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Recently, studies in animal models demonstrate potential roles for clathrin and AP1 in apical protein sorting in epithelial tissue. However, the precise functions of these proteins in apical protein transport remain unclear. Here, we reveal mistargeting of endogenous glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol‐anchored proteins (GPI‐APs) and soluble secretory proteins in Madin‐Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells...
Ceramides are bioactive lipids and precursors to sphingolipids. They have been shown to take part in a wide variety of different physiological processes in eukaryotic organisms and are thought to be toxic at high concentrations. Ceramide is synthesized by condensation of the sphingoid base sphinganine and a fatty acyl CoA by ceramide synthases, a family of enzymes that differ in their specificity...
Previous studies have shown that yeast glycosylphosphatidylinositol‐anchored proteins (GPI‐APs) and other secretory proteins are preferentially incorporated into distinct coat protein II (COPII) vesicle populations for their transport from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi apparatus, and that incorporation of yeast GPI‐APs into COPII vesicles requires specific lipid interactions. We compared the ER exit mechanism and segregation of GPI‐APs from other secretory proteins in mammalian and yeast cells. We find that, unlike yeast, ER‐to‐Golgi transport of GPI‐APs in mammalian cells does not depend on sphingolipid synthesis. Whereas ER exit of GPI‐APs is tightly dependent on Sar1 in mammalian cells, it is much less so in yeast. Furthermore, in mammalian cells, GPI‐APs and other secretory proteins are not segregated upon COPII vesicle formation, in contrast to the remarkable segregation seen in yeast. These findings suggest that GPI‐APs use different mechanisms to concentrate in COPII vesicles in the two organisms, and the difference might explain their propensity to segregate from other secretory proteins upon ER exit....
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the spindle position checkpoint ensures that cells do not exit mitosis until the mitotic spindle moves into the mother/bud neck and thus guarantees that each cell receives one nucleus [1–6]. Mitotic exit is controlled by the small G protein Tem1p. Tem1p and its GTPase activating protein (GAP) Bub2p/Bfa1p are located on the daughter-bound spindle pole body. The GEF Lte1p...
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