| Literature DB >> 28036022 |
Catherine Staudt1, Emeline Puissant2, Marielle Boonen3.
Abstract
Lysosomes clear macromolecules, maintain nutrient andEntities:
Keywords: alternative receptor; lysosome; mannose 6-phosphate; sorting motif; trafficking; unconventional
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28036022 PMCID: PMC5297682 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18010047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Lysosomal transmembrane proteins with atypical sorting signals or transport routes to the lysosomes.
| Gene Symbol | Protein Name | Conventional Sorting Determinant(s) | Atypical Sorting Determinant(s) | Trafficking Mechanism(s) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cystinosin | GYDQL in C-ter tail | YFPQA in 3rd cytoplasmic loop | AP-3 -dependent intracellular/direct trafficking. | [ | |
| Vesicle-associated membrane protein 7 | N-ter longin domain (critical residues: Leu43/Tyr45) | [ | |||
| Lysosomal-associated transmembrane protein 5 | PY motifs (L/PPxY) + ubiquitin-interacting motif (LKVALPSYEE) | PY motifs recruits GGA3, which binds to the ubiquitin-interacting motif of LAPTM5 and mediates transport to endolysosomes. | [ | ||
| Lysosomal-associated transmembrane protein 4A | YXXφ motif in C-ter region | PY motifs in C-ter tail | Nedd4-dependent sorting to endolysosomes. | [ | |
| Lysosomal-associated transmembrane protein 4B | PY motifs in C-ter tail | Nedd4-dependent sorting to endolysosomes. | [ | ||
| Battenin | Atypical dileucine motif (EEEX(8)LI) in a cytoplasmic loop; MX9G in C-ter tail; C-ter CAAX farnesylation motif (C435QLS) | Mostly AP-1 and AP-3-mediated intracellular sorting. | [ | ||
| Transmembrane protein 106B | Extended dileucine motif (ENQLVALI) in the N-ter region; 4th and 5th | Mutation of the 4th and 5th | [ | ||
| G-protein coupled receptor 143 | Unconventional dileucine motif (SLLKGRQGIY) in the 3rd cytosolic loop; WE (tryptophan/Glutamic acid) motif in C-ter tail | [ | |||
| StAR-related lipid transfer protein 3/MLN64 (metastatic lymph node 64) | 14-3-3 binding motif (K392SASNP) in the START domain (C-ter); unidentified internalization motif in the N-ter cytosolic region or transmembrane domains | Indirect trafficking via PM. | [ | ||
| E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase RNF13 (Ring finger protein 13) | Luminal protease-associated domain | A114P substitution in the luminal protease-associated domain prevents sorting to endolysosomes. | [ | ||
| E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase RNF167 (Ring finger protein 167) | Luminal protease-associated domain | A104P and V98G substitutions in the luminal protease-associated domain prevent sorting to endolysosomes. | [ | ||
| Mucolipin-1 | ETERLL in N-ter domain; EEHSLL in C-ter domain | Cysteines 565–567 | ETERLL-mediated direct transport, likely mediated by AP-1. | [ | |
| CD63 antigen/LAMP3 | GYEVM in C-ter region | Direct and indirect transport. C-ter domain binds to AP-2, AP-3, and AP-4. | [ | ||
| Synaptotagmin-7 | Cysteines 35, 38 and 41 close to and in the transmembrane domain | Palmitoylation-dependent piggybacking on CD63. | [ | ||
| ATP-binding cassette subfamily B member 9 | Extended N-ter domain (TMD0) which contains 5 transmembrane helices | Clathrin-dependent internalization. | [ | ||
| ATP-binding cassette subfamily B member 9 | TMD0, composed of four transmembrane helices | [ | |||
| ATP-binding cassette subfamily D member 4 | Possibly transmembrane domains 2 and 5 | Clathrin-dependent internalization. Piggybacking on LMBD1, which uses a Yxxφ sorting signal. | [ | ||
| Lysosome-associated membrane glycoprotein 1 | C-ter GYQTI | AP-1- and AP-3-dependent direct sorting. AP-2-dependent internalization. | [ | ||
| Lysosome-associated membrane glycoprotein 2 | C-ter YEQF | AP-1-and AP-3-dependent direct sorting. AP-2-dependent internalization. Binds to AP-4. Sorted in vesicles positive for hVps41 and VAMP7, negative for CI-MPR, AP-1 and clathrin. | [ | ||
| 4F2hc/LAT1 | Piggybacking on LAPTM4b. | [ |
Alternatives to the mannose 6-phosphate receptors.
| Gene Name | Protein Name | Endosomal Sorting Motif(s) | Endosomal Sorting Mechanism(s) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sortilin | YXXφ (YSVL) and dileucine (DDSDEDLI) signals in C-ter region | Direct route: GGA-mediated (dileucine); AP-1-mediated (YXXφ). | [ | |
| LIMP2 | Dileucine signal (DERAPLI) in C-ter region | Direct route: AP-1 and AP-3-mediated via the dileucine motif. | [ | |
| LDL (low-density lipoprotein) receptor | NPXY signal (NPVY) in the C-ter tail | Indirect route: NPXY- and ARH-dependent internalization. | [ | |
| LDL receptor-related protein 1 | YXXφ (YATL), NPXY (NPTY and NPVY), dileucine (DDVGGLL and DEKRELL) signals in C-ter region | Indirect route: mediated by YXXφ and dileucine motifs closest to the C-ter end. Minor involvement of the other signals. Binding to AP-2 and clathrin reported. | [ | |
| Megalin/low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 2 | NPXY signals in the C-ter region | Indirect route: NPXY-dependent internalization. Proximal NPXY binds to ARH; distal NPXY binds to Dab2. | [ | |
| Seizure 6-like protein 2/Brain Specific Receptor-like Protein A (BSRP-A) | YXXφ (YSPI) and NPXY (NPLY) signals in the C-ter region | Direct route: likely YXXφ -mediated; SEZ6L2 detected in AP-1 positive clathrin-coated vesicles. | [ | |
| Mannose receptor | FENTLY in the C-ter domain | Indirect route: Transmembrane domain and FENTLY-dependent internalization. | [ |
Figure 1Structure and lysosomal cargo(es) of Man-6-P-alternative receptors. These receptors are mostly type I transmembrane proteins, with the exception of LIMP2, which is type III transmembrane protein. Luminal domains/repeats, and known cytosolic sorting signals are indicated on the scheme. The lysosomal proteins that bind to these receptors are listed in the grey boxes. CTSB: cathepsin B; CTSD: cathepsin D; CTSH: cathepsin H; GLA: α-galactosidase; GBA: β-glucocerebrosidase; PSAP: prosaposin; SMPD1, acid sphingomyelinase; GM2A: Ganglioside GM2 activator protein. The mannose receptor recognizes many acid hydrolases that bear terminal mannose or N-acetyl-d-glucosamine on their N-linked glycans. All three members of the LDLR family (LDLR, LRP1 and LRP2/Megalin) contain three types of domains in their N-terminal regions: β-propeller, EGF-like repeats and LDLR repeats. The latter are often involved in ligand binding. However, LRP1 binds to cathepsin D (CTSD) through amino acids 349–394 of its β-chain (last 85 kDa of the protein), i.e., a region that contains EGF-like repeats [108]. LIMP2 and β-glucocerebrosidase associate via several hydrophobic helical interfaces located on both proteins [109]. The cysteine-rich domain of sortilin has been involved in binding to several non-lysosomal ligands [110], whereas both the cysteine-rich domain and C-type lectin-like domains 4 and 5 of the mannose receptor serve as ligand binding sites [106]. SEZ6L2 contains Cub domains, which are known to mediate protein–protein interactions.
Figure 2Sorting pathways to the endolysosomes. Newly synthesized lysosomal proteins are transported to the Golgi apparatus from where they reach the endosomes and, subsequently the lysosomes. One of the main transport pathways followed by these proteins is a direct route from the TGN to the endosomes (1). The lysosomal transmembrane proteins and acid hydrolase receptors (MPRs, sortilin, SEZ6L2) that are bound to their ligands are packaged at the TGN in clathrin-coated carriers that travel toward the endosomes. This packaging is driven by the binding of typical cytosolic tyrosine- or dileucine-based sorting signals, or of atypical motifs, to clathrin adaptor proteins (directly or through some other proteins). Alternatively, some transmembrane proteins (including LAMP1 and LAMP2) can be transported directly from the TGN to the endosomes in non-clathrin-coated vesicles (“LAMP carriers”) that are positive for hVps41 and VAMP7 (2). Lysosomal proteins that are not packaged in transport vesicles at the TGN, and escape to the cell surface as a consequence, can be recaptured by clathrin-mediated internalization, which is also based on the recognition of cytosolic sorting motifs by PM clathrin adaptor proteins (3). In addition, LAMP3 has been found to enter the endolysosomal system by caveolin-mediated internalization (4). Of note, some lysosomal proteins may piggyback on others to enter some of these pathways (as indicated in Table 1). The cells can also acquire some lysosomal proteins from other cells, e.g., through the capture of microvesicles by clathrin-dependent and -independent mechanisms (5) or subsequently to the transfer of exogenous lysosomes through nanotube-like structures tunneling between some cells (6). Lastly, some proportion of lysosomal proteins could, hypothetically, bypass the Golgi apparatus to reach endolysosomes or autophagosomes (which could then fuse with lysosomes) directly from the ER, or after sorting from the ER to the PM and subsequent internalization from this site (7).