| Literature DB >> 30404777 |
Raksha Ravikumar1, Nils Kalbfuß1, Delphine Gendre2, Alexander Steiner1, Melina Altmann3, Stefan Altmann3, Katarzyna Rybak1, Holger Edelmann1, Friederike Stephan1, Marko Lampe4, Eva Facher5, Gerhard Wanner6, Pascal Falter-Braun3,7, Rishikesh P Bhalerao2, Farhah F Assaad8.
Abstract
The trans-Golgi-network (TGN) has essential housekeeping functions in secretion, endocytosis and protein sorting, but also more specialized functions in plant development. How the robustness of basal TGN function is ensured while specialized functions are differentially regulated is poorly understood. Here, we investigate two key regulators of TGN structure and function, ECHIDNA and the Transport Protein Particle II (TRAPPII) tethering complex. An analysis of physical, network and genetic interactions suggests that two network communities are implicated in TGN function and that ECHIDNA and TRAPPII belong to distinct yet overlapping pathways. Whereas ECHIDNA and TRAPPII colocalized at the TGN in interphase cells, their localization diverged in dividing cells. Moreover, ECHIDNA and TRAPPII localization patterns were mutually independent. TGN structure, endocytosis and sorting decisions were differentially impacted in echidna and trappii mutants. Our analyses point to a partitioning of specialized TGN functions, with ECHIDNA being required for cell elongation and TRAPPII for cytokinesis. Two independent pathways able to compensate for each other might contribute to the robustness of TGN housekeeping functions and to the responsiveness and fine tuning of its specialized functions.Entities:
Keywords: Cytokinesis; ECHIDNA; Network interactions; Sorting; TGN; TRAPPII
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30404777 DOI: 10.1242/dev.169201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Development ISSN: 0950-1991 Impact factor: 6.868