10 research outputs found

    Proprotein convertase cleavage liberates a fibrillogenic fragment of a resident glycoprotein to initiate melanosome biogenesis

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    Lysosome-related organelles are cell type–specific intracellular compartments with distinct morphologies and functions. The molecular mechanisms governing the formation of their unique structural features are not known. Melanosomes and their precursors are lysosome-related organelles that are characterized morphologically by intralumenal fibrous striations upon which melanins are polymerized. The integral membrane protein Pmel17 is a component of the fibrils and can nucleate their formation in the absence of other pigment cell–specific proteins. Here, we show that formation of intralumenal fibrils requires cleavage of Pmel17 by a furin-like proprotein convertase (PC). As in the generation of amyloid, proper cleavage of Pmel17 liberates a lumenal domain fragment that becomes incorporated into the fibrils; longer Pmel17 fragments generated in the absence of PC activity are unable to form organized fibrils. Our results demonstrate that PC-dependent cleavage regulates melanosome biogenesis by controlling the fibrillogenic activity of a resident protein. Like the pathologic process of amyloidogenesis, the formation of other tissue-specific organelle structures may be similarly dependent on proteolytic activation of physiological fibrillogenic substrates

    Pgc-1α repression and high-fat diet induce age-related macular degeneration-like phenotypes in mice

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    Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the major cause of blindness in the elderly in developed countries and its prevalence is increasing with the aging population. AMD initially affects the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and gradually leads to secondary photoreceptor degeneration. Recent studies have associated mitochondrial damage with AMD, and we have observed mitochondrial and autophagic dysfunction and repressed peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-Îł coactivator 1α (PGC-1α; also known as Ppargc1a) in native RPE from AMD donor eyes and their respective induced pluripotent stem cell-derived RPE. To further investigate the effect of PGC-1α repression, we have established a mouse model by feeding Pgc-1α+/− mice with a high-fat diet (HFD) and investigated RPE and retinal health. We show that when mice expressing lower levels of Pgc-1α are exposed to HFD, they present AMD-like abnormalities in RPE and retinal morphology and function. These abnormalities include basal laminar deposits, thickening of Bruch's membrane with drusen marker-containing deposits, RPE and photoreceptor degeneration, decreased mitochondrial activity, increased levels of reactive oxygen species, decreased autophagy dynamics/flux, and increased inflammatory response in the RPE and retina. Our study shows that Pgc-1α is important in outer retina biology and that Pgc-1α+/− mice fed with HFD provide a promising model to study AMD, opening doors for novel treatment strategies

    A BLOC-1-AP-3 super-complex sorts a cis-SNARE complex into endosome-derived tubular transport carriers.

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    Membrane transport carriers fuse with target membranes through engagement of cognate vSNAREs and tSNAREs on each membrane. How vSNAREs are sorted into transport carriers is incompletely understood. Here we show that VAMP7, the vSNARE for fusing endosome-derived tubular transport carriers with maturing melanosomes in melanocytes, is sorted into transport carriers in complex with the tSNARE component STX13. Sorting requires either recognition of VAMP7 by the AP-3ÎŽ subunit of AP-3 or of STX13 by the pallidin subunit of BLOC-1, but not both. Consequently, melanocytes expressing both AP-3ÎŽ and pallidin variants that cannot bind their respective SNARE proteins are hypopigmented and fail to sort BLOC-1-dependent cargo, STX13, or VAMP7 into transport carriers. However, SNARE binding does not influence BLOC-1 function in generating tubular transport carriers. These data reveal a novel mechanism of vSNARE sorting by recognition of redundant sorting determinants on a SNARE complex by an AP-3-BLOC-1 super-complex

    Functions of Adaptor Protein (AP)-3 and AP-1 in Tyrosinase Sorting from Endosomes to Melanosomes

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    Specialized cells exploit adaptor protein complexes for unique post-Golgi sorting events, providing a unique model system to specify adaptor function. Here, we show that AP-3 and AP-1 function independently in sorting of the melanocyte-specific protein tyrosinase from endosomes to the melanosome, a specialized lysosome-related organelle distinguishable from lysosomes. AP-3 and AP-1 localize in melanocytes primarily to clathrin-coated buds on tubular early endosomes near melanosomes. Both adaptors recognize the tyrosinase dileucine-based melanosome sorting signal, and tyrosinase largely colocalizes with each adaptor on endosomes. In AP-3-deficient melanocytes, tyrosinase accumulates inappropriately in vacuolar and multivesicular endosomes. Nevertheless, a substantial fraction still accumulates on melanosomes, concomitant with increased association with endosomal AP-1. Our data indicate that AP-3 and AP-1 function in partially redundant pathways to transfer tyrosinase from distinct endosomal subdomains to melanosomes and that the AP-3 pathway ensures that tyrosinase averts entrapment on internal membranes of forming multivesicular bodies

    Heavy water lattice project annual report / editors: T.J. Thompson, I. Kaplan, [and] M.J. Driscoll ; contributors J.H. Barch ... [et al.]

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    Statement of responsibility on title-page reads: Editors: T.J. Thompson, I. Kaplan and M.J. Driscoll; contributors: J. H. Barch, N.L. Berube, H.E. Bliss, K.D. Bowles, E J. Chase, H.S. Cheng, F.M. Clikeman, M.J. Driscoll, I.A. Forbes, D.Frech, J.W. Gosnell, T.L. Harper, J.Harrington, III, F.H. Hauck, M.G. Johnson, I. Kaplan, B. Kelley, L.T. Papay, E.E. Pilat, L.N. Price, N.C. Rasmussen, R.L. Ricketts, E. Sefchovich, S.S. Seth, A.T. Supple, T.J. Thompson, and G.L. Woodruff"September 30, 1966""MIT-2344-9."Includes bibliographical referencesAnnual report; September 30, 1966An experimental and theoretical program on the physics of heavy water moderated, slightly enriched lattices is being conducted at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. During the past year, work was completed on studies of fast neutron distributions, lattices with added neutron absorbers, miniature lattices, two-region lattices, pulsed neutron source methods, and single,-rod experiments. In the past year, measurements were also completed on six lattices: three spacings each for 0.75-inch- and 0.387-inch-diameter, 0.947% enriched, uranium metal fuel.U.S. Atomic Energy Commission contract AT(30-1)234

    BLOC-1 Is Required for Cargo-specific Sorting from Vacuolar Early Endosomes toward Lysosome-related Organelles

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    Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome (HPS) is a genetic disorder characterized by defects in the formation and function of lysosome-related organelles such as melanosomes. HPS in humans or mice is caused by mutations in any of 15 genes, five of which encode subunits of biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles complex (BLOC)-1, a protein complex with no known function. Here, we show that BLOC-1 functions in selective cargo exit from early endosomes toward melanosomes. BLOC-1–deficient melanocytes accumulate the melanosomal protein tyrosinase-related protein-1 (Tyrp1), but not other melanosomal proteins, in endosomal vacuoles and the cell surface due to failed biosynthetic transit from early endosomes to melanosomes and consequent increased endocytic flux. The defects are corrected by restoration of the missing BLOC-1 subunit. Melanocytes from HPS model mice lacking a different protein complex, BLOC-2, accumulate Tyrp1 in distinct downstream endosomal intermediates, suggesting that BLOC-1 and BLOC-2 act sequentially in the same pathway. By contrast, intracellular Tyrp1 is correctly targeted to melanosomes in melanocytes lacking another HPS-associated protein complex, adaptor protein (AP)-3. The results indicate that melanosome maturation requires at least two cargo transport pathways directly from early endosomes to melanosomes, one pathway mediated by AP-3 and one pathway mediated by BLOC-1 and BLOC-2, that are deficient in several forms of HPS

    Exosomes and their Application in Biomedical Field: Difficulties and Advantages

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