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Traffic of p24 Proteins and COPII Coat Composition Mutually Influence Membrane Scaffolding

Authors :
Silvere Pagant
Jennifer G. D’Arcangelo
Jonathan Crissman
Alenka Čopič
Erik L. Snapp
Elizabeth A. Miller
Catherine F. Latham
Source :
Current Biology. (10):1296-1305
Publisher :
Elsevier Ltd.

Abstract

Eukaryotic protein secretion requires efficient and accurate delivery of diverse secretory and membrane proteins. This process initiates in the endoplasmic reticulum, where vesicles are sculpted by the essential COPII coat. The Sec13p subunit of the COPII coat contributes to membrane scaffolding, which enforces curvature on the nascent vesicle. A requirement for Sec13p can be bypassed when traffic of lumenally oriented membrane proteins is abrogated. Here, we sought to further explore the impact of cargo proteins on vesicle formation. We show that efficient ER export of the p24 family of proteins is a major driver of the requirement for Sec13p. The scaffolding burden presented by the p24 complex is met in part by the cargo adaptor, Lst1p, which binds to a subset of cargo, including the p24 proteins. We propose that the scaffolding function of Lst1p is required to generate vesicles that can accommodate difficult cargo proteins that include large oligomeric assemblies and asymmetrically distributed membrane proteins. Vesicles that contain such cargoes are also more dependent on scaffolding by Sec13p and may serve as a model for large carrier formation in other systems.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09609822
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d1dc1cc7b3f9ba56071186ecf40ae93
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2015.03.029