Abstract

Membrane tethering is a highly regulated event occurring during the initial physical contact between membrane-bounded transport carriers and their target subcellular membrane compartments, thereby ensuring the spatiotemporal specificity of intracellular membrane trafficking. Although Rab-family small GTPases and specific Rab-interacting effectors, such as coiled-coil tethering proteins and multisubunit tethering complexes, are known to be involved in membrane tethering, how these protein components directly act upon the tethering event remains enigmatic. Here, using a chemically defined reconstitution system, we investigated the molecular basis of membrane tethering by comprehensively and quantitatively evaluating the intrinsic capacities of 10 representative human Rab-family proteins (Rab1a, -3a, -4a, -5a, -6a, -7a, -9a, -11a, -27a, and -33b) to physically tether two distinct membranes via homotypic and heterotypic Rab-Rab assembly. All of the Rabs tested, except Rab27a, specifically caused homotypic membrane tethering at physiologically relevant Rab densities on membrane surfaces (e.g. Rab/lipid molar ratios of 1:100-1:3,000). Notably, endosomal Rab5a retained its intrinsic potency to drive efficient homotypic tethering even at concentrations below the Rab/lipid ratio of 1:3,000. Comprehensive reconstitution experiments further uncovered that heterotypic combinations of human Rab-family isoforms, including Rab1a/6a, Rab1a/9a, and Rab1a/33b, can directly and selectively mediate membrane tethering. Rab1a and Rab9a in particular synergistically triggered very rapid and efficient membrane tethering reactions through their heterotypic trans-assembly on two opposing membranes. In conclusion, our findings establish that, in the physiological context, homotypic and heterotypic trans-assemblies of Rab-family small GTPases can provide the essential molecular machinery necessary to drive membrane tethering in eukaryotic endomembrane systems.

Highlights

  • Membrane tethering is a highly regulated event occurring during the initial physical contact between membrane-bounded transport carriers and their target subcellular membrane compartments, thereby ensuring the spatiotemporal specificity of intracellular membrane trafficking

  • A large body of earlier genetic and biochemical studies have reported that Rab (Ras-related in brain)-family small GTPases and specific sets of Rab-interacting proteins (i.e. Rab effectors), such as the coiled-coil tethering proteins and multisubunit tethering complexes, participate in the membrane tethering process [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11] that occurs prior to the membrane docking and fusion events mediated by soluble N-ethylmaleimide–sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE)2-family proteins and SNARE-interacting chaperones [12, 13], which are additional critical steps to confer fidelity to the membrane-trafficking process [12,13,14,15,16,17]

  • They all share a typical structural feature of the Rab small GTPase family and are known to be small monomeric proteins of around 25 kDa that consist of an N-terminal nonconserved flexible segment, a conserved globular Ras-superfamily GTPase domain (G-domain) in the middle, a C-terminal flexible hypervariable region (HVR), and one or two geranylgeranyl lipid anchors, which are post-translationally conjugated to the C terminus of the HVR (Fig. 1A and Fig. S1) [8, 31, 32]

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Summary

Results and discussion

From over 60 protein isoforms of Rab-family small GTPases in human cells, which constitute the largest branch of the Ras superfamily [29], we selected 10 representative human Rabfamily proteins (Rab1a, Rab3a, Rab4a, Rab5a, Rab6a, Rab7a, Rab9a, Rab11a, Rab27a, and Rab33b; Fig. 1 and Fig. S1) to assess intrinsic membrane tethering capacities in this reconstitution study. When comparing the two early endosomal Rab isoforms, Rab4a and Rab5a, there were over 20and 300-fold differences in the average particle size and total area of particles, respectively (Table 1) These quantitative imaging data further establish that there is a wide diversity in the intrinsic tethering potency among the human Rab-family proteins (Fig. 4 and Table 1), even though all of the Rab isoforms share the conserved Ras-superfamily GTPase domain as a major portion in their amino acid sequences (Fig. 1A and Fig. S1) and exhibit comparable GTP hydrolysis activities (Fig. 2A). Particle sizes of the Rab-induced liposome clusters observed in fluorescence microscopic images were quantitatively measured using ImageJ2 software

Total area of particlesa
Conclusions
Protein expression and purification
GTPase activity assay
Liposome preparation
Liposome turbidity assay
Fluorescence microscopy
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