Abstract

Intracellular membrane tubules play a crucial role in diverse cellular processes, and their regulation is facilitated by Bin-Amphiphysin-Rvs (BAR) domain-containing proteins. This study investigates the roles of Drosophila ICA69 (dICA69) (an N-BAR protein) and Drosophila CIP4 (dCIP4) (an F-BAR protein), focusing on their impact on in vivo membrane tubule organization. In contrast to the prevailing models of BAR-domain protein function, we observed colocalization of endogenous dICA69 with dCIP4-induced tubules, indicating their potential recruitment for tubule formation and maintenance. Moreover, actin-regulatory proteins such as Wasp, SCAR, and Arp2/3 were recruited at the site of CIP4-induced tubule formation. An earlier study indicated that F-BAR proteins spontaneously segregate from the N-BAR domain proteins during membrane tubule formation. In contrast, our observation supports a model in which different BAR-domain family members can associate with the same tubule and cooperate to fine-tune the tubule width, possibly by recruiting actin modulators during the generation of tubules. Our data suggests that cooperative activities of distinct BAR-domain family proteins may determine the length and width of the membrane tubule in vivo.

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