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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 20 papers out of 807 papers

An evolving understanding of sorting signals for endosomal retrieval.

  • Xin Yong‎ et al.
  • iScience‎
  • 2022‎

Complex mechanisms govern the sorting of membrane (cargo) proteins at endosomes to ensure that protein localization to the post-Golgi endomembrane system is accurately maintained. Endosomal retrieval complexes mediate sorting by recognizing specific motifs and signals in the cytoplasmic domains of cargo proteins transiting through endosomes. In this review, the recent progress in understanding the molecular mechanisms of how the retromer complex, in conjunction with sorting nexin (SNX) proteins, operates in cargo recognition and sorting is discussed. New data revealing the importance of different SNX proteins and detailing how post-translational modifications can modulate cargo sorting to respond to changes in the environment are highlighted along with the key role that endosomal protein sorting plays in SARS-CoV-2 infection.


Sorting signals, N-terminal modifications and abundance of the chloroplast proteome.

  • Boris Zybailov‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2008‎

Characterization of the chloroplast proteome is needed to understand the essential contribution of the chloroplast to plant growth and development. Here we present a large scale analysis by nanoLC-Q-TOF and nanoLC-LTQ-Orbitrap mass spectrometry (MS) of ten independent chloroplast preparations from Arabidopsis thaliana which unambiguously identified 1325 proteins. Novel proteins include various kinases and putative nucleotide binding proteins. Based on repeated and independent MS based protein identifications requiring multiple matched peptide sequences, as well as literature, 916 nuclear-encoded proteins were assigned with high confidence to the plastid, of which 86% had a predicted chloroplast transit peptide (cTP). The protein abundance of soluble stromal proteins was calculated from normalized spectral counts from LTQ-Obitrap analysis and was found to cover four orders of magnitude. Comparison to gel-based quantification demonstrates that 'spectral counting' can provide large scale protein quantification for Arabidopsis. This quantitative information was used to determine possible biases for protein targeting prediction by TargetP and also to understand the significance of protein contaminants. The abundance data for 550 stromal proteins was used to understand abundance of metabolic pathways and chloroplast processes. We highlight the abundance of 48 stromal proteins involved in post-translational proteome homeostasis (including aminopeptidases, proteases, deformylases, chaperones, protein sorting components) and discuss the biological implications. N-terminal modifications were identified for a subset of nuclear- and chloroplast-encoded proteins and a novel N-terminal acetylation motif was discovered. Analysis of cTPs and their cleavage sites of Arabidopsis chloroplast proteins, as well as their predicted rice homologues, identified new species-dependent features, which will facilitate improved subcellular localization prediction. No evidence was found for suggested targeting via the secretory system. This study provides the most comprehensive chloroplast proteome analysis to date and an expanded Plant Proteome Database (PPDB) in which all MS data are projected on identified gene models.


Trafficking of plant plasma membrane aquaporins: multiple regulation levels and complex sorting signals.

  • Adrien S Chevalier‎ et al.
  • Plant & cell physiology‎
  • 2015‎

Aquaporins are small channel proteins which facilitate the diffusion of water and small neutral molecules across biological membranes. Compared with animals, plant genomes encode numerous aquaporins, which display a large variety of subcellular localization patterns. More specifically, plant aquaporins of the plasma membrane intrinsic protein (PIP) subfamily were first described as plasma membrane (PM)-resident proteins, but recent research has demonstrated that the trafficking and subcellular localization of these proteins are complex and highly regulated. In the past few years, PIPs emerged as new model proteins to study subcellular sorting and membrane dynamics in plant cells. At least two distinct sorting motifs (one cytosolic, the other buried in the membrane) are required to direct PIPs to the PM. Hetero-oligomerization and interaction with SNAREs (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor protein attachment protein receptors) also influence the subcellular trafficking of PIPs. In addition to these constitutive processes, both the progression of PIPs through the secretory pathway and their dynamics at the PM are responsive to changing environmental conditions.


The Role of the Tyrosine-Based Sorting Signals of the ORF3a Protein of SARS-CoV-2 on Intracellular Trafficking, Autophagy, and Apoptosis.

  • Wyatt Henke‎ et al.
  • bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology‎
  • 2023‎

The open reading frame 3a (ORF3a) is an accessory transmembrane protein that is important to the pathogenicity of SARS-CoV-2. The cytoplasmic domain of ORF3a has three canonical tyrosine-based sorting signals (YxxΦ; where x is any amino acid and Φ is a hydrophobic amino acid with a bulky -R group). They have been implicated in the trafficking of membrane proteins to the cell plasma membrane and to intracellular organelles. Previous studies have indicated that mutation of the 160YSNV163 motif abrogated plasma membrane expression and inhibited ORF3a-induced apoptosis. However, two additional canonical tyrosine-based sorting motifs (211YYQL213, 233YNKI236) exist in the cytoplasmic domain of ORF3a that have not been assessed. We removed all three potential tyrosine-based motifs and systematically restored them to assess the importance of each motif or combination of motifs that restored efficient trafficking to the cell surface and lysosomes. Our results indicate that the YxxΦ motif at position 160 was insufficient for the trafficking of ORF3a to the cell surface. Our studies also showed that ORF3a proteins with an intact YxxΦ at position 211 or at 160 and 211 were most important. We found that ORF3a cell surface expression correlated with the co-localization of ORF3a with LAMP-1 near the cell surface. These results suggest that YxxΦ motifs within the cytoplasmic domain may act cooperatively in ORF3a transport to the plasma membrane and endocytosis to lysosomes. Further, our results indicate that certain tyrosine mutants failed to activate caspase 3 and did not correlate with autophagy functions associated with this protein.


Competing sorting signals guide endolyn along a novel route to lysosomes in MDCK cells.

  • G Ihrke‎ et al.
  • The EMBO journal‎
  • 2001‎

We have examined the trafficking of the mucin-like protein endolyn in transfected, polarized MDCK cells using biochemical approaches and immunofluorescence microscopy. Although endolyn contains a lysosomal targeting motif of the type YXXPhi and was localized primarily to lysosomes at steady state, significant amounts of newly synthesized endolyn were delivered to the apical cell surface. Antibodies to endolyn, but not lamp-2, were preferentially internalized from the apical plasma membrane and efficiently transported to lysosomes. Analysis of endolyn-CD8 chimeras showed that the lumenal domain of endolyn contains apical targeting information that predominates over basolateral information in its cytoplasmic tail. Interestingly, surface polarity of endolyn was independent of O-glycosylation processing, but was reversed by disruption of N-glycosylation using tunicamycin. At all times, endolyn was soluble in cold Triton X-100, suggesting that apical sorting was independent of sphingolipid rafts. Our data indicate that a strong, N-glycan-dependent apical targeting signal in the lumenal domain directs endolyn into a novel biosynthetic pathway to lysosomes, which occurs via the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells.


Identification and characterization of arginine finger-like motifs, and endosome-lysosome basolateral sorting signals within the Coxiella burnetii type IV secreted effector protein CirA.

  • Mary M Weber‎ et al.
  • Microbes and infection‎
  • 2018‎

Coxiella burnetii is an obligate intracellular pathogen that replicates in an endolysosome-like compartment termed the Coxiella-containing vacuole (CCV). Formation of this unique replicative niche requires delivery of bacterial effector proteins into the host cytosol where they mediate crucial interactions with the host. We previously identified an essential Dot/Icm effector, CirA that is required for intracellular replication and CCV formation. Furthermore, CirA was shown to stimulate the GTPase activity of RhoA in vitro. In the current study, we used a bioinformatics-guided approach and identified three arginine finger-like motifs, often found in Rho GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) and endosome-lysosome basolateral sorting signals associated with vesicle trafficking. When expressed in mammalian cells, mutation of either endosome-lysosome-basolateral sorting signals or the arginine finger-like motifs rescued stress phenotypes and decreased plasma membrane localization of ectopically expressed CirA. We further demonstrate that endosome-lysosome sorting signals are required for co-localization with Rab5 and Rab7. Collectively our data indicate that arginine finger-like motifs and endosome-lysosome-basolateral sorting signals within CirA are essential for interaction with the host cytoskeleton.


AP-1 binding to sorting signals and release from clathrin-coated vesicles is regulated by phosphorylation.

  • Pradipta Ghosh‎ et al.
  • The Journal of cell biology‎
  • 2003‎

The adaptor protein complex-1 (AP-1) sorts and packages membrane proteins into clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs) at the TGN and endosomes. Here we show that this process is highly regulated by phosphorylation of AP-1 subunits. Cell fractionation studies revealed that membrane-associated AP-1 differs from cytosolic AP-1 in the phosphorylation status of its beta1 and mu1 subunits. AP-1 recruitment onto the membrane is associated with protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A)-mediated dephosphorylation of its beta1 subunit, which enables clathrin assembly. This Golgi-associated isoform of PP2A exhibits specificity for phosphorylated beta1 compared with phosphorylated mu1. Once on the membrane, the mu1 subunit undergoes phosphorylation, which results in a conformation change, as revealed by increased sensitivity to trypsin. This conformational change is associated with increased binding to sorting signals on the cytoplasmic tails of cargo molecules. Dephosphorylation of mu1 (and mu2) by another PP2A-like phosphatase reversed the effect and resulted in adaptor release from CCVs. Immunodepletion and okadaic acid inhibition studies demonstrate that PP2A is the cytosolic cofactor for Hsc-70-mediated adaptor uncoating. A model is proposed where cyclical phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of the subunits of AP-1 regulate its function from membrane recruitment until its release into cytosol.


Identification and characterization of the mitochondrial membrane sorting signals in phosphatidylserine decarboxylase 1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

  • Ariane Wagner‎ et al.
  • Biochimica et biophysica acta. Molecular and cell biology of lipids‎
  • 2018‎

Phosphatidylserine decarboxylase 1 (Psd1p) catalyzes the formation of the majority of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Psd1p is localized to mitochondria, anchored to the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM) through membrane spanning domains and oriented towards the mitochondrial intermembrane space. We found that Psd1p harbors at least two inner membrane-associated domains, which we named IM1 and IM2. IM1 is important for proper orientation of Psd1p within the IMM (Horvath et al., J. Biol. Chem. 287 (2012) 36744-55), whereas it remained unclear whether IM2 is important for membrane-association of Psd1p. To discover the role of IM2 in Psd1p import, processing and assembly into the mitochondria, we constructed Psd1p variants with deletions in IM2. Removal of the complete IM2 led to an altered topology of the protein with the soluble domain exposed to the matrix and to decreased enzyme activity. Psd1p variants lacking portions of the N-terminal moiety of IM2 were inserted into IMM with an altered topology. Psd1p variants with deletions of C-terminal portions of IM2 accumulated at the outer mitochondrial membrane and lost their enzyme activity. In conclusion we showed that IM2 is essential for full enzymatic activity, maturation and correct integration of yeast Psd1p into the inner mitochondrial membrane.


Two tyrosine-based sorting signals in the Cx43 C-terminus cooperate to mediate gap junction endocytosis.

  • John T Fong‎ et al.
  • Molecular biology of the cell‎
  • 2013‎

Gap junction (GJ) channels that electrically and chemically couple neighboring cells are formed when two hemichannels (connexons) of apposed cells dock head-on in the extracellular space. Remarkably, docked connexons are inseparable under physiological conditions, and we and others have shown that GJs are internalized in whole, utilizing the endocytic clathrin machinery. Endocytosis generates double-membrane vesicles (annular GJs or connexosomes) in the cytoplasm of one of the apposed cells that are degraded by autophagosomal and, potentially, endo/lysosomal pathways. In this study, we investigated the structural motifs that mediate Cx43 GJ endocytosis. We identified three canonical tyrosine-based sorting signals of the type "YXXΦ" in the Cx43 C-terminus, two of which function cooperatively as AP-2 binding sites. We generated a set of green fluorescent protein-tagged and untagged Cx43 mutants that targeted these two sites either individually or together. Mutating both sites completely abolished Cx43-AP-2/Dab2/clathrin interaction and resulted in increased GJ plaque size, longer Cx43 protein half-lives, and impaired GJ internalization. Interestingly, Dab2, an accessory clathrin adaptor found earlier to be important for GJ endocytosis, interacts indirectly with Cx43 via AP-2, permitting the recruitment of up to four clathrin complexes per Cx43 protein. Our analyses provide a mechanistic model for clathrin's efficient internalization of large plasma membrane structures, such as GJs.


Binding of cargo sorting signals to AP-1 enhances its association with ADP ribosylation factor 1-GTP.

  • Intaek Lee‎ et al.
  • The Journal of cell biology‎
  • 2008‎

The adaptor protein AP-1 is the major coat protein involved in the formation of clathrin-coated vesicles at the trans-Golgi network. The prevailing view is that AP-1 recruitment involves coincident binding to multiple low-affinity sites comprising adenosine diphosphate ribosylation factor 1 (Arf-1)-guanosine triphosphate (GTP), cargo sorting signals, and phosphoinositides. We now show that binding of cargo signal peptides to AP-1 induces a conformational change in its core domain that greatly enhances its interaction with Arf-1-GTP. In addition, we provide evidence for cross talk between the dileucine and tyrosine binding sites within the AP-1 core domain such that binding of a cargo signal to one site facilitates binding to the other site. The stable association of AP-1 with Arf-1-GTP, which is induced by cargo signals, would serve to provide sufficient time for adaptor polymerization and clathrin recruitment while ensuring the packaging of cargo molecules into the forming transport vesicles.


Intra-ER sorting of the peroxisomal membrane protein Pex3 relies on its luminal domain.

  • Mohammad H Fakieh‎ et al.
  • Biology open‎
  • 2013‎

Pex3 is an evolutionarily conserved type III peroxisomal membrane protein required for peroxisome formation. It is inserted into the ER membrane and sorted via an ER subdomain (the peroxisomal ER, or pER) to peroxisomes. By constructing chimeras between Pex3 and the type III ER membrane protein Sec66, we have been able to separate the signals that mediate insertion of Pex3 into the ER from those that mediate sorting within the ER to the pER subdomain. The N-terminal 17-amino acid segment of Pex3 contains two signals that are each sufficient for sorting to the pER: a chimeric protein containing the N-terminal domain of Pex3 fused to the transmembrane and cytoplasmic segments of Sec66 sorts to the pER in wild type cells, and does not colocalise with peroxisomes. Subsequent transport to existing peroxisomes requires the Pex3 transmembrane segment. When expressed in Drosophila S2R+ cells, ScPex3 targeting to peroxisomes is dependent on the intra-ER sorting signals in the N-terminal segment. The N-terminal segments of both human and Drosophila Pex3 contain intra-ER sorting information and can replace that of ScPex3. Our analysis has uncovered the signals within Pex3 required for the various steps of its transport to peroxisomes. Our generation of versions of Pex3 that are blocked at each stage along its transport pathway provides a tool to dissect the mechanism, as well as the molecular machinery required at each step of the pathway.


Proteoliposome Engineering with Cell-Free Membrane Protein Synthesis: Control of Membrane Protein Sorting into Liposomes by Chaperoning Systems.

  • Mitsuru Ando‎ et al.
  • Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany)‎
  • 2018‎

Integral membrane proteins (IMPs) modulate key cellular processes; their dysfunctions are closely related to disease. However, production of IMPs in active conformations for further study is hindered by aggregation and toxicity in living expression systems. IMPs are therefore produced in cell-free systems employing liposome chaperoning, but membrane integration of the nascent IMPs is suboptimal and orientation of the integrated proteins remains uncontrollable. Thus, an artificial membrane protein sorting system is developed, based on polyhistidine/nickel-chelate affinity, combined with cell-free membrane protein synthesis. Its proof of concept is demonstrated with a N-terminal hexahistadine-fused conexin-43 (NHis-Cx43) model IMP. Nickel-chelating liposomes efficiently incorporate twofold newly synthesized NHis-Cx43 compared with Cx43. NHis-Cx43, when synthesized in this system, forms dye-permeable hemichannels, similar to plasma membrane pores formed by Cx43 in cells. The topology of incorporated NHis-Cx43 indicates two orientations in the liposomal membranes. However, NHis-Cx43 orientation is controlled, resulting in single topology, by combination of the natural molecular chaperone DnaKJE. Successful synthesis and at least 4.5-fold increase lipid incorporation are also achieved with three other NHis-fused IMPs, including α-helix and β-barrel IMPs. Overall, this simple membrane protein sorting system is usable combined with molecular chaperones to prepare proteoliposomes for many applications.


Recognition of dileucine-based sorting signals from HIV-1 Nef and LIMP-II by the AP-1 gamma-sigma1 and AP-3 delta-sigma3 hemicomplexes.

  • Katy Janvier‎ et al.
  • The Journal of cell biology‎
  • 2003‎

The sorting of transmembrane proteins to endosomes and lysosomes is mediated by signals present in the cytosolic tails of the proteins. A subset of these signals conform to the [DE]XXXL[LI] consensus motif and mediate sorting via interactions with heterotetrameric adaptor protein (AP) complexes. However, the identity of the AP subunits that recognize these signals remains controversial. We have used a yeast three-hybrid assay to demonstrate that [DE]XXXL[LI]-type signals from the human immunodeficiency virus negative factor protein and the lysosomal integral membrane protein II interact with combinations of the gamma and sigma1 subunits of AP-1 and the delta and sigma3 subunits of AP-3, but not the analogous combinations of AP-2 and AP-4 subunits. The sequence requirements for these interactions are similar to those for binding to the whole AP complexes in vitro and for function of the signals in vivo. These observations reveal a novel mode of recognition of sorting signals involving the gamma/delta and sigma subunits of AP-1 and AP-3.


GP4: an integrated Gram-Positive Protein Prediction Pipeline for subcellular localization mimicking bacterial sorting.

  • Stefano Grasso‎ et al.
  • Briefings in bioinformatics‎
  • 2021‎

Subcellular localization is a critical aspect of protein function and the potential application of proteins either as drugs or drug targets, or in industrial and domestic applications. However, the experimental determination of protein localization is time consuming and expensive. Therefore, various localization predictors have been developed for particular groups of species. Intriguingly, despite their major representation amongst biotechnological cell factories and pathogens, a meta-predictor based on sorting signals and specific for Gram-positive bacteria was still lacking. Here we present GP4, a protein subcellular localization meta-predictor mainly for Firmicutes, but also Actinobacteria, based on the combination of multiple tools, each specific for different sorting signals and compartments. Novelty elements include improved cell-wall protein prediction, including differentiation of the type of interaction, prediction of non-canonical secretion pathway target proteins, separate prediction of lipoproteins and better user experience in terms of parsability and interpretability of the results. GP4 aims at mimicking protein sorting as it would happen in a bacterial cell. As GP4 is not homology based, it has a broad applicability and does not depend on annotated databases with homologous proteins. Non-canonical usage may include little studied or novel species, synthetic and engineered organisms, and even re-use of the prediction data to develop custom prediction algorithms. Our benchmark analysis highlights the improved performance of GP4 compared to other widely used subcellular protein localization predictors. A webserver running GP4 is available at http://gp4.hpc.rug.nl/.


Give It AGO: The Search for miRNA-Argonaute Sorting Signals in Arabidopsis thaliana Indicates a Relevance of Sequence Positions Other than the 5'-Position Alone.

  • Christoph J Thieme‎ et al.
  • Frontiers in plant science‎
  • 2012‎

The specific recognition of miRNAs by Argonaute (AGO) proteins, the effector proteins of the RNA-induced silencing complex, constitutes the final step of the biogenesis of miRNAs and is crucial for their target interaction. In the genome of Arabidopsis thaliana (Ath), 10 different AGO proteins are encoded and the sorting decision, which miRNA associates with which AGO protein, was reported to depend exclusively on the identity of the 5'-sequence position of mature miRNAs. Hence, with only four different bases possible, a 5'-position-only sorting signal would not suffice to specifically target all 10 different AGOs individually or would suggest redundant AGO action. Alternatively, other and as of yet unidentified sorting signals may exist. We analyzed a dataset comprising 117 Ath-miRNAs with clear sorting preference to either AGO1, AGO2, or AGO5 as identified in co-immunoprecipitation experiments combined with sequencing. While mutual information analysis did not identify any other single position but the 5'-nucleotide to be informative for the sorting at sufficient statistical significance, significantly better than random classification results using Random Forests nonetheless suggest that additional positions and combinations thereof also carry information with regard to the AGO sorting. Positions 2, 6, 9, and 13 appear to be of particular importance. Furthermore, uracil bases at defined positions appear to be important for the sorting to AGO2 and AGO5, in particular. No predictive value was associated with miRNA length or base pair binding pattern in the miRNA:miRNA* duplex. From inspecting available AGO gene expression data in Arabidopsis, we conclude that the temporal and spatial expression profile may also contribute to the fine-tuning of miRNA sorting and function.


Contribution of the clathrin adaptor AP-1 subunit µ1 to acidic cluster protein sorting.

  • Paloma Navarro Negredo‎ et al.
  • The Journal of cell biology‎
  • 2017‎

Acidic clusters act as sorting signals for packaging cargo into clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs), and also facilitate down-regulation of MHC-I by HIV-1 Nef. To find acidic cluster sorting machinery, we performed a gene-trap screen and identified the medium subunit (µ1) of the clathrin adaptor AP-1 as a top hit. In µ1 knockout cells, intracellular CCVs still form, but acidic cluster proteins are depleted, although several other CCV components were either unaffected or increased, indicating that cells can compensate for long-term loss of AP-1. In vitro experiments showed that the basic patch on µ1 that interacts with the Nef acidic cluster also contributes to the binding of endogenous acidic cluster proteins. Surprisingly, µ1 mutant proteins lacking the basic patch and/or the tyrosine-based motif binding pocket could rescue the µ1 knockout phenotype completely. In contrast, these mutants failed to rescue Nef-induced down-regulation of MHC class I, suggesting a possible mechanism for attacking the virus while sparing the host cell.


Physiological regulation of membrane protein sorting late in the secretory pathway of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

  • K J Roberg‎ et al.
  • The Journal of cell biology‎
  • 1997‎

In mammalian cells, extracellular signals can regulate the delivery of particular proteins to the plasma membrane. We have discovered a novel example of regulated protein sorting in the late secretory pathway of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In yeast cells grown on either ammonia or urea medium, the general amino acid permease (Gap1p) is transported from the Golgi complex to the plasma membrane, whereas, in cells grown on glutamate medium, Gap1p is transported from the Golgi to the vacuole. We have also found that sorting of Gap1p in the Golgi is controlled by SEC13, a gene previously shown to encode a component of the COPII vesicle coat. In sec13 mutants grown on ammonia, Gap1p is transported from the Golgi to the vacuole, instead of to the plasma membrane. Deletion of PEP12, a gene required for vesicular transport from the Golgi to the prevacuolar compartment, counteracts the effect of the sec13 mutation and partially restores Gap1p transport to the plasma membrane. Together, these studies demonstrate that both a nitrogen-sensing mechanism and Sec13p control Gap1p transport from the Golgi to the plasma membrane.


Plus ça change - evolutionary sequence divergence predicts protein subcellular localization signals.

  • Yoshinori Fukasawa‎ et al.
  • BMC genomics‎
  • 2014‎

Protein subcellular localization is a central problem in understanding cell biology and has been the focus of intense research. In order to predict localization from amino acid sequence a myriad of features have been tried: including amino acid composition, sequence similarity, the presence of certain motifs or domains, and many others. Surprisingly, sequence conservation of sorting motifs has not yet been employed, despite its extensive use for tasks such as the prediction of transcription factor binding sites.


Roles of RNA scaffolding in nanoscale Gag multimerization and selective protein sorting at HIV membranes.

  • Yachen Ying‎ et al.
  • Science advances‎
  • 2024‎

HIV-1 Gag proteins can multimerize upon the viral genomic RNA or multiple random cellular messenger RNAs to form a virus particle or a virus-like particle, respectively. To date, whether the two types of particles form via the same Gag multimerization process has remained unclarified. Using photoactivated localization microscopy to illuminate Gag organizations and dynamics at the nanoscale, here, we showed that genomic RNA mediates Gag multimerization in a more cluster-centric, cooperative, and spatiotemporally coordinated fashion, with the ability to drive dense Gag clustering dependent on its ability to act as a long-stranded scaffold not easily attainable by cellular messenger RNAs. These differences in Gag multimerization were further shown to affect downstream selective protein sorting into HIV membranes, indicating that the choice of RNA for packaging can modulate viral membrane compositions. These findings should advance the understanding of HIV assembly and further benefit the development of virus-like particle-based therapeutics.


Nucleolar targeting in an early-branching eukaryote suggests a general mechanism for ribosome protein sorting.

  • Milad Jeilani‎ et al.
  • Journal of cell science‎
  • 2022‎

The compartmentalised eukaryotic cell demands accurate targeting of proteins to the organelles in which they function, whether membrane-bound (like the nucleus) or non-membrane-bound (like the nucleolus). Nucleolar targeting relies on positively charged localisation signals and has received rejuvenated interest since the widespread recognition of liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) as a mechanism contributing to nucleolus formation. Here, we exploit a new genome-wide analysis of protein localisation in the early-branching eukaryote Trypanosoma brucei to analyse general nucleolar protein properties. T. brucei nucleolar proteins have similar properties to those in common model eukaryotes, specifically basic amino acids. Using protein truncations and addition of candidate targeting sequences to proteins, we show both homopolymer runs and distributed basic amino acids give nucleolar partition, further aided by a nuclear localisation signal (NLS). These findings are consistent with phase separation models of nucleolar formation and physical protein properties being a major contributing mechanism for eukaryotic nucleolar targeting, conserved from the last eukaryotic common ancestor. Importantly, cytoplasmic ribosome proteins, unlike mitochondrial ribosome proteins, have more basic residues - pointing to adaptation of physicochemical properties to assist segregation.


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