysin/Rvs (BAR) domain-containing protein endophilin. Clathrin-independent endocytic events are often less reliant on dynamin, and whether in these cases BAR domain proteins such as endophilin contribute to scission has remained unexplored. Here we show, in human and other mammalian cell lines, that endophilin-A2 (endoA2) specifically and functionally associates with very early uptake structures that are induced by the bacterial Shiga and cholera toxins, which are both clathrin-independent endocytic cargoes. In controlled in vitro systems, endoA2 reshapes membranes before scission. Furthermore, we demonstrate that endoA2, dynamin and actin contribute in parallel to the scission of Shiga-toxin-induced tubules. Our results establish a novel function of endoA2 in clathrin-independent endocytosis. They document that distinct scission factors operate in an additive manner, and predict that specificity within a given uptake process arises from defined combinations of universal modules. Our findings highlight a previously unnoticed link between membrane scaffolding by endoA2 and pulling-force-driven dynamic scission.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25517096 PMCID: PMC4342003 DOI: 10.1038/nature14064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962