2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043043
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C. elegans BLOC-1 Functions in Trafficking to Lysosome-Related Gut Granules

Abstract: The human disease Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome results from defective biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles (LROs) and can be caused by mutations in subunits of the BLOC-1 complex. Here we show that C. elegans glo-2 and snpn-1, despite relatively low levels of amino acid identity, encode Pallidin and Snapin BLOC-1 subunit homologues, respectively. BLOC-1 subunit interactions involving Pallidin and Snapin were conserved for GLO-2 and SNPN-1. Mutations in glo-2 and snpn-1,or RNAi targeting 5 other BLOC-1 subuni… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(43 citation statements)
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References 92 publications
(162 reference statements)
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“…Perhaps BORC is more important than BLOC-1 or both complexes have partly overlapping functions in supporting viability. C. elegans Snapin mutants are viable but exhibit defects in the biogenesis of gut granules (a type of LRO) (Hermann et al, 2012) and the synaptic vesicle cycle (Yu et al, 2013). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Perhaps BORC is more important than BLOC-1 or both complexes have partly overlapping functions in supporting viability. C. elegans Snapin mutants are viable but exhibit defects in the biogenesis of gut granules (a type of LRO) (Hermann et al, 2012) and the synaptic vesicle cycle (Yu et al, 2013). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One possible sorting complex is the biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles complex-1 (BLOC-1), which is a known regulator of intracellular trafficking to lysosome-related organelles in mammals, Drosophila, and C. elegans (39 -41). ATP7A is known to supply copper to melanosomes in a BLOC-1-dependent manner in mammalian cells, and BLOC-1 subunits are also required for the proper trafficking of gut granule cargo in worms (39,42). Given that CUA-1.1 localizes to gut granules and that ATP7A localizes to melanosomes in response to elevated levels of copper, redistribution of the copper exporter may require the BLOC-1 complex and related sorting proteins in metazoans.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…glo-2 encodes a pallidin/HSP-9 homologue, which is a subunit of the BLOC-1 complex (Hermann et al, 2012; PMID 22916203). GLO-2::GFP driven by the own promoter was expressed in the intestinal cells and localized in the cytoplasm.…”
Section: Endocytosis: Screens and Assaysmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mutations in the components of these complexes are associated with Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome (Cullinane et al, 2011; PMID 21665000; Huizing et al, 2008; PMID 18544035; Sitaram et al, 2012; PMID 22718909). The C. elegans genome encodes 7 BLOC-1 subunits including GLO-2, BLOS-1, BLOS-2, BLOS-4, DSBN-1, MUTD-1, and SNPN-1, but seems to lack a BLOS-3 homolog (Hermann et al, 2012; PMID 22916203). In yeast two-hybrid assay, GLO-2 interacts with itself, BLOS-1 and BLOS-4 while SNPN-1 interacts with DSBN-1, suggesting that BLOC-1 components form complexes in C. elegans as they do in other species (Hermann et al, 2012; PMID 22916203).…”
Section: Endocytosis: Screens and Assaysmentioning
confidence: 99%