| Literature DB >> 29501720 |
Stephanie J Popa1, Sarah E Stewart1, Kevin Moreau2.
Abstract
Eukaryotic cells have a highly evolved system of protein secretion, and dysfunction in this pathway is associated with many diseases including cancer, infection, metabolic disease and neurological disorders. Most proteins are secreted using the conventional endoplasmic reticulum (ER)/Golgi network and as such, this pathway is well-characterised. However, several cytosolic proteins have now been documented as secreted by unconventional transport pathways. This review focuses on two of these proteins families: annexins and galectins. The extracellular functions of these proteins are well documented, as are associations of their perturbed secretion with several diseases. However, the mechanisms and regulation of their secretion remain poorly characterised, and are discussed in this review. This review is part of a Special Issues of SCDB on 'unconventional protein secretion' edited by Walter Nickel and Catherine Rabouille.Entities:
Keywords: Annexins; Galectins; Transport; Unconventional secretion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29501720 PMCID: PMC6565930 DOI: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2018.02.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 1084-9521 Impact factor: 7.727
Fig. 1Pathways for unconventional secretion of galectins and annexins. Direct translocation, which may be facilitated or unfacilitated as part of type I secretion, or facilitated by ABC transporters in type II secretion. Export via lysosomes or endosomes, an example of type III secretion. Export in EVs, either via exosomes or via microvesicles; export via exosomes might be an example of type III secretion. It is unclear where annexin found on the surface of EVs originates from. It could come from crossing a membrane in MVBs, and might be transferred from EVs back to the plasma membrane, as indicated by arrows marked with question marks. Brief summaries of the evidence for each protein family using that pathways is shown for annexin in green and for galectin in blue.
Evidence for regulation of galectin and annexin secretion.
| Regulator | Effect | Evidence | Result | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium ion influx | Increases galectin and annexin secretion | Calcium ionophore A23187 treatment of kidney cells | ↑ galectin-3 secretion | [ |
| Corticosteroid-induced calcium ion influx triggers annexin A1 cleavage | ↑ annexin A1 secretion | [ | ||
| Glutamate stimulation of NMDA receptor, inducing calcium ion influx | ↑ annexin A2 secretion | [ | ||
| p11 | Increases annexin A2 secretion | Interferon-γ treatment of lung epithelial cells | ↑ annexin A2 secretion | [ |
| Thrombin treatment of umbilical vein endothelial cells | ↑ annexin A2 secretion | [ | ||
| p11 knockdown in mouse endothelial cells | ↓ annexin A2 secretion | [ | ||
| Stress | Generally increases unconventional secretion | Reviewed by Merani et al. | ↑ galectin secretion | [ |
| Dengue viral infection of THP-1 cells | ↑ galectin-9 secretion | [ | ||
| Neutrophils externalise annexin A1 during extravasation | ↑ annexin A1 secretion | [ | ||
| Temperature stress of endothelial cells | ↑ annexin A2 secretion | [ | ||
| Caspase-1 | Potential stress-activated regulator of some unconventionally secreted proteins | Galectin-1, galectin-3 and annexin A2 identified in a mass-spectrometry-based screen to identify secreted proteins regulated by caspase-1 | [ | |
| Knockdown of caspase-1 in Human primary fibroblast | ↓ annexin A2 in supernatant | [ | ||
| P2X7R | Increases annexin secretion | P2X7R stimulation of macrophages | ↑ annexin A1, A2 and A4 secretion | [ |
| Serum | Increases galectin-3 secretion | Cells cultured in serum free medium | ↓ galectin-3 secretion | [ |
| Fetuin treatment of breast cancer cells | ↑ galectin-3 secretion | [ | ||
| PMA | Increases galectin-9 secretion | PMA treatment of Jurkat T cell line | ↑ galectin-9 on cell surface | [ |
| PMA treatment of THP-1 cells | ↑ galectin-9 in medium, exosomes | [ | ||