Conformational Defects Slow Golgi Exit, Block Oligomerization, and Reduce Raft Affinity of Caveolin-1 Mutant Proteins
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) in Molecular Biology of the Cell
- Vol. 15 (10), 4556-4567
- https://doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e04-06-0480
Abstract
Caveolin-1, a structural protein of caveolae, is cleared unusually slowly from the Golgi apparatus during biosynthetic transport. Furthermore, several caveolin-1 mutant proteins accumulate in the Golgi apparatus. We examined this behavior further in this mutant study. Golgi accumulation probably resulted from loss of Golgi exit information, not exposure of cryptic retention signals, because several deletion mutants accumulated in the Golgi apparatus. Alterations throughout the protein caused Golgi accumulation. Thus, most probably acted indirectly, by affecting overall conformation, rather than by disrupting specific Golgi exit motifs. Consistent with this idea, almost all the Golgi-localized mutant proteins failed to oligomerize normally (even with an intact oligomerization domain), and they showed reduced raft affinity in an in vitro detergent-insolubility assay. A few mutant proteins formed unstable oligomers that migrated unusually slowly on blue native gels. Only one mutant protein, which lacked the first half of the N-terminal hydrophilic domain, accumulated in the Golgi apparatus despite normal oligomerization and raft association. These results suggested that transport of caveolin-1 through the Golgi apparatus is unusually difficult. The conformation of caveolin-1 may be optimized to overcome this difficulty, but remain very sensitive to mutation. Disrupting conformation can coordinately affect oligomerization, raft affinity, and Golgi exit of caveolin-1.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- A combination of three distinct trafficking signals mediates axonal targeting and presynaptic clustering of GAD65The Journal of cell biology, 2002
- Mechanism of caveolin filament assemblyProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002
- Caveolae Are Highly Immobile Plasma Membrane Microdomains, Which Are not Involved in Constitutive Endocytic TraffickingMolecular Biology of the Cell, 2002
- Small cargo proteins and large aggregates can traverse the Golgi by a common mechanism without leaving the lumen of cisternaeThe Journal of cell biology, 2001
- Peri-Golgi vesicles contain retrograde but not anterograde proteins consistent with the cisternal progression model of intra-Golgi transportThe Journal of cell biology, 2001
- The Debate about Transport in the Golgi—Two Sides of the Same Coin?Cell, 2000
- Glycosphingolipids Are Not Essential for Formation of Detergent-resistant Membrane Rafts in Melanoma CellsPublished by Elsevier ,1999
- Expression of Caveolin-1 Is Required for the Transport of Caveolin-2 to the Plasma MembraneJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1999
- Oligomerization of VIP21‐caveolin in vitro is stabilized by long chain fatty acylation or cholesterolFEBS Letters, 1996
- Caveolin, a protein component of caveolae membrane coatsCell, 1992