| Literature DB >> 31084567 |
Elizabeth Sztul1, Pei-Wen Chen2, James E Casanova3, Jacqueline Cherfils4, Joel B Dacks5, David G Lambright6, Fang-Jen S Lee7, Paul A Randazzo8, Lorraine C Santy9, Annette Schürmann10, Ilka Wilhelmi10, Marielle E Yohe11, Richard A Kahn12.
Abstract
Detailed structural, biochemical, cell biological, and genetic studies of any gene/protein are required to develop models of its actions in cells. Studying a protein family in the aggregate yields additional information, as one can include analyses of their coevolution, acquisition or loss of functionalities, structural pliability, and the emergence of shared or variations in molecular mechanisms. An even richer understanding of cell biology can be achieved through evaluating functionally linked protein families. In this review, we summarize current knowledge of three protein families: the ARF GTPases, the guanine nucleotide exchange factors (ARF GEFs) that activate them, and the GTPase-activating proteins (ARF GAPs) that have the ability to both propagate and terminate signaling. However, despite decades of scrutiny, our understanding of how these essential proteins function in cells remains fragmentary. We believe that the inherent complexity of ARF signaling and its regulation by GEFs and GAPs will require the concerted effort of many laboratories working together, ideally within a consortium to optimally pool information and resources. The collaborative study of these three functionally connected families (≥70 mammalian genes) will yield transformative insights into regulation of cell signaling.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31084567 PMCID: PMC6724607 DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E18-12-0820
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Cell ISSN: 1059-1524 Impact factor: 4.138
Human ARF family GTPases.
| GTPase | Localization | Function(s) | Interactors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Arf1 | Cytosol, Golgi | Recruitment of coat complexes, activation of PLD, PI kinases | COP-I, GGAs, MINTs, Cholera toxin, Arfaptin, MKLP1, ARF GEFs, ARF GAPs |
| 2 | Arf3 | Cytosol, Golgi | Recruitment of coat complexes, activation of PLD, PI kinases | COP-I, GGAs, MINTs, Cholera toxin, Arfaptin, MKLP1, ARF GEFs, ARF GAPs |
| 3 | Arf4 | Cytosol, Golgi, endosomes | COP-I, GGAs, MINTs, Cholera toxin, Arfaptin, MKLP1, ARF GEFs, ARF GAPs | |
| 4 | Arf5 | Cytosol, Golgi, endosomes | Recruitment of coat complexes, activation of PLD, PI kinases | COP-I, GGAs, MINTs, Cholera toxin, Arfaptin, MKLP1, ARF GEFs, ARF GAPs |
| 5 | Arf6 | PM, endosomes, RE, cortical actin | Cortical actin rearrangement, endocytosis, PLD activation | β-arrestin, POR1, PLD, Cytohesins, MKLP1, FilGAP |
| 6 | Arl1 | Golgi, TGN | Endosome–Golgi secretory traffic, LD formation | Arfaptin, MKLP1, PDEd, HRG4, Golgins, GRIP-domain proteins |
| 7 | Arl2 | Cytosol, mitochondria, centrosomes, basal bodies, cilia, RRs | Tubulin heterodimer assembly, mitochondrial fusion, Prenyl-protein traffic | TBCD/β-tubulin, TBCD, ELMOD1-3, BART/ARL2BP, PDEd, HRG4/UNC119 |
| 8 | Arl3 | Cytosol, centrosomes, cilia, mitotic spindle, midbody, Golgi | Cytokinesis, Prenyl- and Myr-protein traffic | PDE6δ, HRG4/UNC119, Golgins, ARL13B, BART/ARL2BP |
| 9 | Arl4a | Cytosol, nucleus, TGN, endosomes, PM | Endosome–Golgi traffic, actin remodeling, cell migration | ELMO, GCC185, Robo1, Cytohesin2 |
| 10 | Arl4c | Cytosol, nucleus, PM | Cholesterol traffic, filopodia, cell migration, tumorigenesis | α-Tubulin, filamin-A, Cytohesin2 |
| 11 | Arl4d | Cytosol, mitochondria, nucleus, PM, actin | Actin remodeling, neurite outgrowth | HP1, importin-α, Cytohesin2, |
| 12 | Arl5a | Nucleus | Endosome–Golgi traffic | HP1α, GARP, Ragulator |
| 13 | Arl5b | Nucleus | Endosome–Golgi traffic | HP1α, GARP, Ragulator |
| 14 | Arl5c | |||
| 15 | Arl6 | Cilia | BBSome, Sec61β | |
| 16 | Arl8a | Lysosomes, phagolysosomes | Lysosomal traffic and fusion | SKIP-kinesin1b, HOPS complex |
| 17 | Arl8b | Lysosomes, phagolysosomes | Lysosomal traffic and fusion | SKIP-kinesin1b, HOPS complex |
| 18 | Arl9 | |||
| 19 | Arl10 | Nuclei, mitochondria | ||
| 20 | Arl11 | p-ERK | ||
| 21 | Arl13a | |||
| 22 | Arl13b | Cilia, EE, CDRs, centrosomes | Regulation of ciliary formation/maintenance, axoneme, Hh signaling, EEs | ARL3, INPP5E, PDE6δ, tubulin, FIP5, UBC9, MYH9 |
| 23 | Arl14 | |||
| 24 | Arl15 | Cytosol, Golgi | Genetic links to adiponectin levels and type 2 diabetes | ASAP2 |
| 25 | Arl16 | Cytosol, mitochondria, nucleus, cilia | RIG-I | |
| 26 | Arfrp1 | Recruitment of Arl1 and Golgin-97/245 to | Sec7-1, Cytohesin | |
| 27 | Sar1a | ER | ||
| 28 | Sar1b | ER | ||
| 29 | Trim23 | Lysosomes, Golgi, autophagosomes | Ubiquitin ligase, viral infection, membrane trafficking | UBE2D2, TBK1, Cytohesin1 |
National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) gene names are listed, along with cellular localization, identified functions, and protein interactors. Abbreviations used include CDR, circular dorsal ruffles; EE, early endosomes; PLD, phospholipase D; PM, plasma membrane; RE, recycling endosomes; RRs, rods and rings. Additional information is included in Supplemental Table I.
Human ARF GAPs.
| GAP | Localization | Function(s) | Interactors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Arfgap1 | Golgi | ER protein retrieval | γ-Adaptin (AP-1), KDEL receptor/ERD2, p24 |
| 2 | Arfgap2 | Golgi | ||
| 3 | Arfgap3 | TGN, EEs | EE–LE transport of M6PR and EGFR | γ-COP (COPI), GGA1/2 |
| 4 | Acap1/CENTB1 | Rab11 REs | Integrin and TfnR recycling | β1-Integrin, TfnR, clathrin heavy chain |
| 5 | Acap2/CENTB2 | PM, phagocytic cup, ARF6 endosomes | Neurite outgrowth, FcγR-mediated phagocytosis | Rab35 |
| 6 | Acap3/CENTB5 | Neurite outgrowth, neuronal migration | ||
| 7 | Adap1/CENTA1 | Membrane ruffles, mitochondria, dendrites, synapse | Kif13b | |
| 8 | Adap2/CENTA2 | |||
| 9 | Agap1 | AP-3 endosomes | Endosome–lysosome transport | AP-3, Kif2A |
| 10 | Agap2/PIKE | FAs, Rab4/AP-1endosomes | Cell migration, neurite outgrowth, invasion, TfnR recycling | FAK, RACK1, Akt, Homer, AP-1 |
| 11 | Agap3 | Endosomes | ||
| 12 | Agfg1/HRB, RIP | Clathrin/AP-2/EPS15 vesicles | TfnR endocytosis, HIV-1 replication | Rev |
| 13 | Agfg2 | |||
| 14 | Arap1 | EEs, CDRs, podosomes | EGFR endocytosis, macropinocytosis, secretory lysosomes | CIN85, AP-3 |
| 15 | Arap2 | FAs, APPL EEs | FA turnover, SF formation, integrin endocytosis | RhoA, Arf6, APPL1 |
| 16 | Arap3 | Podosome-like adhesions | Cell migration, invasion, RhoGAP stimulation | Rap1, RhoGAP |
| 17 | Asap1 | PM, FAs, podosomes/invadopodia, CDRs | Cell migration, invasion, SF formation, integrin and EGFR recycling | FAK, Crk, CrkL, Src, cortactin, NM2A, PRKD2, CIN85, CDAP |
| 18 | Asap2 | Cell periphery, phagocytic cup | Cell migration, FcγR-mediated phagocytosis | Selenoprotein K |
| 19 | Asap3 | PM, CDRs | Cell migration, integrin recycling, invasion | Grb2 |
| 20 | Git1 | FAs, SNX27 endosomes, REs, EEs | Cell migration, invasion, EGFR traffic/degradation | PIX, Arf6, paxillin, MEK1, FAK, SNX6 |
| 21 | Git2 | PM, FAs | Cell migration, invasion, beta2-Adrenergic R down-regulation | Vav2, paxillin, GRKs |
| 22 | Smap1 | PM | TfnR endocytosis | Clathrin heavy chain |
| 23 | Smap2 | EE, TGN | EE–TGN transport | Clathrin heavy chain, CALM |
| 24 | ELMOD1 | Golgi, nuclear speckles, LDs | ||
| 25 | ELMOD2 | ER, mitochondria, LDs, centrosomes, RRs | Mitochondrial fusion | ARL2, other ARF family GTPases |
| 26 | ELMOD3 | PM, actin, lagging edge | ||
| 27 | RP2 | PM, microtubules, nucleus | Ciliary traffic | ARL3, UNC119, G protein β1 |
NCBI gene names are listed, along with cellular localization, identified functions, and protein interactors. Abbreviations used include CDR, circular dorsal ruffles; EE, early endosomes; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; FA, focal adhesions; LD, lipid droplets; LE, late endosomes; PM, plasma membrane; RE, recycling endosomes; RRs, rods and rings; SF, stress fibers. Additional information is included in Supplemental Table III.
FIGURE 1:Subcellular localization of the ARF family GTPases, ARF GEFs, and ARF GAPs. A schematic cell with organelles (in red) showing the localization of the GTPases (in light blue), GEFs (in purple), and GAPs (in green). More detailed information for these localizations is provided in references cited in the text.
Phenotypes of mice with mutations/deletions of ARF family GTPases.
| GTPase | Conventional knockout | Conditional knockout | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| ARF1 | Embryonically lethal (E5.5) | — | |
| ARF4 | |||
| ARF6 | Embryonically lethal (midgestation); smaller liver with progressive apoptosis; defective hepatic cord formation | — | |
| ARF6 | |||
| ARL3 | Early death (3 wk of age); abnormal development of renal, hepatic, and pancreatic epithelial tubule structures; abnormal epithelial cell proliferation and cyst formation; photoreceptor degeneration (at P14) | — | |
| ARL4 | Reduction of testis weight (30%) and sperm count (60%) without affecting fertility | — | |
| ARL6 (BBS3) | Development of BBS-associated phenotypes: retinal degeneration, male infertility, loss of sperm flagella, severe hydrocephalus, thinning of the cerebral cortex; reduced size of hippocampus and corpus striatum, reduced number and misshaping of ependymal cell cilia, increased body fat | — | |
| ARL13B(a GEF of ARL3) | Hennin (hnn) mutation (ENU-induced mutation) corresponding to Arl3 null allele:Embryonically lethal; at ED 9.5, open neural tube in the head, caudal spinal cord, and randomized heart looping; at ED 14, abnormal eyes and axial polydactylyNodal cilia half the normal length; abnormal structure of the axonemeSpecific disruption of the Sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling pathway | ||
| ARFRP1 | Embryonically lethal; apoptotic epiblast cells within ectoderm at ED 6.0 and 7.0Mistargeting of E-cadherin to intracellular compartments | ||
Indicated are the ARF and ARL proteins deleted either as whole-body knockout (conventional knockout) or in a cell-type or tissue-specific manner, including inducible deletions (conditional knockout). E, embryonic day; ENU, N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea; HGF, hepatocyte growth factor; P, postnatal day; VLDL, very low density lipoprotein.
FIGURE 2:Structural determinants of ARF association with membranes and interactors. ARFs have four regions that change conformation between GDP- and GTP-bound forms: the canonical switch 1 (in orange) and switch 2 (in magenta) that directly sense the nature of the bound nucleotide; the myristoylated N-terminal helix (in blue), which is autoinhibitory in ARF-GDP and binds the membrane in ARF-GTP; and the interswitch (in red) that functions as a push button to ensure allosteric communication between the membrane- and the nucleotide-binding sites. GEFs, GAPs, and effectors generally bind to switch 1, switch 2, and/or the interswitch by one domain (in light yellow) and carry other domains that bind to the membrane (in light blue). The membrane bilayer is denoted in gray.
Human ARF GEFs.
| GEF | Localization | Function(s) | Interactors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Arfgef1/BIG1 | TGN, sorting endosomes | Activation of Arf1/3, recruitment of AP1/AP3, myelination | Arl1, Arf1/3, ARF4/5 |
| 2 | Arfgef2/BIG2 | TGN, sorting endosomes | Activation of Arf1/3, recruitment of AP1/AP3 | Arl1, Arf1/3, ARF4/5 |
| 3 | Cyth1 | PM | Cell adhesion/migration, integrin regulation | GRASP/tamalin, CNKSR1-3, CASP, Arl4A, Arl4D, Arf6 |
| 4 | Cyth2/ARNO | PM, REs, Ruffles | Cell adhesion/migration, integrin regulation, actin remodeling, endosome traffic | GRASP/tamalin, CNKSR1-3, CASP, Arl4A, Arl4D, Arf6, paxillin, RLIP76, β-arrestin, pallidin |
| 5 | Cyth3/ARNO3/GRP1 | PM, (Glut4-positive) endosomes | Glut4 exocytosis, cell migration | GRASP/tamalin, CNKSR1-3, CASP, Arl4A, Arl4D, Arf6 |
| 6 | Cyth4 | |||
| 7 | GBF1 | Golgi | Membrane traffic at | p115, Rab1b, COG4, γ-COP, GGA1-3, ATLG, Gmh1 |
| 8 | Iqsec1/BRAG2/GEP100 | PM | Integrin endocytosis/cell adhesion regulation of AMPA receptor traffic | Calmodulin, MAP4K4, Arf5, Arf6 |
| 9 | Iqsec2/BRAG1 | PSDs | Regulation of AMPA receptor traffic | Calmodulin, PSD95, IRSp53, Arf6 |
| 10 | Iqsec3 | PSDs | Regulation of GABAergic synapse formation | Calmodulin, gephyrin, Arf6 |
| 11 | Psd/EFA6 | PM, tight junctions, axons, PSDs, endosomes | Tight junction formation, epithelial lumen formation | α-Actinin-1, 4, Arf6 |
| 12 | Psd2/EFA6C | |||
| 13 | Psd3/EFA6D | |||
| 14 | Psd4/EFA6B | PM, epithelial tight junctions | Tight junction formation, epithelial lumen formation | α-Actinin-1, 4, Arf6 |
| 15 | Fbox8 |
NCBI gene names are listed, along with cellular localization, identified functions, and protein interactors. Abbreviations used include PM, plasma membrane; PSD, postsynaptic densities, RE, recycling endosomes; TGN, trans-Golgi network. Additional information is included in Supplemental Table II.
FIGURE 3:Domain organization of ARF GEFs and ARF GAPs. A schematic of the domains present in each subfamily of the ARF GEFs (A) and ARF GAPs (B). The defining ARF GEF/Sec7 domain and the ARF GAP domain are aligned. Protein lengths are not drawn to scale. Abbreviations (in alphabetical order): A, ARF GAP lipid-packing sensor (ALPS); ANK, ankyrin repeat; BAR, Bin/Amphiphysin/Rvs; BoCCS, binder of coatomer, cargo, and SNARE; CALM BD, calm binding domain; CB, clathrin box; DCB, dimerization and cyclophilin binding; E/DLPPKP8, 8 repeats of this primary sequence (single letter code); F-BOX, cyclin F protein interaction motif; FG repeats, multiple copies of XXFG repeated; GLD, GTP binding protein–like domain; GRM, Glo3 regulatory motif; HDS(1-4), homology downstream of Sec7; HUS, homology upstream of Sec7; IQ, isoleucine/glutamine calmodulin-binding motif; PBS, Paxillin binding site; PH, pleckstrin homology; Pro-rich, proline rich; RA, Ras association; Rho GAP, Rho GTPase-activating protein; SAM, sterile α motif; SHD, Spa homology domain.
FIGURE 4:Evolution of the ARF family and its regulators. (A) The timing of the emergence of the relevant protein subfamilies is shown mapped on a simplified tree of eukaryotes. The polygons, circles, and squares denote the latest point by which the ARF GTPases, GAPs, and GEFs must have evolved, respectively, with the names of the subfamilies given to the right. The names of the eukaryotic supergroups are in italics, while the relevant “reconstructed ancestor” discussed in the text are in bold and noted by a dashed line. (B) Overlay of ARF1-5 evolution with that of the nine ARF GAP subfamilies that possess multiple paralogues. ARF evolution is depicted in black and Arf GAP in gray, with duplications at the base of Holozoa and Vertebrata. Relevant evolutionary transitions are illustrated by dashed lines.