Abstract

Endosomal coats incorporate membrane-binding subunits such as sorting nexin (SNX) proteins. The Saccharomyces cerevisiae SNX-BAR paralogs Vin1 and Vps5 are respective subunits of the endosomal VINE and retromer complexes whose dimerizing BAR domains are required for complex assembly and membrane association. However, a degree of promiscuity is predicted for yeast BAR-BAR pairings, and recent work has implicated the unstructured N-terminal domains of Vin1 and Vps5 in coat formation. Here, we map N-terminal signals in both SNX-BAR paralogs that contribute to the assembly and function of two distinct endosomal coats in vivo. Whereas Vin1 leverages a polybasic region and adjacent hydrophobic motif to bind Vrl1 and form VINE, the N-terminus of Vps5 interacts with the retromer subunit Vps29 at two sites, including a conserved hydrophobic pocket in Vps29 that engages other accessory proteins in humans. We also examined the sole isoform of Vps5 from the milk yeast Kluyveromyces lactis and found that ancestral yeasts may have used a nested N-terminal signal to form both VINE and retromer. Our results suggest that the specific assembly of Vps5-family SNX-BAR coats depends on inputs from unique N-terminal sequence features in addition to BAR domain coupling, expanding our understanding of endosomal coat biology.

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