Abstract

Luminal calcium regulates vesicle transport early in the secretory pathway. In ER-to-Golgi transport, depletion of luminal calcium leads to significantly reduced transport and a buildup of budding and newly budded COPII vesicles and vesicle proteins. Effects of luminal calcium on transport may be mediated by cytoplasmic calcium sensors near ER exits sites (ERES). The penta-EF-hand (PEF) protein apoptosis-linked gene 2 (ALG-2) stabilizes sec31A at ER exit sites (ERES) and promotes the assembly of inner and outer shell COPII components. However, in vitro and intact cell approaches have not determined whether ALG-2 is a negative or positive regulator, or a regulator at all, under basal physiological conditions. ALG-2 interacts with another PEF protein, peflin, to form cytosolic heterodimers that dissociate in response to calcium. However, a biological function for peflin has not been demonstrated and whether peflin and the ALG-2/peflin interaction modulates transport has not been investigated. Using an intact, single cell, morphological assay for ER-to-Golgi transport in normal rat kidney (NRK) cells, we found that depletion of peflin using siRNA resulted in significantly faster transport of the membrane cargo VSV-G. Double depletion of peflin and ALG-2 blocked the increased transport resulting from peflin depletion, demonstrating a role for ALG-2 in the increased transport. Furthermore, peflin depletion caused increased targeting of ALG-2 to ERES and increased ALG-2/sec31A interactions, suggesting that peflin may normally inhibit transport by preventing ALG-2/sec31A interactions. This work identifies for the first time a clear steady state role for a PEF protein in ER-to-Golgi transport—peflin is a negative regulator of transport.

Highlights

  • The ER-to-Golgi interface is the busiest vesicle trafficking step, transporting up to one-third of all eukaryotic proteins

  • We took a different approach to investigating PEF protein function in ER-to-Golgi transport by investigating the role of peflin, a PEF family member that binds to apoptosis-linked gene 2 (ALG-2) and is presumed to regulate its activity

  • ALG-2 and peflin form cytosolic heterodimers that dissociate in response to calcium [37]; whether and how peflin regulates ALG-2/sec31A interactions and/or ER-to-Golgi transport has not been reported

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Summary

Introduction

The ER-to-Golgi interface is the busiest vesicle trafficking step, transporting up to one-third of all eukaryotic proteins. We took a different approach to investigating PEF protein function in ER-to-Golgi transport by investigating the role of peflin, a PEF family member that binds to ALG-2 and is presumed to regulate its activity. We found that depletion of peflin significantly stimulated ALG-2 targeting to ERES and ALG-2/sec31A interactions and concomitantly stimulated ER-to-Golgi transport.

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