Trafficking of Green Fluorescent Protein-Tagged SNARE Proteins in HSY Cells
2002; Oxford University Press; Volume: 132; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a003280
ISSN1756-2651
AutoresTaishin Takuma, Toshiya Arakawa, Minoru Okayama, Itaru Mizoguchi, Akihiko Tanimura, Yoshifumi Tajima,
Tópico(s)Microtubule and mitosis dynamics
ResumoSNARE proteins are widely accepted to be involved in the docking and fusion process of intracellular vesicle trafficking. VAMP-2, syntaxin-4, and SNAP-23 are plausible candidate SNARE proteins for non-neuronal exocytosis. Thus, we examined the localization, protein-protein interaction, and intracellular trafficking of these proteins by expressing them as green fluorescent protein (GFP)- and FLAG-tagged fusion proteins in various cells, including HSY cells, a human parotid epithelial cell line. GFP-VAMP-2 was expressed strongly in the Golgi area and weakly on the plasma membrane. Although GFP-SNAP-23 seemed to be expressed universally in the cytosol, the GFP signal was clearly seen on the plasma membrane, when soluble GFP-SNAP-23 was removed by treatment with saponin. GFP-syntaxin-4 was undetectable on the plasma membrane but was strongly expressed on unidentified unusually large vesicles. GFP-syntaxin-4 without its transmembrane domain was still incompletely soluble and observed as aggregates. When syntaxin-4 and munc18c were coexpressed, syntaxin-4 was translocated at least in part to the plasma membrane. The protein-protein interaction between syntaxin-4 and VAMP-2 with their transmembrane domains was markedly inhibited on coexpression of munc18c. These results suggest that munc18c plays an important role in the trafficking of syntaxin-4 to its proper destination by preventing premature interactions with other proteins, including SNARE proteins.
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