Ermes Candiello1, Manuel Kratzke1, Dirk Wenzel2, Dan Cassel3, Peter Schu1. 1. Georg-August University Göttingen, Department for Cellular Biochemistry, Humboldtallee 23, D-37073 Göttingen, Germany. 2. Electron microscopy, Max-Planck-Institut for Biophysical Chemistry, Am Fassberg 11, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany. 3. Israel Institute of Technology, Department Biology, Haifa 32000, Israel.
Abstract
The σ1 subunit of the AP-1 clathrin-coated-vesicle adaptor-protein complex is expressed as three isoforms. Tissues express σ1A and one of the σ1B and σ1C isoforms. Brain is the tissue with the highest σ1A and σ1B expression. σ1B-deficiency leads to severe mental retardation, accumulation of early endosomes in synapses and fewer synaptic vesicles, whose recycling is slowed down. AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B regulate maturation of these early endosomes into multivesicular body late endosomes, thereby controlling synaptic vesicle protein transport into a degradative pathway. σ1A binds ArfGAP1, and with higher affinity brain-specific ArfGAP1, which bind Rabex-5. AP-1/σ1A-ArfGAP1-Rabex-5 complex formation leads to more endosomal Rabex-5 and enhanced, Rab5(GTP)-stimulated Vps34 PI3-kinase activity, which is essential for multivesicular body endosome formation. Formation of AP-1/σ1A-ArfGAP1-Rabex-5 complexes is prevented by σ1B binding of Rabex-5 and the amount of endosomal Rabex-5 is reduced. AP-1 complexes differentially regulate endosome maturation and coordinate protein recycling and degradation, revealing a novel molecular mechanism by which they regulate protein transport besides their established function in clathrin-coated-vesicle formation.
The σ1 subunit of the AP-1 clathrin-coated-vesicle adaptor-protein complex is expressed as three isoforms. Tissues express σ1A and one of the σ1B and σ1C isoforms. Brain is the tissue with the highest σ1A and σ1B expression. σ1B-deficiency leads to severe mental retardation, accumulation of early endosomes in synapses and fewer synaptic vesicles, whose recycling is slowed down. AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B regulate maturation of these early endosomes into multivesicular body late endosomes, thereby controlling synaptic vesicle protein transport into a degradative pathway. σ1A binds ArfGAP1, and with higher affinity brain-specific ArfGAP1, which bind Rabex-5. AP-1/σ1A-ArfGAP1-Rabex-5 complex formation leads to more endosomal Rabex-5 and enhanced, Rab5(GTP)-stimulated Vps34 PI3-kinase activity, which is essential for multivesicular body endosome formation. Formation of AP-1/σ1A-ArfGAP1-Rabex-5 complexes is prevented by σ1B binding of Rabex-5 and the amount of endosomal Rabex-5 is reduced. AP-1 complexes differentially regulate endosome maturation and coordinate protein recycling and degradation, revealing a novel molecular mechanism by which they regulate protein transport besides their established function in clathrin-coated-vesicle formation.
The ubiquitous AP-1 complex consists of four adaptin subunits. γ1 and
β1 bind clathrin and ‘accessory’ proteins for
vesicle formation, whereas μ1A and σ1A bind the cargo proteins
for AP-1 clathrin-coated-vesicles (CCV)12. The μ1A subunit
is also involved in the regulation of AP-1 membrane-cytoplasma recycling34. The σ1B isoform is 87% identical to σ1A.
Although both bind the same cargo proteins with di-leucine-based sorting motifs, certain
cargo proteins like sortilin56789, are exclusively bound by
σ1B. AP-1/σ1A is essential for brain development, whereas
AP-1/σ1B takes part in synaptic vesicle recycling710.
Humans with mutations in σ1A die post-natally, whereas the zebrafish
‘knock-down’ is viable11. σ1A
−/− mice die in-utero and the few who are born die
perinatally (Schu, unpublished). If AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B are
absent, as in μ1A ‘knock-out’ mice, embryos have
hemorrhages in the ventricles and the spinal canal and die at day 13.5
in-utero10. Thus, AP-1 complexes are indispensable for
neuronal development and function, but the essential functions they fulfil are not well
understood.Neurotransmission is mediated by the fusion of synaptic vesicles (SV) with the
presynaptic plasma membrane. SV have to be efficiently recycled to prevent depletion of
the SV pool and the fusion site has to be cleared from SV proteins12 to
ensure proper neurotransmission. Membrane and SV protein retrieval is mediated by
clathrin-independent and clathrin-dependent pathways. Clathrin-independent pathways are
the fastest pathways, operating within milliseconds and up to seconds, while
clathrin-dependent pathways are slower and require several seconds to be completed13. In clathrin-dependent SV protein endocytosis CCV formation at the
plasma membrane requires the AP-1-homologous AP-2 complex and additional vesicle coat
proteins. After their uncoating, these endocytotic vesicles can fuse with early
endosomes, from which SV are reformed in a AP-1-dependent manner71314. A function of these early endosomes in the SV recycling route has not yet been
demonstrated, but the impairment of endosomal SV protein sorting by
σ1B-deficiency and the severe mental retardation demonstrate its importance
for neurotransmission. σ1B is encoded on the X-chromosome in humans and
mice. σ1B deficiency in humans leads to severe mental retardation and a
delay of starting to walk. σ1B −/− mice develop the
same phenotypes as the humanpatients, demonstrating conserved molecular functions.
These animals have severely impaired spatial memory and learning, they are hypoactive
and their motor coordination is impaired715.Absence of AP-1/σ1B from pre-synapses leads to changes in diverse vesicular
protein transport pathways. Reformation of SV during recycling is slower and incomplete,
leading to a reduction in SV numbers, whereas phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate
(PI-3-P)-positive early endosomes accumulate. The synthesis of multivesicular body (MVB)
late endosomes is up-regulated and protein levels of about one third of SV proteins are
reduced, indicating enhanced degradation of SV proteins via the MVB pathway. Very
surprisingly, these σ1B −/− synapses contain more of
the endocytotic AP-2 CCV716.These alterations in early endosome maturation and protein sorting in σ1B
−/− synapses indicated to us that endosomal AP-1/σ1A
and AP-1/σ1B complexes might take part in the regulation of MVB endosome
formation. Analysing the σ1 dependence of these membrane dynamics we
unraveled a novel molecular mechanism by which AP-1/σ1B and
AP-1/σ1A regulate protein sorting, which does not involve the formation AP-1
CCV. We demonstrate in this study that they regulate synaptic early endosome membrane
dynamics, enabling protein transport into an endolysosomal degradative pathway. A direct
sorting function of AP-1 for SV proteins into SV and in SV reformation, as indicated by
the ‘knock-out’ phenotype, remains to be demonstrated. Here we
show that MVB pathway activation involves the σ1A-mediated formation of a
novel Rab5-activating complex: AP-1/σ1A/ArfGAP1/Rabex-5. ArfGAP1 is the
GTPase that activates Arf1GTP. Complex formation is most efficient with
the brain-specific isoform of ArfGAP1. Rabex-5 is a Rab5GDP-GTP exchange factor. Rab5
activates the PI 3-kinase Vps34 (PI3KC3), whose activity is essential for MVB
formation16171819. σ1B binds Rabex-5, preventing
ArfGAP1 binding and thus formation of the stable tripartite complex. Here we show that
σ1A and σ1B AP-1 complexes, besides their longknown functions in
protein sorting and CCV formation, coordinate SV protein recycling and SV protein
degradation pathways. Our data support a model, in which AP-1 complexes regulate SV
protein degradation via the MVB pathway by controlling early endosome maturation and by
directing the degradation of selected SV proteins. This would enable the synthesis of SV
with a modified protein composition and thus altered properties in neurotransmission.
Also in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases is the sorting of
endosomal proteins disturbed and thus these novel AP-1 functions could also be important
for the progression of these diseases.
Results
Vps34 is hyperactivated on σ1B −/−
endosomes
Previous data show that synapses of σ1B −/−
mice have enlarged endosomes and contain two times more PI-3-P than endosomes
from wt mice. Also the late endosome MVB pathway, which depends on the PI
3-kinase Vps34, is upregulated in synapses of σ1B
−/− mice716. These data indicate, that
AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B may take part in the regulation of
early endosome maturation into MVB endosomes via the regulation of
Vps34-activity. In order to analyse such a molecular mechanism in-vitro,
we first tested whether the enlarged endosomes seen in EM images in-vivo
can still be found after the 5 h density centrifugation required for
their isolation. Vesicles with tubules are readily detected in the early
endosome (low-density, ld) density gradient fraction from σ1B
−/−, but not in fractions from wt brains (Fig. 1A). Vps34 is bound to these early and late endosomes
(high-density, hd) (Fig. 1B), but endosomes from
σ1B −/− mice do not contain more Vps34 than
wt endosomes (Fig.1C), indicating increased Vps34 specific
activity. To test whether Vps34 activity is indeed up-regulated, we added the
specific inhibitor 3-methyl adenine (3-MA)20. Endosomal PI-3-P
levels of wt and σ1B −/− endosomes were
compared by determining the amount of EEA1 bound to these endosomes via its
PI-3-P-specific FYVE-domain (Fig.1D). EEA1 is not a
presynaptic, or apical, protein and will bind to these endosomes only after cell
lysis1621222324. In the Kratzke et al.16 publication, we published the data showing that
23.2 ± 4.4 and
16.7 ± 3.1% of the loaded EEA1 is associated
with the early endosome (ld) and late endosome (hd) enriched density gradient
fractions. Endosomes from wt mice contain only
6.2 ± 2.5 and
7 ± 2.5% of the loaded EEA1. We performed
experiments in parallel at the time adding 3-MA (5 mM) to the
extracts from σ1B −/− neurons. Addition of
the Vps34 PI 3-kinase inhibitor normalised EEA1 binding and reduced it even
below wt levels (Fig. 1D; see also final result chapter
and Kratzke et al.)16. Thus the increase in PI-3-P in
σ1B −/− endosomes is indeed due to
hyperactive Vps34.
Figure 1
Synaptosomal distribution and activity of the PI3-kinase Vps34.
Experiments were repeated with extracts from individual animals. (A)
EM images of early endosome-containing density gradient fractions. Arrows
indicate membrane dynamics of endosomes isolated from σ1B
−/− brains. (B) Vps34 detected in low-density
(ld) and high-density (hd) gradient fractions from wt brains enriched early
(ld) and late (hd) endosomes, is expressed as % of Vps34 detected in all
fractions (Σ = 100%)
(n = 5; mean and s.d.). (C) σ1B
deficiency does not alter the Vps34 content of these endosomes: wt (filled
bars), σ1B −/− (open bars)
(n = 5; mean and s.d.). (D) σ1B
deficiency causes the redistribution of
23 ± 4 and
16.7 ± 4 of EEA1 into the early (id) and
late (hd) endosome fractions of the gradient due to their increase in PI-3-P
(see Kratzke et al.16 and Fig.
5). Addition of the specific Vps34 inhibitor 3-MA blocks PI-3-P
formation, demonstrated by the reduced EEA1 membrane association: wt (filled
bars), σ1B −/− plus 3-MA (grey bars)
(n = 3; mean and s.d.). Representative Western blots
are shown in (C,D).
Rab5/Vps34-pathway is activated by σ1A
Vps34 PI 3-kinase activity18 is stimulated by complex formation
with the protein kinase Vps1525. The Vps34 C-terminal helical
domain blocks the Vps34 active site. Vps15 binding to this helix and the
preceding domain stabilises the active-site open conformation of Vps3420. Because σ1A and σ1B differ in their
C-terminal helical domains, a differential Vps34 binding via these domains could
cause the differences in Vps34 activity. σ1A binding could
stimulate, or σ1B binding could inhibit Vps34 activity. Neither the
Vps34 C-terminal nor the catalytic domain bound σ1-adaptins in
γ1/σ1 hemicomplex Y3H assays, suggesting an indirect
regulation by σ1 adaptins (Fig. S1). Membrane-cytoplasm recycling of Vps34/Vps15 is a mechanism
of Vps34-pathway regulation, but not in neurons, where Vps34/Vps15 remains
membrane bound17. Rab5GTP binds Vps15, enhancing
Vps34 activity by an unknown molecular mechanism17, but the
amount of Rab5 on σ1B −/− endosomes was not
increased16. Rab5 cytoplasma-endosome recycling could be
reduced in these synaptic endosomes compared to fibroblastoid endosomes, as is
the Vps34/Vps15 recycling. Alternatively, other Rab5 functions and the
respective GEFs could be reduced, whereas the Vps34-pathway is activated and
thus the amount of endosome bound Rab5 would not be altered. Indeed,
σ1B −/− early endosomes do contain more of
the Rab5-GEF Rabex-5, whereas the neighbouring high density, late endosome
fraction contains less16. Thus σ1A binding to Rabex-5
could be a mechanism for Rab5-pathway activation. We tested the Rabex-5
C-terminal aa 396–491 for σ1-binding in
γ1/σ1 hemicomplex Y3H binding assays, because these
mediate Rabex-5 early endosome binding independent of the Rab5/Rabex-5 linker
Rabaptin-5α2627. Unexpectedly, Rabex-5 binds
σ1B, not σ1A (Fig. 2A). In
addition, we tested the Rab5-pathway-inactivating RabGAP5 for σ1
isoform binding, because its inhibition could contribute to Rab5-pathway
activation. RabGAP5 consists of the catalytic TBC domain, a SH3-domain and a
C-terminal RUN-domain, present in proteins linked to GTPase functions28. Also the RabGAP5 RUN-domain (aa 578–760) binds
σ1B, not σ1A (Fig. 2A). Therefore
both proteins might use similar motifs and sequence alignment indicated two
related motifs in both: P_E_A:E_C:L_L and
P_L_Q:K_P:E_Q:G_V. We replaced in Rabex-5 the E and L residues
following the P in both putative motifs by A. This abolished σ1B
binding in Y3H assays (Fig. S2).
Rabex-5 proteins with one of the two motifs mutated gave highly variable results
in in-vitro AP-1 pulldown experiments, indicating that they are unstable
proteins in-vitro and that both motifs might act in concert to enable
σ1B binding. However, wt Rabex-5 and RabGAP5 domains pulled down
AP-1 out of wt and σ1B −/− synaptosome
extracts, confirming the Y3H protein interaction data. Rabex-5 isolates 160%
more AP-1/σ1A complexes out of σ1B
−/− synaptosome extracts and RabGAP5 30% more, which was
not expected due to the absence of σ1A-Rabex-5 and RabGAP5 binding
in the Y3H experiment (Fig. 2B). Because of these
contradictory results from the in-vitro experiments, we tested for AP-1
colocalisation with these two proteins and with Rab5 on membranes in-vivo
with the proximity-ligation-assay (PLA). We used wt, σ1B
−/− and AP-1-deficient (μ1A
−/−) MEF cell lines. Their endosomes are larger than
synaptic endosomes, thus providing a higher spatial resolution. Indeed, in
σ1B −/− cells more AP-1/Rabex-5 and also
more AP-1/Rab5 colocalised. Moreover, these complexes are confined to smaller
areas in σ1B −/− cells compared to wt cells,
indicating maturing membrane subdomains (Fig. 2C,D). Also
more RabGAP5 colocalises with AP-1/σ1A, but these complexes are more
dispersed, which should result in reduced RabGAP5 interaction with Rab5,
limiting Rab5-pathway inactivation (Fig. 2C,D). Due to the
difference in the AP-1/Rabex-5 and AP-1/RabGAP5 complex distributions, their
compositions would be expected to be different. We did not investigate the
AP-1/RabGAP5 distribution further at this point, because pulldown experiments
and the increased Rabex-5 early endosome binding in σ1B
−/− neurons demonstrate that it is the most relevant
mechanism. All these data are in line with Rab5GTP-mediated
activation of Vps34 activity and with our previous biochemical analysis, which
showed increased Rabex-5 association with early endosomes16.
There is, however, a discrepancy with the Y3H data, which show σ1B,
but not σ1A binding of Rabex-5 (Fig. 2A).
Figure 2
Formation of AP-1 - Rab5 effector-protein complexes.
(A) σ1 - Rabex-5 and -RabGAP5 binding specificities in the
Y3H assay. (B) Comparison of AP-1 pulldown by Rabex-5 and RabGAP5
from wt and σ1B −/− brain extracts
(n = 4 each). (C) PLA assay of AP-1 complex
formation with Rabex-5, Rab5 and RabGAP5 as well as their distribution on
endosomes (representative IFM) and (D) the IFM quantification, col.:
amount of AP-1 (γ1-adaptin) colocalisation, area: size of
endosomal membrane domain covered by the proteins (cells
n = 10 per sample). Comparing the differences
between ‘ko’ and wt data sets gave in all
χ2 tests
distributions ≤ 0.004 (>95%
probability).
ArfGAP1 links σ1A and Rabex-5
The discrepancy between Y3H and pulldown experiments can be explained by the
formation of AP-1/σ1A-Rabex-5 complexes by a linker protein, like
the Rabex-5/Rab5 linker Rabaptin-5α. Rabaptin-5α is also
bound by the C-terminal ‘ear’-domain of
AP-1/γ1. Altering the protein ratio of both alters early endosome
protein recycling29. Thus, we expressed Rabex-5 for pulldown
experiments in E. coli and incubated the Rabex-5-loaded beads with brain
extracts from wt and σ1B −/− mice. Again,
more AP-1 complexes were isolated from σ1B
−/− brains than from wt brains by Rabex-5 (Fig. 3A). However, Rabex-5 isolated less
Rabaptin-5α out of σ1B −/−
synaptic extracts than from wt extracts (Fig. 3A),
excluding a linker function in this pathway. Thus we tested ArfGAP1 for a
σ1A/Rabex-5 linker function for several reasons. Like
Rabaptin-5α, it binds the γ1
‘ear’-domain and it binds to endosomes. Also, it exists
as a brain-specific isoform of unkown function3031. ArfGAP1 has
functions independent of its N-terminal GAP domain activity and the
brain-specific isoform has an altered C-terminal domain3233343536. ArfGAP1 stimulates Arf1GTPGTP-hydrolysis by a conformational change induced by binding of its C-terminal
lipid-sensor domains, ALPS1 and 2, to highly curved membranes37.
Arf1GTP recruits AP-1 on membranes and releases it upon
GTP-hydrolysis and thus ArfGAP1 regulates AP-1 membrane binding. The
brain-specific ArfGAP1 is generated by a deletion/insertion modification
altering the ALPS2 motif31. Indeed, ubiquitous
ArfGAP1U and brain-specific ArfGAP1B were
enriched in Rabex-5 pulldowns from σ1B −/−
synaptosome extracts compared to wt extracts (Fig. 3A).
Therefore we tested for ArfGAP1 binding by σ1 adaptins. It has been
shown that the C-terminal ArfGAP1 domain of the ubiquitous isoform binds the
γ1 ‘ear’-domain30. This
interaction did not interfere with our analysis of σ1 isoform
binding, because in the Y3H-assays γ1 is expressed without its
C-terminal ‘ear’ domains (Fig.
3B). The ArfGAP1U C-terminal domain showed comparably
weak, whereas ArfGAP1B showed stronger binding towards
σ1A. As expected from the efficient isolation of
AP-1/σ1A by Rabex-5 in pulldown experiments (Fig.
3A), both ArfGAP1 C-terminal domains showed significantly lower
affinity towards σ1B (Fig. 3B). Thus, we
tested, whether C-terminal ArfGAP1 domains, like the Rabex-5 domain, isolate
more AP-1/σ1A out of σ1B −/−
than from wt synaptosomes. Both isolated AP-1, and specifically
ArfGAP1B isolated more AP-1/σ1A out of
σ1B −/− synaptosomes (Fig.
3C). This differential isolation would not be possible, if the
C-terminal ArfGAP1 domains would bind the γ1
‘ear’ domain with high affinity, because γ1
is present in both AP-1 complexes. Collectively, these data indicated the
formation of AP-1/ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 complexes.
Figure 3
Specificity of AP-1 - ArfGAP1 complex formation.
Experiments were performed with extracts from individual animals. (A)
Isolation of AP-1, Rabaptin-5α and ArfGAP1 isoforms from brain
extracts by Rabex-5 pulldowns. Representative Western blots and the
quantification (n = 3 each). (B) Y3H assay
for ArfGAP1-σ1 binding specificities. The GAP-domain (aa
1–136) and the two C-terminal domains of ubiquitous (aa
137–415) and brain-specific ArfGAP1 (137–403) were
tested. (C) ArfGAP1 isoforms pulldown AP-1 from wt and
σ1B −/− brains. Representative Western
blots and the quantification are shown (WB, br.
n = 4 , ubiq. n = 5).
Comparing the differences between ,ko‘ and wt (set to 100%) data
sets gave in all χ2 test
distributions ≤ 1 × 10−72
(>99% probability).
To test whether Rabex-5 binds ArfGAP1 proteins and whether such complexes are
able to bind AP-1 complexes, E. coli-expressed Rabex-5 was first tested
for isolating E. coli-expressed ArfGAP1 and then those complexes were
tested for AP-1 isolation out of brain extracts. Rabex-5 bound both ArfGAP1
proteins (Fig. 4A) and indeed,
Rabex-5/ArfGAP1U and Rabex-5/ArfGAP1B
complexes isolate more AP-1/σ1A from σ1B
−/− synaptosomes (Fig. 4A,B). Even
the difference between the ArfGAP1 isoforms appears to be reproducible in these
demanding consecutive pull-down experiments, but this is not statistically
significant (χ2-test distribution 0.8). Thus
tripartiteAP-1/ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 complexes can form and therefore we tested
whether the ArfGAP1 distribution on membranes depends on AP-1 complexes as does
the distribution of Rabex-5/Rab5 (Fig. 2C,D). We expressed
GFP-tagged ArfGAP1B and ArfGAP1U in wt,
σ1B −/− and in MEF cells lacking both AP-1
complexes (μ1A −/−, ΔAP-1)10 and determined their distribution on peripheral endosomes and
the peri-nuclear trans-Golgi-network (Figs 4C and S3).
AP-1 and ArfGAP1 localise to neighbouring domains with only limited
colocalisation in wt cells, best visible on the larger trans-Golgi network
(TGN), in line with transient interactions (Fig. S3). There was no qualitative difference
in the AP-1-dependence of their distributions on both compartments, but the
effect was more pronounced on the larger TGN. Over 85% of ArfGAP1 proteins bound
endosomes (Fig. S3). Indeed,
concentrations of ArfGAP1U and ArfGAP1B increased
in the absence of AP-1/σ1B compared to wt cells. They also decreased
in ΔAP-1 (μ1A −/−) cells lacking
both AP-1 complexes (Fig. 4C). The ArfGAP1B
distribution appears to depend more on the presence of AP-1 complexes than
ArfGAP1U, because its concentration fell below wt levels in
ΔAP-1 cells. The ArfGAP1U concentration decreased
only to wt levels, when both AP-1 complexes were absent. The second of the two
lipid sensor motifs of ArfGAP1U, which is modified in
ArfGAP1B, thus appears to mediate either a lipid-domain
dependent distribution38 or the association with a yet unknown
protein, making its concentration less AP-1-dependent. Nevertheless,
ArfGAP1U is also more concentrated, when AP-1/σ1B
is absent.
Figure 4
Formation of AP-1/ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 complexes.
(A,B)
In-vitro formation of tripartite AP-1/ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 complexes.
E. coli-expressed Rabex-5 was used to isolate E. coli
expressed ArfGAP1 brain and ubiquitous isoforms (left panel of
representative WB). These Rabex-5/ArfGAP1 complexes are able to isolate AP-1
complexes (anti-γ1 WB) from wt and σ1B
−/− synaptosome extracts, which demonstrates an
ArfGAP1 linker function. (B) Experiments were repeated with extracts
from 3 individual animals per genotype and their quantitation is shown (WB,
n = 3). The difference between ArfGAP1 isoforms
appears to reproduce the differences in σ1 isoform affinities
also in the consecutive pull-down experiments, however the
χ2 test gave p = 0.8
or 55% and more experiments would have to be done. (C) AP-1
dependence of the endosomal concentrations of ArfGAP1 isoforms.
ArfGAP1U (ubiquitous) and ArfGAP1B (brain)
were expressed as GFP-tagged proteins in the MEF cell lines
(wt = wild-type; σ1B
−/−;
ΔAP-1 = μ1A
−/− (see TGN concentrations in suppl.) (cells
n = 10) Box-plot diagram shows the median and the
values outside the 50% percentile as lines; black dot indicates an
experiment not included for the statistics. Comparing the significance of
the data sets between wt and the mutant cell lines by
χ2 tests gave
distributions ≤ 1 × 10−16
(>99%).
That ArfGAP1 performs this linker function was not expected, because
σ1B −/− endosomes contain less ArfGAP1 than
wt endosomes16. ArfGAP1 has low binding affinity towards low
curvature membranes39 and thus less ArfGAP1 might bind
constitutively to these enlarged endosomes7, whereas the
remaining ArfGAP1 pool is retained in these complexes with AP-1. Its
Arf1GTP GAP-activity is expected to be inhibited in this
tripartite endosomal complex37, preventing AP-1 membrane
dissociation. This explains the increase in AP-1/σ1A complexes bound
to σ1B −/− endosomes relative to the reduced
amounts in synapses and in the synaptic CCV pool16. There is also
a marked increase of ArfGAP1 proteins in the endocytic AP-2 CCV pool of
σ1B −/− synapses, indicating that their
redistribution between these two membrane pools might also be regulated16.
σ1B inhibits Rab5/Vps34-pathway activation by
σ1A
The formation of AP-1/σ1A/ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 complexes (Figs 2, 3, 4) and the
increase in endosomal Rabex-5 in σ1B −/−
synapses16 indicates that AP-1/σ1B binding to
Rabex-5 inhibits formation of the AP-1/σ1A/ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 complexes
and thus Rabex-5 recruitment to endosomes. As a consequence the Rab5/Vps34
pathway is less active in wt than in σ1B −/−
synapses. To test whether we can rescue the Vps34 hyperactivation on these
endosomes by AP-1/σ1B, we added wt cytosols to the density
centrifugation. Adding cytosolic proteins to the density gradient solutions
enables their interaction with membrane proteins during the entire
5 h long centrifugation, during which synaptic early endosomes are
separated from the majority of the endosomes (and normally cytosolic proteins)
found in fractions 1 and 2. Brain cytosol was prepared from isogenic wt animals
and MEF cytosol was prepared from an isogenic wt cell line. MEF cells contain
much less AP-1/σ1B and thus served as negative control7. 7 mg protein of σ1B −/−
brain extract was loaded on top of the optiprep density gradient (fraction 1). A
total of 1.4 mg cytosolic proteins were added to the density
gradient solutions before the density gradient was formed. Fraction 4, enriched
in synaptic early endosomes, contains 4% of the loaded σ1B
−/− brain proteins16. The amount of wt
cytosolic proteins added also corresponds to 4%
(280 μg/gradient fraction) of loaded σ1B
−/− proteins per gradient fraction. Vps34 activity and
PI-3-P formation was again analysed by EEA1 binding to the endosomal
fractions16. The increase in PI-3-P seen in σ1B
−/− endosomes was inhibited by the addition of wt brain
(Fig. 5), but not by wt MEF cytosol (not shown).
Collectively, these data strongly suggest that AP-1/σ1B inhibits
Vps34 activation by reducing the amount of Rabex-5 bound to these early
endosomes.
Figure 5
Rescue of the Rab5/Vps34-pathway activation in σ1B
−/− brain endosomes.
Inhibition of Vps34 activity in σ1B −/−
early (low-density; density gradient fraction 4) and late (high-density;
density gradient fraction 5) endosomes (as in Fig. 1)
by the addition of AP-1/σ1B cytosol to σ1B
−/− membranes. PI-3-P was determined by membrane
association of the PI-3-P binder EEA1. wt black circles, dotted line
(n = 4, s.d.) , σ1B
−/− red triangles, solid line
(n = 6; s.d.), σ1B
−/− plus AP-1/σ1B red circles, dotted
line (n = 4, s.d.). Gradient fraction 1 corresponds
to the load and it is not included. Representative western-blots of
fractions 4, (low-density, early endosomes) are shown. In all experiments wt
and σ1B −/− extracts were processed in
parallel and compared and thus EEA1 of wt fraction 4 (ld E) is shown twice.
χ2 test distributions for the data obtained
from σ1B −/− extracts for this fraction
is 1 × 10−10
(>99%).
Discussion
In synapses of AP-1/σ1B ‘knock-out’ mice SV
recycling is slower than in wt synapses, and large early endosomes are formed on
which the remaining second AP-1 complex, AP-1/σ1A, accumulates. This
indicates that AP-1 complexes take part in SV reformation from these endosomes716. Such a role would be in line with their protein sorting function
in CCV formation, but both, the mechanism and its function in SV recycling have yet
to be demonstrated. Here we reveal a novel molecular mechanism and a novel AP-1
function in protein sorting and transport, that is not linked to CCV formation.
AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B complexes bound to synaptic early
endosomes regulate their maturation into late endosomes, a process required for SV
protein degradation via endolysosomes. These late endosomes are MVB late
endosomes716 into which membrane and membrane-associated
proteins are targeted after they have been modified with ubiquitin40.Endosomal AP-1/σ1A activates the Rab5/Vps34-pathway essential for early
endosome maturation into MVB late endosomes via binding of ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 complexes
and it does so preferentially with the brain-specific isoform of ArfGAP1.
AP-1/σ1A - ArfGAP1 - Rabex-5 complex formation leads to more Rabex-5
bound to these endosomes16 and to the concentration of Rabex-5 and
Rab5 in AP-1-coated endosomal subdomains. ArfGAP1 stimulates Arf1GTP
hydrolysis, leading to membrane dissociation of AP-1. GAP-activity is stimulated by
conformational changes in the C-terminal domain37. It is thus
reasonable to assume that simultaneous binding of σ1A and Rabex-5 to the
C-terminal domain prevents activation of the GAP-activity, leading to stable
AP-1/σ1A membrane binding. This would explain why endosomes of
σ1B −/− synapses contain more
AP-1/σ1A complexes than wt endosomes16.
AP-1/σ1B interferes with formation of this stable complex by binding
Rabex-5 directly (Figs 2,3 and 4). Early endosomes from wt cells contain less Rabex-5 and less
AP-1/σ1A complexes than σ1B −/−
early endosomes16 (Fig. 6). Thus, without
trapping and inhibiting ArfGAP1, an AP-1/σ1B/Rabex-5 endosomal complex
is not stable. In vesicular protein sorting high affinity AP-1 membrane binding
requires PI-4-P, a membrane-bound cargo protein and Arf1GTP. The
instability can be due to low membrane binding affinity of this bipartite complex
and to the Arf1GTP inactivation by ArfGAP1. Importantly,
σ1B −/− endosomes contain less ArfGAP1 than wt
endosomes16 and thus ArfGAP1 might be limiting for
Arf1GTP activation, but regulatory protein modifications might be
involved as well (see also below).
Figure 6
Model for the regulation of SV protein recycling versus SV protein
degradation via the multivesicular body late endosome (MVB) pathway by AP-1
complexes AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B.
The Rab5/Vps34-dependent MVB pathway is activated by the ArfGAP1-mediated
recruitment of Rabex-5 into a stable AP-1/σ1A - ArfGAP1 complex.
Rabex-5 binding to σ1B prevents complex formation and thus
stable Rabex-5 recruitment onto endosomes. Post-translational modifications
like protein phosphorylation are likely involved in the differential
regulation of the pathway by both AP-1 complexes (see also discussion).
ArfGAP1 binding to the γ1 (subunit shown in red)
‘ear’-domain may support ArfGAP1 recruitment.
σ1A shown in yellow, σ1B in gold, μ1A in
dark grey and β1 in light grey.
Besides the ArfGAP1-σ1A interaction via the ArfGAP1 C-terminal domain,
this ArfGAP1 domain also binds the γ1
‘ear’-domain30. This γ1
globular domain is connected via a long flexible hinge domain to the N-terminal core
of γ1, which interacts with σ1 and β1 adaptins.
This interaction mode could therefore support ArfGAP1 recruitment to AP-1-coated
membranes (Fig. 6). The differential interaction of
AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B complexes with ArfGAP1/Rabex-5 (Figs 2B and 3A) indicates that the
ArfGAP1- γ1 ‘ear’ interaction is of comparably
lower affinity.Clathrin is not only involved in CCV formation, but also in the MVB pathway. EM
images of σ1B −/− synapses indicated an increase
of clathrin on early endosomes, which would be in line with the upregulation of the
MVB pathway7. However, this early endosomal clathrin pool is not
recruited by the early endosomal AP-1 complexes. The ESCRT-0 component Hrs recruits
these clathrin molecules and this interaction is essential for the formation of the
internal vesicles of MVB endosomes414243.Besides having GDP-GTP exchange activity, Rabex-5 is also a ubiquitin E3-ligase and
thus could also ubiquitinate AP-1/σ1A-bound cargo proteins. This would
send those proteins immediately into the Vps34-dependent MVB pathway, which should
increase the fidelity and speed of the transport of synaptic proteins into the
degradation pathway. Rabex-5 is not the only ubiquitin ligase in synapses and all
depend on the activation of the Rab5/Vps34 pathway for delivery of their specific
target proteins to MVB endosomes, and not only proteins bound to
AP-1/σ1A will be sent into this pathway44. By microscopy,
Vps34 and its product PI-3-P (FYVE-GFP staining) have been detected in dendrites,
but in axons and synapses only trace amounts of Vps34 were detected and PI-3-P was
not detected at all4546. This indicates that synaptic PI-3-P
turnover is especially fast and thus coupled to SV recycling or that the
Vps34/MVB-pathway has a highly selective function in synapses, transporting only a
limited subset of proteins into MVB endolysosomes for degradation. This is in line
with our data demonstrating that not all SV proteins are reduced in σ1B
−/− synapses16.We propose a model in which both AP-1 complexes regulate SV reformation as well as SV
protein degradation (Fig. 6). The next question we have to
answer is the regulation of the balance between SV protein recycling and endosomal
transport, and in which context SV protein degradation is induced. We did not
succeed in generating σ1-isoform specific antibodies and can only
estimate σ1A:σ1B ratios based on the 25% reduction in AP-1
CCV in σ1B −/− synapses16. A 4:1
ratio indicates that endosomal AP-1/σ1A regulates also the basal rate of
synaptic early endosome maturation, which can be upregulated by the inhibition of
σ1B-Rabex5 binding. All proteins identified to be involved are modified
by post-translational modifications, and it is likely that complex formation is
regulated by modification of one or more of these proteins. Rabex-5 is
phosphorylated at its C-terminus on Ser/Thr and Tyr residues (summarised on
PhosphoSitePlus), which might prevent binding by ArfGAP1 and thus its stable
endosome association. Also ArfGAP1 is modified by phosphorylation. LRRK2
(leucine-rich repeat kinase 2) activity, whose mutations are the most common cause
for Parkinson’s Disease, inhibits ArfGAP1 GAP-activity and ArfGAP1 is
able to stimulate LRRK2 activity4748. LRRK2 has also been shown to
be involved in the regulation of SV recycling as well as in late endosome
transport4950. Therefore LRRK2 is part of the regulatory
network, that coordinates protein and membrane traffic in synapses and is thus a
candidate kinase for taking part in the regulation of this AP-1 function. We are
currently working to identify protein modifications and the respective kinases
involved in the regulation of this pathway. In Alzheimer’s disease, like
in Parkinson’s disease, disturbed endosomal protein sorting contributes
to disease development, and the novel AP-1 function presented here might also play a
role in the development of this disease51.In σ1B −/− synapses only a subset of SV proteins
is degraded, presumably by their selective modification by E3-ligases, and thus the
protein composition of the SV formed should be altered. This should affect
properties such as their mobility and their targeting to and anchoring at active
zones, as well as their fusion kinetics with the plasma membrane525354. In contrast, the homologous AP-3 complex involved in SV
protein sorting during SV biogenesis facilitates direct fusion and degradation of
entire SV with Rab7 late endosomes and their degradation5556. This
pathway bypasses the Rab5 early endosomes and gives a hint why synapses contain more
Rab7 than Rab557. The degradation of only a subset of SV proteins in
σ1B −/− synapses indicates that the alteration
in the composition of the pool of SV proteins are part of an adaptation mechanism.
We will test how these changes in σ1B −/−
synapses affect SV properties and synapse functions using high resolution microscopy
and electrophysiology. The mouse ‘knock-out’ phenotype
demonstrates that the AP-1/σ1A - AP-1/σ1B competition in the
regulation of early endosome maturation and SV protein degradation is part of a
network regulating synaptic plasticity and synaptic silencing essential for the
regulation of learning, memory formation and memory recall.The AP-1/σ1A and AP-1/σ1B complexes regulate the maturation
of synaptic early endosomes into late, MVB endosomes. They do so by complex
formation with or without ArfGAP1 and Rabex-5. This novel function of the clathrin
AP-1 adaptor-protein complexes raises their role to one of the major coordinators of
protein export routes out of early endosomes.
Methods
Endosome isolation, western blotting, EM images, data analysis
The σ1B mouse ‘knock-out’ model has been
described in Glyvuk et al. 2010 and has a SV129/BL6 genetic background.
Animals used for tissue isolations were −/− animals and
isogenic +/+ animals derived from +/− matings. Animals are kept in
the central animal facility of the Faculty of Medicine of the
Georg-August-University Göttingen in accordance with the appropriate
guidelines. Animals were killed with CO2 and cervical dislocation in
accordance with the appropriate guidelines. Animal housing and the protocol for
killing the animals were approved by the
‘Niedersächsisches Landesamt für
Verbraucherschutz und Lebensmittelsicherheit’ (LAVES). Brains were
immediately isolated and frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at
−80 °C. Differential and
OptiPrepTM density centrifugations were done as established
and described in detail in Kratzke et al.16. Membrane
bound and soluble proteins were separated by differential centrifugation. Mouse
cortex was homogenised with a 1 mL glass homogeniser (10 strokes
loose, 10 tight plunger) and centrifuged at 1000 g, 10 min.
Supernatant (S1) is named cortex fraction. Centrifugation of S1 at
13000 g for 15 min yielded supernatant S13 and pellet
P13. Centrifugation of S13 at 100000 g for 45 min
yielded a supernatant S100 and a pellet P100. All steps were performed in
38 mM potassium aspartate, 38 mM potassium glutamate,
38 mM potassium gluconic acid, 20 mM MOPS,
5 mM reduced glutathione, 10 mM potassium carbonate,
0,5 mM magnesium carbonate, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM
EGTA, 1:5000 protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma, München, Ger),
10 nM Calyculin A, 1 mM Na3VO4, pH
7,1) at 4 °C. Continuous OptiPrep™
(Axis-Shield, Heidelberg, Ger) gradients were prepared using a Gradient Station
ip (BioComp Instruments, Fredericton, CA). Cortex fractions were prepared as
described above. Synaptosomes were lysed by 20 passages through a ball
homogeniser (Isobiotec, Heidelberg, Ger) with a clearance of
12 μm. This extract was layered over 0–30%
OptiPrep™ gradients, centrifuged at 65000 g for
5 h and six fractions were collected. Protein concentration was
determined according to the Bradford assay (BioRad, Munich, Ger). Fractions of
the velocity centrifugation were mixed with 60% OptiPrep™ to a final
concentration of 32.5% or greater, laid under a continuous 0–30%
OptiPrep™ gradient and centrifuged at 100000 g for
18 h. For the complementation experiment 7 mg of
σ1B −/− brain lysate was loaded on top of
the preformed gradient (fraction 1). 1.4 mg of wt cytosolic proteins
(100.000 × g supernatant) was mixed in the
gradient density buffers before the gradient was formed (fractions
2–6). The EEA1 antibody was sc-6414 (Santa Cruz, USA) and the Vps34
antibody was #3811 (Cell Signaling, USA). Secondary, HRP-conjugated antibodies
were from Dianova (Hamburg, Germany). Western blots were developed using
luminescence reagents (Millipore) and images were recorded using the Fuji LAS
1000 (Fujifilm Corp., Düsseldorf, Germany). The protein content in
each fraction is expressed in % of the total. Diagrams were generated using
DataGraph (Visual Data Tools, USA). Box-plot diagrams show the distribution of
all the data and their median and the values outside the 50% percentile as
lines. Data not included for the calculation of the median are indicated by a
black dot. Each data set is based on a minimum of 3 independently performed
experiments. The significance of the differences detected in experiments
comparing data from wt and σ1B −/− mice as
well as data obtained with different protein isoforms were verified by the
χ2 (chi square, Excel) test, because it is most
appropriate for smaller sample numbers. In addition, it allows to compare
‘knock-out’ with wt data sets, which were defined as
100% signal intensity in each experiment. χ2
distributions ≤ 0.004 indicate
a ≥ 95% probability
(m = 1) that two data sets are different. EM images of
the gradient fraction enriched in synaptic endosomes were prepared after
concentration of the gradient fractions from 400 μl to
50 μl and glutaraldehyde fixation and uranyl-actetate
staining following standard EM procedures.
Yeast-3-hybrid assays
γ1 N-terminal core domain (1–550 aa) encoding murine cDNA
was cloned into pGADT7 (GAL4 DNA-AD-fusion). Murine σ1-adaptin ORFs
were cloned in the MSC-II of pBridge and the indicated proteins and protein
domains to be tested for σ1-binding were cloned into the MSC-I site
(GAL4 DNA BD-fusion) of pBridge (InVitrogen, Karlsruhe, Germany). Plasmids were
transformed for growth and interaction assays into the yeast strain AH109.
Rabex-5 and ArfGAP1 pulldown
The Rabex-5 C-terminal aa396–491 domain and RabGAP5 C-terminal
aa578–760 encoding cDNAs were cloned into pGEX4T1 and expressed with
an N-terminal GST-tag. ArfGAP1 protein domains were expressed as N-terminal
6His-tagged fusions from pKM260 in E. coli BL21D3 strain
(0.5 mM IPTG 4 h, 37 °C). Cells
were lysed in PBS buffer (140 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM KCl,
6.5 mM NaHPO4, 1.5 mM
KH2PO4, 1 mM PMSF, pH 7.4;
30 min, Lysozyme 0.1%, Proteinase Inhibitors; sonicated
3 min at 4 °C). After centrifugation at
4,000 rpm, 25 min, 4 °C, pellet
was resuspended in PBS with 7 M Urea, sonicated 3 min,
4 °C to dissolve inclusion bodies. Bacterial lysates
were incubated at 4 °C overnight with GluthationeSepharose Beads (Amersham Bioscience) or with Ni-NTAagarose Beads (Qiagen).
Resins were harvested and washed with 30 volumes PBS buffer 5 times. Brains were
sliced in 1.5 mL PBS pH 7.4, proteinase inhibitors (Roche), and
homogenised (glass potter: 30 strokes loose and then tight piston). Homogenate
was centrifuged, 1000 g, 10 min, and supernatant (S1)
was decanted in a tube, the pellet (P1) was washed and centrifuged,
1000 g, 10 min; the supernatant (S2) was added to S1 and
centrifuged at 9200 g, 15 min. The supernatant (S3) was
discarded and the pellet (P3) resuspended in 1,5 mL and centrifuged:
10200 g, 15 min. Pellet (P10) was resuspended in
500–600 μL of buffer and homogenised with a
ball homogeniser: clearance 12 μm (Isobiotec,
Heidelberg, Germany), 40 passages. Homogenised synaptosomes were centrifuged,
25000 g, 20 min. Supernatants were incubated with
Glutathione- or nickel-beads respectively for 4 hours at RT. Beads
were harvested and washed with PBS 5 times and loaded on SDS-PAGE.
In-vivo distribution of proteins
MEF cell lines used have been established in the literature cited in the results.
Cells were fixed with 4% PFA, AP-1 was labelled with anti-γ1
antibody (BD 610386) and Rab5 (Abcam ab18211) or Rabex-5 or RabGAP5 (Proteintech
12735-1-AP, 20825-1-AP) antibodies. Subsequent steps of the
‘proximity-ligation-assay’ were done according to the
manufacturer instructions (Sigma). pEGFP-C2 ArfGAP1U and
ArfGAP1B plasmids were transiently transfected into MEF cell
lines. Cells were fixed in 4% PFA, AP-1 was labelled with anti-γ1
(BD biosciences) and secondary Alexa 633 antibodies (life technologies).
Confocal images were recorded with a Leica SP2 microscope (Leitz, Germany) and
quantified using the microscopes software package and ImageJ software (NIH,
USA).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Candiello, E. et al. AP-1/σ1A and
AP-1/σ1B adaptor-proteins differentially regulate neuronal early
endosome maturation via the Rab5/Vps34-pathway. Sci. Rep.
6, 29950; doi: 10.1038/srep29950 (2016).
Authors: Zhaolin Hua; Sergio Leal-Ortiz; Sarah M Foss; Clarissa L Waites; Craig C Garner; Susan M Voglmaier; Robert H Edwards Journal: Neuron Date: 2011-08-11 Impact factor: 17.173
Authors: A Simonsen; R Lippé; S Christoforidis; J M Gaullier; A Brech; J Callaghan; B H Toh; C Murphy; M Zerial; H Stenmark Journal: Nature Date: 1998-07-30 Impact factor: 49.962
Authors: Giovanni Piccoli; Steven B Condliffe; Matthias Bauer; Florian Giesert; Karsten Boldt; Silvia De Astis; Andrea Meixner; Hakan Sarioglu; Daniela M Vogt-Weisenhorn; Wolfgang Wurst; Christian Johannes Gloeckner; Michela Matteoli; Carlo Sala; Marius Ueffing Journal: J Neurosci Date: 2011-02-09 Impact factor: 6.167
Authors: Klodjan Stafa; Alzbeta Trancikova; Philip J Webber; Liliane Glauser; Andrew B West; Darren J Moore Journal: PLoS Genet Date: 2012-02-09 Impact factor: 5.917
Authors: Jesica Raingo; Mikhail Khvotchev; Pei Liu; Frederic Darios; Ying C Li; Denise M O Ramirez; Megumi Adachi; Philippe Lemieux; Katalin Toth; Bazbek Davletov; Ege T Kavalali Journal: Nat Neurosci Date: 2012-03-11 Impact factor: 24.884
Authors: Svetlana M Stamatovic; Allison M Johnson; Nikola Sladojevic; Richard F Keep; Anuska V Andjelkovic Journal: Ann N Y Acad Sci Date: 2017-04-17 Impact factor: 5.691