VE-cadherin is an adhesion molecule critical to vascular barrier function and angiogenesis. VE-cadherin expression levels are regulated by p120 catenin, which prevents lysosomal degradation of cadherins by unknown mechanisms. To test whether the VE-cadherin cytoplasmic domain mediates endocytosis, and to elucidate the nature of the endocytic machinery involved, the VE-cadherin tail was fused to the interleukin (IL)-2 receptor (IL-2R) extracellular domain. Internalization assays demonstrated that the VE-cadherin tail dramatically increased endocytosis of the IL-2R in a clathrin-dependent manner. Interestingly, p120 inhibited VE-cadherin endocytosis via a mechanism that required direct interactions between p120 and the VE-cadherin cytoplasmic tail. However, p120 did not inhibit transferrin internalization, demonstrating that p120 selectively regulates cadherin internalization rather than globally inhibiting clathrin-dependent endocytosis. Finally, cell surface labeling experiments in cells expressing green fluorescent protein-tagged p120 indicated that the VE-cadherin-p120 complex dissociates upon internalization. These results support a model in which the VE-cadherin tail mediates interactions with clathrin-dependent endocytic machinery, and this endocytic processing is inhibited by p120 binding to the cadherin tail. These findings suggest a novel mechanism by which a cytoplasmic binding partner for a transmembrane receptor can serve as a selective plasma membrane retention signal, thereby modulating the availability of the protein for endo-lysosomal processing.
The capacity of DnaA protein to initiate DNA synthesis at the chromosomal origin is influenced profoundly by the tightly bound nucleotides ATP and ADP. Acidic phospholipids can catalyze the conversion of inactive ADP‐DnaA protein into the active ATP form. Proteolytic fragments of the nucleotide form of DnaA protein were examined to determine regions of the protein critical for functional interaction with membranes. A 35 kDa chymotryptic and 29 kDa tryptic fragment retained the tightly bound nucleotide. The fragments, whose amino‐termini are within three residues of each other, but differ at their carboxyl ends, showed strikingly different behavior when treated with acidic phospholipids. The larger chymotryptic fragment released the bound nucleotide in the presence of acidic, but not neutral phospholipids. In contrast, the smaller tryptic fragment was inert to both forms of phospholipids. Acidic membranes, but not those composed of neutral phospholipids, protect from tryptic digestion a small portion of the segment that constitutes the difference between the 29 and 35 kDa fragments. The resulting 30 kDa tryptic fragment, which possesses this protected region, interacts functionally with acidic membranes to release the bound effector nucleotide. Inasmuch as the anionic ganglioside GM1, a compound structurally dissimilar to acidic glycerophospholipids, efficiently releases the nucleotide from DnaA protein, an acidic surface associated with a hydrophobic environment is the characteristic of the membrane that appears crucial for regulatory interaction with DnaA protein.
ProP is a member of the major facilitator superfamily, a proton-osmolyte symporter, and an osmosensing transporter. ProP proteins share extended cytoplasmic carboxyl terminal domains (CTDs) implicated in osmosensing. The CTDs of the best characterized, group A ProP orthologs, terminate in sequences that form intermolecular, antiparallel a-helical coiled coils (e.g., ProPEc, from Escherichia coli). Group B orthologs lack that feature (e.g., ProPXc, from Xanthomonas campestris). ProPXc was expressed and characterized in E. coli to further elucidate the role of the coiled coil in osmosensing. The activity of ProPXc was a sigmoid function of the osmolality in cells and proteoliposomes. ProPEc and ProPXc attained similar activities at the same expression level in E. coli. ProPEc transports proline and glycine betaine with comparable high affinities at low osmolality. In contrast, proline weakly inhibited high-affinity glycine-betaine uptake via ProPXc. The K M for proline uptake via ProPEc increases dramatically with the osmolality. The K M for glycine-betaine uptake via ProPXc did not. Thus, ProPXc is an osmosensing transporter, and the C-terminal coiled coil is not essential for osmosensing. The role of CTD-membrane interaction in osmosensing was examined further. As for ProPEc, the ProPXc CTD co-sedimented with liposomes comprising E. coli phospholipid. Molecular dynamics simulations illustrated association of the monomeric ProPEc CTD with the membrane surface. Comparison with the available NMR structure for the homodimeric coiled coil formed by the ProPEc-CTD suggested that membrane association and homodimeric coiled-coil formation by that peptide are mutually exclusive. The membrane fluidity in liposomes comprising E. coli phospholipid decreased with increasing osmolality in the range relevant for ProP activation. These data support the proposal that ProP activates as cellular dehydration increases cytoplasmic cation concentration, releasing the CTD from the membrane surface. For group A orthologs, this also favors a-helical coiled-coil formation that stabilizes the transporter in an active form.
p0071 is an armadillo family protein related to both the adherens junction protein p120ctn and to the desmosomal proteins plakophilins 1-3. p0071 assembles into both adherens junctions and desmosomes, suggesting that this protein may regulate the balance between adherens junction and desmosome formation. Furthermore, this subfamily of proteins may also regulate cell functions directly influenced by intercellular junctions, including the strength of cell adhesion and the ability of cells to migrate. These possibilities were tested by expressing exogenous p0071 in A431 epithelial cells and monitoring the effects on adhesive junction assembly in comparison to other closely related armadillo family proteins. In this model system, p0071 specifically enhanced adherens junction assembly but dramatically compromised desmosome assembly, resulting in keratin filament retraction from regions of cell-cell contact. Protein interaction studies revealed that p0071 bound to the first 160 amino-terminal residues of desmoplakin and also interacted directly with plakoglobin, suggesting that p0071 may regulate desmosome assembly by controlling plakoglobin availability. Using an in vitro assay to measure the strength of cell-cell contacts, both plakophilin-1 and p120ctn were found to increase the strength of adhesion. Interestingly, p0071 expression caused no overall changes in adhesive strength, but dramatically inhibited the ability of A431 cells to close an in vitro wound. These results suggest that p120ctn/plakophilin family proteins interact with intercellular junction binding partners to differentially modulate the adhesive and migratory behavior of epithelial cells.
Osmosensing transporter ProP protects bacteria from osmotically induced dehydration by mediating the uptake of zwitterionic osmolytes. ProP activity is a sigmoidal function of the osmolality. ProP orthologues share an extended, cytoplasmic C-terminal domain. Orthologues with and without a C-terminal, α-helical coiled-coil domain respond similarly to the osmolality. ProP concentrates at the poles and septa of Escherichia coli cells in a cardiolipin (CL)-dependent manner. The roles of phospholipids and the C-terminal domain in subcellular localization of ProP were explored. Liposome association of peptides representing the C-terminal domains of ProP orthologues and variants in vitro was compared with subcellular localization of the corresponding orthologues and variants in vivo. In the absence of coiled-coil formation, the C-terminal domain bound liposomes and ProP concentrated at the cell poles in a CL-independent manner. The presence of the coiled-coil replaced those phenomena with CL-dependent binding and localization. The effects of amino acid replacements on lipid association of the C-terminal peptide fully recapitulated their effects on the subcellular localization of ProP. These data suggest that polar localization of ProP results from association of its C-terminal domain with the anionic lipid-enriched membrane at the cell poles. The coiled-coil domain present on only some orthologues renders that phenomenon CL-dependent.
Osmosensing by transporter ProP is modulated by its cardiolipin (CL)-dependent concentration at the poles of Escherichia coli cells. Other contributors to this phenomenon were sought with the BACterial Two-Hybrid System (BACTH). The BACTH-tagged variants T18-ProP and T25-ProP retained ProP function and localization. Their interaction confirmed the ProP homo-dimerization previously established by protein crosslinking. YdhP, YjbJ and ClsA were prominent among the putative ProP interactors identified by the BACTH system. The functions of YdhP and YjbJ are unknown, although YjbJ is an abundant, osmotically induced, soluble protein. ClsA (CL Synthase A) had been shown to determine ProP localization by mediating CL synthesis. Unlike a deletion of clsA, deletion of ydhP or yjbJ had no effect on ProP localization or function. All three proteins were concentrated at the cell poles, but only ClsA localization was CL-dependent. ClsA was shown to be N-terminally processed and membrane-anchored, with dual, cytoplasmic, catalytic domains. Active site amino acid replacements (H224A plus H404A) inactivated ClsA and compromised ProP localization. YdhP and YjbJ may be ClsA effectors, and interactions of YdhP, YjbJ and ClsA with ProP may reflect their colocalization at the cell poles. Targeted CL synthesis may contribute to the polar localization of CL, ClsA and ProP.
The capacity of DnaA protein to initiate DNA synthesis at the chromosomal origin is influenced profoundly by the tightly bound nucleotides ATP and ADP. Acidic phospholipids can catalyze the conversion of inactive ADP‐DnaK protein into the active ATP form. Proteolytic fragments of the nucleotide form of DnaA protein were examined to determine regions of the protein critical for functional interaction with membranes. A 35 kDa chymotryptic and 29 kDa tryptic fragment retained the tightly bound nucleotide. The fragments, whose amino‐termini are within three residues of each other, but differ at their carboxyl ends, showed strikingly different behavior when treated with acidic phospholipids. The larger chymotryptic fragment released the bound nucleotide in the presence of acidic, but not neutral phospholipids. In contrast, the smaller tryptic fragment was inert to both forms of phospholipids. Acidic membranes, but not those composed of neutral phospholipids, protect from tryptic digestion a small portion of the segment that constitutes the difference between the 29 and 35 kDa fragments. The resulting 30 kDa tryptic fragment, which possesses this protected region, interacts functionally with acidic membranes to release the bound effector nucleotide. Inasmuch as the anionic ganglioside GM1, a compound structurally dissimilar to acidic glycerophospholipids, efficiently releases the nucleotide from DnaA protein, an acidic surface associated with a hydrophobic environment is the characteristic of the membrane that appears crucial for regulatory interaction with DnaA protein.
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