| Literature DB >> 27589732 |
Christin Bissig1,2, Leila Rochin3, Guillaume van Niel4,5.
Abstract
In pigment cells, melanin synthesis takes place in specialized organelles, called melanosomes. The biogenesis and maturation of melanosomes is initiated by an unpigmented step that takes place prior to the initiation of melanin synthesis and leads to the formation of luminal fibrils deriving from the pigment cell-specific pre-melanosomal protein (PMEL). In the lumen of melanosomes, PMEL fibrils optimize sequestration and condensation of the pigment melanin. Interestingly, PMEL fibrils have been described to adopt a typical amyloid-like structure. In contrast to pathological amyloids often associated with neurodegenerative diseases, PMEL fibrils represent an emergent category of physiological amyloids due to their beneficial cellular functions. The formation of PMEL fibrils within melanosomes is tightly regulated by diverse mechanisms, such as PMEL traffic, cleavage and sorting. These mechanisms revealed increasing analogies between the formation of physiological PMEL fibrils and pathological amyloid fibrils. In this review we summarize the known mechanisms of PMEL fibrillation and discuss how the recent understanding of physiological PMEL amyloid formation may help to shed light on processes involved in pathological amyloid formation.Entities:
Keywords: PMEL; amyloid; apolipoprotein E; fibril formation; melanocyte; melanosome; pigmentation; secretases
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27589732 PMCID: PMC5037717 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17091438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic representation of melanosome biogenesis. The different stages of melanosomes are illustrated by electron microscopy pictures. Melanosome biogenesis is initiated in multivesicular endosomes, also called stage I melanosomes, where PMEL fibrils start to assemble. In stage II melanosomes, PMEL fibrils give the melanosomes their characteristic ellipsoidal shape and striated appearance. Both stage I and stage II melanosomes are unpigmented. Melanin starts to be produced in stage III melanosomes, to which melanin synthesizing enzymes, such as Tyrosinase or Tyrp1, are transported. Melanin is sequestered on PMEL fibrils, which become completely masked by melanin in stage IV melanosomes. In skin, mature stage IV melanosomes are transferred to keratinocytes (red arrow).
Figure 2Schematic representation of pre-melanosomal protein (PMEL) protein domain structure. Triangles and pentagons represent N- and O-linked glycosylations, respectively. PMEL cleavage sites and the involved proteases are indicated in red. PMEL amyloid fibril formation requires processing of the amyloidogenic Mα fragment into subfragments by still unknown proteases (indicated as ?). Red arrows illustrate proteolytic PMEL processing steps and black arrow represents amyloid formation.
Figure 3Model for pre-melanosomal protein (PMEL) fibril formation in stage I melanosomes. The amyloidogenic Mα fragment of PMEL is released into the lumen of stage I melanosomes by action of BACE2 (beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 2) protease. This cleavage also produces a C-Terminal Fragment (CTF) that is sequestered at the limiting membrane of stage I melanosomes by the endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) machinery, to be further cleaved by the presenilin 2 (PSEN2) of the γ-secretase complex in lysosomes. The Mα fragment is then loaded onto intraluminal vesicles (ILVs) in a process that requires the tetraspanin CD63 (cluster of differentiation 63) and apolipoprotein E (ApoE). ILVs have been proposed to act as nucleators for PMEL fibril formation. One may speculate that CD63 and ApoE cluster PMEL on ILVs, thus promoting its fibrillation. However, it remains to characterize the unknown mechanism and proteases (indicate as ?) involved in PMEL fibrillation.