1993
DOI: 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1993.tb05701.x
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Rab9 functions in transport between late endosomes and the trans Golgi network.

Abstract: Rab proteins represent a large family of ras‐like GTPases that regulate distinct vesicular transport events at the level of membrane targeting and/or fusion. We report here the primary sequence, subcellular localization and functional activity of a new member of the rab protein family, rab9. The majority of rab9 appears to be located on the surface of late endosomes. Rab9, purified from Escherichia coli strains expressing this protein, could be prenylated in vitro in the presence of cytosolic proteins and gera… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

15
390
1
4

Year Published

1994
1994
2010
2010

Publication Types

Select...
7
3

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 514 publications
(410 citation statements)
references
References 41 publications
15
390
1
4
Order By: Relevance
“…In the present study, we show that in HeLa cells the OSBP homologue ORP1L localizes on late endocytic compartments and its distribution overlaps largely with those of Lamp-1, the small GTPase Rab7, a central regulator of late endosomal membrane trafficking events, and Rab9, a GTPase with a key role in the route from late endosomes to the trans-Golgi (Lombardi et al, 1993;Carroll et al, 2001). The finding that ORP1L overexpression induced clustering of LE/lysosomes prompted us to test whether ORP1L interacts with the late endosomal small GTPases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 51%
“…In the present study, we show that in HeLa cells the OSBP homologue ORP1L localizes on late endocytic compartments and its distribution overlaps largely with those of Lamp-1, the small GTPase Rab7, a central regulator of late endosomal membrane trafficking events, and Rab9, a GTPase with a key role in the route from late endosomes to the trans-Golgi (Lombardi et al, 1993;Carroll et al, 2001). The finding that ORP1L overexpression induced clustering of LE/lysosomes prompted us to test whether ORP1L interacts with the late endosomal small GTPases.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 51%
“…But it indicates that the acidic organelle where LF becomes competent to cross the membrane is a late endosomal compartment. The actual translocation of LF into the cytosol could take place in late endosomes themselves as well as in the trans Golgi compartment which is dynamically linked to late endosomes via a membrane trafficking pathway controlled by rab9 [29,30]. This is at variance from what was found before with diphtheria toxin, which is the best characterized protein toxin requiring a transmembrane pH gradient to translocate its catalytic subunit into the cell cytosol.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Brefeldin, a fungal toxin known to rapidly dissociate the Golgi complex (Orci et al, 1991) did not affect the morphology, size, or number of these structures (our unpublished results). The staining did not colocalize with clathrin-coated vesicles (Figure 1C), with the early endosomal protein EEA1 ( Figure 1D; Mu et al, 1995;Selak et al, 1999;Lawe et al, 2000), with the late endosomal protein rab9 (Lombardi et al, 1993; Figure 1E), with the peroxisome membrane protein PMP70 ( Figure 1F; Kamijo et al, 1990), with LAMP1 ( Figure 1G), a lysosome marker (Fukuda et al, 1988), or with caveolin (our unpublished results; Conrad et al, 1995;Song et al, 1995). Last, antibodies to ubiquitin ligases, cullin-1 (Kipreos et al, 1996;Lisztwan et al, 1998) and p19 Skp1 (Zhang et al, 1995;Bai et al, 1996;Connelly and Hieter, 1996), members of the SCF family of ubiquitin ligases (for Skp1, Cdc53/Cullin, F-box receptor; Feldman et al, 1997;Skowyra et al, 1997), did not colocalize with these structures either (our unpublished results).…”
Section: Gw182 Is Localized To Cytoplasmic Specklesmentioning
confidence: 95%