Abstract
Clathrins are cytoplasmic proteins that play essential roles in endocytosis and other membrane traffic pathways. Upon recruitment to intracellular membranes, the canonical clathrin triskelion assembles into a polyhedral protein coat that facilitates vesicle formation and captures cargo molecules for transport. The triskelion is formed by trimerization of three clathrin heavy-chain subunits. Most vertebrates have two isoforms of clathrin heavy chains, CHC17 and CHC22, generating two clathrins with distinct cellular functions. CHC17 forms vesicles at the plasma membrane for receptor-mediated endocytosis and at the trans-Golgi network for organelle biogenesis. CHC22 plays a key role in intracellular targeting of the insulin-regulated glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4), accumulates at the site of GLUT4 sequestration during insulin resistance, and has also been implicated in neuronal development. Here, we demonstrate that CHC22 and CHC17 share morphological features, in that CHC22 forms a triskelion and latticed vesicle coats. However, cellular CHC22-coated vesicles were distinct from those formed by CHC17. The CHC22 coat was more stable to pH change and was not removed by the enzyme complex that disassembles the CHC17 coat. Moreover, the two clathrins were differentially recruited to membranes by adaptors, and CHC22 did not support vesicle formation or transferrin endocytosis at the plasma membrane in the presence or absence of CHC17. Our findings provide biochemical evidence for separate regulation and distinct functional niches for CHC17 and CHC22 in human cells. Furthermore, the greater stability of the CHC22 coat relative to the CHC17 coat may be relevant to its excessive accumulation with GLUT4 during insulin resistance.
Highlights
Clathrins are cytoplasmic proteins that play essential roles in endocytosis and other membrane traffic pathways
Functional studies indicate that CHC22 and CHC17 operate in separate membrane traffic pathways in formation of the human glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) storage compartment [7], and the two isoforms are separately immunoprecipitated from cell lysate [6]
CHC22 was implicated as a component of CHC17-coated vesicles by proteomics experiments, which showed that CHC22 was depleted from clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs) preparations following siRNA-mediated down-regulation of CHC17 [16]
Summary
Clathrins are cytoplasmic proteins that play essential roles in endocytosis and other membrane traffic pathways. Upon recruitment to intracellular membranes, the canonical clathrin triskelion assembles into a polyhedral protein coat that facilitates vesicle formation and captures cargo molecules for transport. Clathrin is a triskelion-shaped (three-legged) protein that is recruited by adaptor molecules to cellular membranes where it self-assembles into a latticed coat, driving membrane bud formation. Mice have a similar insulin response leading to GLUT4 translocation in muscle and fat, CHC22 clathrin participation is a feature of human GSC formation that is absent from murine models. We demonstrate that CHC22 and CHC17 form segregated coated vesicles and that regulation of their membrane recruitment and disassembly, as well as uncoating, is distinct. Fundamental biochemical differences underlie the non-redundant functions of the two clathrins These differences are relevant to CHC22 function in human health and disease, and could account for some of the documented differences in human and murine glucose metabolism noted from mouse models [14, 15]
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