MODULE 6: protein trafficking Flashcards
1
Q
COP-II dependent vesicular transport (5 stages)
A
STAGE 1: PRIMING
- sec12 (nuclear exchange factor) recognises inactive form of sar1 (GDP, sar1 = GTPase)
- sec12 recruits and activates sar1 (GTP)
- activated sar1 undergoes conformational change such that hydrophobic N-terminus associates with membrane (this defines specificity of where process will occur)
STAGE 2: COAT ASSEMBLY
- active sar1-GTP is bound to ER membrane
- recruits Sec23/24 subcomplex
- sec23/24 captures different cargo types
- sec13/31 recuited to stabilise polymerisation and budding
- COP-II vesicle pinches off and is released from membrane
STAGE 3: COAT DISASSEMBLY
- ** coat is recycled
- ** dense coat prevents recognition by other machinery
- ** coat is stable and requires active process to be removed
- sec23 promotes hydrolysis GTP on sar1 to GDP
- energy from hydrolysis causes conformational change that uncouples sar1-GDP from vesicle and disassembly of coat
- uncoated vesicle exposes membrane protein tails
STAGE 4: TRANSLOCATION + DOCKING
- kinesin moves vesicles towards plus end
- dyactin moves vesicles owards minus end
- vesicle is tethered via SNARE proteins to target membrane —> close proximity
- rab-GTP anchored to the vesicle engages a rab effector on the acceptor membrane
STAGE 5: FUSION
- NSF and SNAP molecules detect cis-SNARE complexes and use ATP to dissasemble them
- causes fusion of vesicle and membrane
- following fusion, NSF and a-SNAP bind to the SNARE complex for recycling
2
Q
protein sorting mechanisms
A
segregation:
- different cellular regions have different biochemistry (e.g. pH)
- machinery segregated according to biochemistry
- KDEL motif occurs on ER proteins
- binds in cis=Golgi network but not in rough ER —> even though receptor is in both organelles
- pH and post-translational modification prevent binding of KDEL to receptor in rough ER —> selective function
retrieval:
- to concentrate cargo, no active exclusion of transport out, but actively transported back to target organelle
- retrieval results in concentrated protein in organelle
- V-SNARES retrieved in this way
3
Q
transport pathways within trans-golgi network (3)
A
3 options once molecules reach TGN
- constitutive:
- no protein signal
- protein packaged and non-selectively secreted
- on going pathway
- albumin, - regulated
- molecules selectively segregated
- incoorperated into secretory vesicles
- release of vesicles is controlled - sorting into lysosomes
- destined for lysosomal system
- become part of soluble proteins which make up lysosomes
4
Q
TGN to lysosome pathway
A
- newly synthesised precursors recognised by enzymes as it moves through the golgi
- modified —> phosphorylated on 6th position
- modified proteins recognised by M6P receptor
- ligand binds to receptors
- recognised by clathrin coat and vesicle forms
- transport to lysosome + uncoating
- fusion with lysosome
- uncoupling and activation of precursor
- receptor incoorperated into retrograde transport —> back to TGN
5
Q
receptor-mediated endocytosis via clathrin-coated pits
A
for example: LDL (low density lipioprotein)
- N-terminus of LDLR binds apoprotein B in LDL
- —–> at pH=5, LDL particle disassociates from receptor and is trafficked back to cell surface
- —–> at pH=7, LDL binds to receptor
- C-terminus of LDLR binds adaptin complex
- sorting signal from cytoplasm recognised by adaptin complex
- clathrin-coat begins to assemble and vesicle forms
- vesicle pinches off, facilitated by dynamin
- —–> dynamin is a GTPase —> hydrolyses GTP to GDP + P(i) + energy
- —–> two dynamin rings twist to provide mechanical force to pinch off vesicle