![]() |
|
|
Vol. 20, Issue 14, 3251-3260, July 15, 2009
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

Department of Cell Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037
Submitted March 31, 2009;
Revised May 8, 2009;
Accepted May 12, 2009
Monitoring Editor: Sandra Lemmon
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Biochemical assays have shown that overexpression or small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown of the various endocytic accessory proteins inhibit, to varying degrees, the overall rate of CME, typically assessed by internalization of transferrin (Huang et al., 2004
; Engqvist-Goldstein et al., 2004
; Soulet et al., 2005
). However, these quantitative differences in the requirements of the various accessory factors for the overall efficiency of CME provide little insight into how the factors might differ qualitatively in their function and whether they act at different stages during CCP maturation. Moreover, siRNA knockdown of some accessory proteins showed only moderate or no effects on CME, making conclusions regarding their function difficult and ambiguous. More sensitive in vivo assays are needed to detect milder phenotypes due to incomplete knockdown and/or partial redundancy in protein function. Together with a higher temporal resolution to resolve early stages of CCP maturation, these assays could provide better insight into the differential roles of these endocytic accessory proteins in CME.
Several studies have used microscopy-based assays and fluorescently tagged proteins to dissect the spatiotemporal organization of single CCPs in living cells (Merrifield et al., 2002
; Kaksonen et al., 2003
; Soulet et al., 2005
; Rappoport et al., 2008
). This approach has been especially successful when combined with genetic knockout studies in yeast (Kaksonen et al., 2003
, 2005
; Rappoport et al., 2008
). Because individual endocytic events in yeast occur in a relatively invariant, stereotypical manner, these analyses have enabled the clustering of endocytic accessory factors into temporally and functionally distinct subsets. In contrast, fluorescent studies on CME in mammalian cells have revealed significant dynamic heterogeneity (Gaidarov et al., 1999
; Merrifield et al., 2002
; Keyel et al., 2004
; Yarar et al., 2008
; Loerke et al., 2009
). We have recently developed methods that exploit this dynamic heterogeneity to gain insight into the function of various endocytic components in the CCP maturation process. By decomposition of the measured CCP lifetime distributions, we identified three kinetically distinct subpopulations: two short-lived abortive populations and a longer-lived productive population (Loerke et al., 2009
). Manipulation of cargo and adaptor protein concentration and analysis of dynamin mutants suggested that CCP maturation is gated by an "endocytic restriction/checkpoint", which is sensitive to cargo loading and regulated by dynamin. The finding that our manipulations differentially affected either the fraction of the three CCP subpopulations or their lifetimes indicated that these are independent parameters that can be measured to establish a functional hierarchy of CME factors. For example, perturbations that increase the lifetimes of productive CCPs and/or decrease their fractional contribution are likely to be limiting components for CCP maturation. In contrast, factors that are sensed by the endocytic restriction/checkpoint apparatus would be expected to affect the rate of turnover of abortive CCPs.
Here, we use this assay to identify the differential effects of siRNA-repressed expression levels of 10 endocytic accessory proteins: SNX9, epsin1, Hip1R, Eps15, intersectin2, CALM, endophilin, GAK, and clathrin light chain a and b (LCa and LCb, respectively). Our data provide new insight into the regulatory roles of these accessory proteins in clathrin-coated vesicle (CCV) formation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
2-adaptin fused to EGFP were kindly provided by Dr. T. Kirchhausen (Harvard Medical School). Cells were grown under 5% CO2 at 37°C in DMEM supplemented with 20 mM HEPES, 10 µg/ml streptomycin, 66 µg/ml penicillin, 10% (vol/vol) fetal calf serum (FCS, Hyclone, Logan, UT) and 0.5 mg/ml geneticin (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA).
siRNA and Transfection
siRNA duplexes (Dharmacon Research, Boulder, CO, and Invitrogen) were 1) chosen according to published sequences, 2) derived from a Dharmacon "ON-TARGET plus Set of 4", or 3) personally designed by using the online Stealth siRNA Designer (https://rnaidesigner.invitrogen.com/rnaiexpress/). The following sequences were used: endophilin: GCA CAU UGU CAA AGG UCA ATT (Wang et al., 2003
); epsin1: GAU CAA GGU UCG AGA GGC CTT (Dharmacon "Set of 4"); Eps15: UUG ACC UUU GAC AAU GUG CTT (Huang et al., 2004
); GAK: GCG ACA CGG UUC UGA AGA UTT (Dharmacon "Set of 4"); Hip1R: UGG CUG ACC UCU UCG AUC AUU (Dharmacon "Set of 4"); SNX9: AGA GCU ACA UCG AAU AUC ATT (Yarar et al., 2007
); CLCa: GCA GAA GAA GCC UUU GUA ATT (Huang et al., 2004
); CLCb: GGA ACC AGC GCC AGA GUG AUU (Huang et al., 2004
); CALM: AAG GAT AAA AGT GGA TTG CAA (Qiagen, Chatsworth, CA); and intersectin2: AAC GTA AAG CCC AGA AAG AAA (Qiagen).
The day before transfection, 8 x 104 BSC1 cells were plated in a 60-mm Petri dish. On day 1 and day 3, cells were washed with Opti-MEM (Invitrogen) and transfected using 50 nM siRNA and 12 µl HiPerFect transfection reagent (Qiagen) in a total volume of 2 ml Opti-MEM, according to the manufacturer's recommendations. After a 5-h incubation, cells were washed with culture medium and split if necessary. Cells were analyzed by Western blot or total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIR-FM) 72 h after the first transfection.
SDS-PAGE and Western Blot
To detect levels of specific protein depletion after siRNA treatment, cells were lysed (50 mM Tris-base, 2 mM EGTA, 150 mM NaCl, 1% Nonidet P40, 10 mM NaF, 2 mM Na-vanadate, 0.25% deoxycholic acid, Complete protease inhibitor [Roche, Indianapolis, IN], pH 7.4) and sonicated, and remaining cell debris was spun down. Total protein concentration was determined, and equal amounts of cell lysates were separated using SDS-PAGE (10 or 12% gels), transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (Whatman, Clifton, NJ), blocked for 1 h at room temperature in Western blot buffer (20 mM Tris-Base, 15 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, and 0.5% Tween-20, pH 7.4), supplemented with 5% skim milk, and incubated with primary antibodies overnight (anti-actin, Chemicon International, Temecula, CA; endophilin2, kindly provided by Prof. P. De Camilli (Yale University School of Medicine); epsin1, Eps15, CLCs, CALM, and Snx9, from the Schmid lab; GAK, Medical & Biological Laboratories, Nagoya, Japan; Hip1R, kindly provided by Prof. D. Drubin (University of California, Berkeley); intersectin, Novus Biologicals, Littleton, CO; and dynamin3, Abcam, Cambridge, MA, [which recognizes a 100-kDa nonspecific band that serves as a loading control, referred to as Ab-Cam antigen]). The blots were revealed by HRP-labeled secondary antibodies and enhanced chemiluminescence. For a rigorous quantification, chemiluminescent blots were analyzed by an Alpha Innotech FluorChem SP image station and the values for respective silencing efficiency were obtained using ImageJ (NIH; http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/) image analysis software. The protein band intensity of the silenced protein was normalized to the respective loading control (actin or the Ab-Cam antigen), averaged among the different lysate dilutions and, in order to obtain the percentage of silencing, compared with the expression levels in control cells that were treated with nonrelated siRNA.
Live Cell Imaging by TIR-FM
Cells were prepared for TIR-FM as previously described (Loerke et al., 2009
). In brief: the day before imaging, 80,000 BSC1 cells were seeded per well in six-well plates containing a 22 x 22-mm glass coverslip. The next day, cells were washed three times with PBS, incubated with imaging medium, and mounted on coverslips. For imaging, the cells were rapidly transferred to a prewarmed microscope stage (37°C; controlled with a custom-modified stage incubator), and four to seven cells were imaged per coverslip. TIR-FM movies of BSC1 cells stably expressing LCa-EGFP or
2-EGFP were acquired in fast (frame rate, 400 ms; exposure time, 90 ms) and slow (frame rate, 2 s; exposure time, 200 ms) acquisition mode during 10 min, using a 100x 1.45 NA objective (Nikon, Melville, NY) mounted on a Nikon TE2000U inverted microscope (Nikon, Melville, NY) and a 14-bit mode-operated Hamamatsu Orca II-ERG camera (Hamamatsu Photonics, Hamamatsu City, Japan). For every silencing condition, at least 18 movies of different cells from a minimum of three independent silencing experiments were recorded. Movies of control cells treated with nonrelevant siRNA were routinely recorded in parallel with experimental conditions. For acquisition of epifluorescence (EPI)-TIR-FM movies upon GAK depletion, pairs of EPI- and TIR-FM images (exposure times, 200 ms) were acquired sequentially for 10 min, with 2-s intervals between pairs and 30–0ms delay between EPI and TIR-FM acquisition.
Automated Image and CCP Lifetime Analysis
Fluorescent particle detection and life-time tracking of CCPs in the TIR-FM movies was accomplished using the software package described in (Jaqaman et al., 2008
). The lifetime analysis of CCPs was performed according to previous studies (Loerke et al., 2009
).
Statistical Analyses
Significant subpopulations were identified by minimization of the value of the Bayesian information criterion (BIC) as described in (Loerke et al., 2009
). The lifetime decomposition yields time constants [ô1, ô2, ..., ôn] and contributions [c1, c2, ..., cn] of the (generally three) CCP subpopulations and the contribution cp of the persistent population; these parameters are calculated by fitting the lifetime histogram, pooled from multiple cells, to the appropriate number of (Weibull-shaped) distributions.
It is not completely straightforward to define a meaningful error for the parameters. The simplest approach for calculating a meaningful cell-to-cell error
q for each of the parameters q would be to fit the lifetime histograms of each cell individually, and to then calculate
q as the SD of the resulting distribution of parameters. However, in our case a minimum of two movies (one fast, one slow) is required to construct one complete histogram suitable for data fitting. Furthermore, as discussed in (Loerke et al., 2009
) many more cells and an n >5000 are required to guarantee stable convergence of the model selection step. Therefore, we use the jackknife method for error determination (Thomson and Chave, 1991
), a special case of a bootstrap assay. If q is the parameter of interest (e.g., the time constant of population 2),
all is the estimate using all observations, and
i is the estimate using all observations except i, i.e., the parameter is calculated by fitting the lifetime histogram pooled from all movies except movie i.
The jackknife variance
|
|
all. Moreover, the distribution of the jackknifed parameter estimation approximates a normal distribution because of the central limit theorem. As a result, the p-value of the difference of a certain parameter between two conditions can be assayed by a t test approach, as follows:
The means and jackknife-estimated variances of the parameter in condition one and two are [
1,
2] and [var1, var2]; the sample sizes (number of cells/movies) in the two conditions are [n1, n2].
The SE for unequal sample size and unequal variance is
|
|
1 –
2)/S12, and the relevant degrees of freedom are (as the most conservative estimate) d = min[(n1 – 1), (n1 – 1)]. Thus, the p-value for this t-statistic and for the specified degrees of freedom is defined as one minus the integral of the probability density function of the t-distribution between [–t, t].
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Using this assay, we previously showed that siRNA depletion of two core components of the endocytic machinery, AP-2 and dynamin, had dramatically different effects on CCP dynamics. AP-2 depletion (by 50%) reduced the total number of CCPs without affecting either the proportion or the lifetimes of the three subpopulations (Loerke et al., 2009
). In contrast, siRNA depletion of dynamin (by
70%) had no effect on the number of CCPs or on the proportion of abortive versus productive CCPs, but increased the lifetimes of both abortive and productive subpopulations. These differential phenotypes are consistent with the well-established role for AP-2 as a critical and limiting structural component required to initiate CCP assembly and with a role for dynamin in regulating CCP maturation. To better define the distinct functions of the less well-studied endocytic accessory factors, we examined the effects of their knockdown on the distinct aspects of CCP dynamics.
Early and Late Stages of CCP Maturation Are Affected by Depletion of SNX9, CALM, or Epsin
SNX9 is an SH3 domain– and BAR domain–containing protein that interacts with dynamin and promotes its GTPase activity (Soulet et al., 2005
; Lundmark and Carlsson, 2009
). In vivo studies have shown a concomitant burst of SNX9 and dynamin recruitment to CCPs during late stages of CCV formation (Soulet et al., 2005
). As a member of the sorting nexin family, SNX9 has also been shown to interact with different cell surface transmembrane proteins and may play a role in directing their endocytosis (Howard et al., 1999
). CALM is the nonneuronal homologue of AP180 (Assembly Protein 180 kDa) and functions in coat assembly and in recognition of v-SNAREs, a specialized cargo component of CCVs, through its ANTH domain (Harel et al., 2008
). Finally, epsin1 is an EH domain–binding partner that interacts with both Eps15 and intersectin (Chen et al., 1998
; Yamabhai et al., 1998
; Nakashima et al., 1999
). It is thought to induce membrane curvature by binding of PtdIns(4,5)P2 through its ENTH domain and insertion of an N-terminal amphipathic helix into the inner leaflet of the lipid bilayer (Ford et al., 2002
; Stahelin et al., 2003
). It also has a ubiquitin-binding motif involved in recruiting ubiquinated cargo molecules to CCPs (Hawryluk et al., 2006
; Chen and Zhuang, 2008
; Kazazic et al., 2009
).
We used siRNA treatment to individually reduce the cellular levels of these proteins and examined the effects on CCP dynamics. For all experiments described herein, we assayed cells 72 h after a double-round siRNA treatment. Although this protocol resulted in only partial knockdown of expression levels (Supplementary Figure S2), the sensitivity of our assay nonetheless enabled us to detect reproducible and statistically significant effects (see Figures 12
–4, *** p <10–8). Strong perturbations that potently inhibit CME were avoided because they increase the percentage of persistent CCPs and may result in indirect effects due to depletion of other limiting factors. We also confirmed that siRNA knockdown of the endocytic accessory proteins described herein did not dramatically alter overall CCP density (Supplementary Figure S1B).
Reduction of the cellular SNX9 pool by 35% significantly decreased the relative contribution of productive CCPs, with a corresponding increase in early abortive species and no effects on their lifetimes (Figure 2, A and B). We also detected a slight (p = 1.7 x 10–5) increase of productive lifetimes. Although this change did not fall under the here fixed threshold of significance, we expect that higher knockdown efficiency would increase this difference, as was previously shown biochemically (Soulet et al., 2005
). Similar effects were observed upon depletion of CALM by 60% relative to initial cellular expression levels, but the strongly increased early abortive population displayed a significantly slower turnover rate (Figure 2, A and B). The effect of depletion of these proteins on early abortive CCPs provides strong evidence that these short-lived structures are indeed related to CME and not internal clathrin-coated structures transiently appearing in the evanescent field. Partial depletion of epsin1 by 40% also decreased the efficiency of CCP maturation with corresponding increases in the fraction of predominantly late abortive CCPs (Figure 2A). Like SNX9 and CALM, depletion of epsin1 also increased the lifetimes of productive CCPs, albeit to a greater degree (Figure 2B), suggesting that its expression levels are more critical in CCV formation. Consistent with this, depletion of epsin1 also increased the relative contribution of persistent CCPs by 47% to 2.8 ± 0.3%, whereas the effect of SNX9 or CALM depletion on these CCPs was not significant (Supplementary Figure S1A). These data suggest that each of these factors is, albeit to varying extents, limiting for CCP maturation.
|
In contrast to the results reported above, depletion of Hip1R, Eps15, and intersectin2 by 55, 75, and 45%, respectively (Supplementary Figure S2), had no significant effect on the proportion of productive CCPs, but all three treatments significantly increased their lifetimes (Figure 3, A and B). In line with previous observations, we also observed an increase in the relative contribution of persistent CCPs from 1.9 ± 0.2% in control siRNA-treated cells to 2.7 ± 0.4% in Hip1R-depleted cells, and to 3.2 ± 0.4% after intersectin2 siRNA-treatment, whereas Eps15 depletion did not affect this population (Supplementary Figure S1A). We did not detect any effect of siRNA knockdown of intersectin1 (data not shown). Together, these phenotypes suggest that the functions of these proteins are restricted to, and are rate-limiting, for late events in CCV formation, but that they may not be limiting for early events in CCP maturation.
|
|
20 s delay in the disappearance of clathrin-coated structures first from the TIRF field and then from the EPI field (data not shown), confirming that these very long-lived CCPs internalized as regular CCVs. We therefore assume that after GAK silencing, the two long-lived CCP populations resulted from a split of the productive CCP population into a fast (mean lifetime of 40.1 ± 4.5 s) and a slow productive CCPs (mean lifetime of 171.0 ± 2.5 s; Figure 4B). Together these data suggest that GAK plays both early and late, rate-limiting roles in governing CCP maturation.
Clathrin LCa or LCb Depletion Causes Distinct Phenotypes
The clathrin triskelion is composed of three clathrin heavy chains (CHCs), each bound to one of two clathrin light chain (CLC) isoforms, designated CLCa and CLCb. Although the precise function of the two CLC isoforms is unknown, they might play a regulatory role in clathrin polymerization (Wilbur et al., 2008
). Biochemical assays for transferrin internalization have detected only mild, if any, effects upon siRNA depletion of either or both CLCs (Huang et al., 2004
). To examine the effect of CLC depletion using our more sensitive TIRF-based assay, we carried out siRNA-mediated knockdown of CLCa or CLCb in BSC1 cells stably expressing the AP-2 subunit
2, tagged with EGFP (
2-EGFP). As a major component of CCPs, AP-2 colocalizes with clathrin at the forming pit, and CCP trajectories can be tracked and analyzed in the same manner as LCa-EGFP–labeled CCPs (Loerke et al., 2009
). In agreement with previous results in control cells, our BIC-based model selection identified three kinetically distinct subpopulations of
2-EGFP–labeled CCPs in cells treated with nonrelevant siRNA. Also as reported earlier (Loerke et al., 2009
), CCP lifetimes were generally shorter when
2-EGFP was tracked (cf. Figures 1C and 5B). Depletion of the CLCa isoform by
50% resulted in a significant (p < 10–6; threshold was set lower compared with previous figures because of the smaller sample size) increase in the relative contribution of productive CCPs without significantly affecting their lifetimes (Figure 5, A and B). In contrast, depletion of the CLCb isoform decreased the lifetimes of productive CCPs, without altering their relative contributions. Both of these effects would slightly increase the efficiency of CME, suggesting that the CLCs might function as negative regulators of CME. Interestingly, the two CLC isoforms also had very different effects on the abortive CCP subpopulations. Depletion of CLCa resulted in a significant decrease in the mean lifetime of early and late abortive CCPs, whereas CLCb depletion had the opposite effect and increased the lifetimes of late abortive species. Depletion of CLCb also increased the proportion of late abortive species at the expense of early abortive CCPs, which is consistent with the delayed rate of turnover of abortive species. Thus, both light chains appear to provide input into the endocytosis restriction/checkpoint apparatus, but evoke differential responses: CLCa depletion activates turnover, whereas CLCb depletion delays turnover of abortive species.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Depletion of Most Endocytic Accessory Proteins Decreases the Efficiency of CME
Under all conditions, with the exception of GAK depletion, the observed CCP lifetime distributions could be best fitted by a model that invokes three kinetically distinct CCP subpopulations. Knockdown of six of 12 accessory proteins (i.e., SNX9, epsin1, intersectin2, CALM, Eps15, and Hip1R; summarized in Figure 6) caused either a decrease in the relative contribution of productive CCPs and/or an increase in their lifetimes, confirming that these proteins are critical components of the machinery for CCP maturation. To varying degrees, the activities of these proteins are also rate limiting for CCV formation. This interpretation is consistent with previous biochemical studies that measured a lower overall rate of Tfn internalization after their siRNA-mediated knockdown (Huang et al., 2004
; Engqvist-Goldstein et al., 2004
; Soulet et al., 2005
). Those proteins whose depletion leads to a reduction in the proportion of productive CCPs (e.g., SNX9, CALM, and epsin) may play earlier roles in CCP maturation. A critical threshold of these proteins, or their respective activities, may be needed to pass the restriction/checkpoint; hence, their relative absence leads to an increase in abortive events. By contrast, those proteins whose depletion affects only the rate of maturation (e.g., Eps15, Hip1R, and intersectin2) are likely to play later roles in CCV formation and/or could mediate functions not sensed by the restriction/checkpoint apparatus.
We and others (Keyel et al., 2004
) have observed so-called "visitors" by which we mean intracellular CCSs that move transiently through the narrow evanescent field. These fast moving, transiently imaged structures are excluded from our analyses because we eliminate CCSs that are not detected for at least five successive frames. In contrast, we have previously argued (Loerke et al., 2009
) that the short lived early abortive CCPs correspond to bona fide endocytic intermediates because they are labeled by both LCa-EGFP and
2-EGFP, and their numbers are proportionally reduced by AP-2 knockdown. The present study provides further support that these abortive events are related to CCV formation, as their numbers are significantly increased by knockdown of SNX9 and CALM. These data suggest that although these proteins are not proportionally limiting for CCP nucleation—that is, unlike AP-2, the total density of CCPs does not decrease in proportion to their depletion (see Supplementary Figure S1B)—each may play a structural role in stabilizing early CCP intermediates and thus reducing their turnover. This is consistent with the known clathrin assembly activities of CALM and might be reflective of clathrin/AP-2 binding and scaffolding functions of SNX9.
A Subset of Accessory Proteins Affects the Turnover of Abortive CCPs
Depletion of a discrete and limited subset of proteins, namely GAK, CLCa, and endophilin, dramatically increased the rate of turnover of abortive structures. We suggest that the presence and/or activity of these endocytic accessory proteins signals more directly to the restriction/checkpoint apparatus such that their relative absence (upon knockdown) triggers more rapid turnover of incomplete CCP intermediates. These proteins, either through direct interaction with the assembling clathrin coat (GAK and CLCa) or through direct interactions with the underlying membrane (endophilin is a BAR domain–containing protein) may be able to sense critical early stages in CCP maturation that generate curvature and feed this information into the checkpoint. Because clathrin can spontaneously assemble into large, endocytically compromised flat lattices (Miller et al., 1991
; Chetrit et al., 2009
), it is attractive to speculate that the absence of curvature in the developing CCP might necessitate rapid turnover of an aberrant intermediate. Further studies are required to test this hypothesis.
GAK Silencing Causes a Split of the Productive CCP Population
The effects of
80% knockdown of GAK were unique in that the measured lifetime distribution of CCPs could be significantly better fitted by BIC-based model selection with four kinetically distinct subpopulations. Although we do not know with certainty the functional significance of these longer-lived subpopulations, we have strong evidence that they both represent ultimately productive endocytic events. This is because 1) EPI/TIRF movies show a delay between signal disappearance first in the TIRF-, then in the EPI channel, 2) biochemical studies showed only a relatively minor defect in Tfn uptake at this level of GAK knockdown (data not shown), and 3) the contributions of the two long-lived populations in GAK-depleted cells equaled the contribution of productive CCPs in control cells. The first subpopulation of these longer-lived CCPs (comprising
66% of productive CCPs) had a shorter mean lifetime than the single productive subpopulation in control cells. We do not think this is biologically relevant, but rather it reflects the parsing of longer-lived species into the fourth subpopulation, thereby reducing the apparent mean lifetime of the remaining subpopulation. It should also be noted that although BIC-based model selection can robustly identify the need for two productive populations for a fit of the lifetime distribution, determining their lifetimes is less precise because the fit now involves a double-exponential decay with relatively similar time scales, numerically a notoriously unstable process. The emergence of two productive CCP subpopulations after GAK depletion could be explained by two mutually nonexclusive hypotheses. First, the split of productive CCPs into two subpopulations could indicate that GAK acts cooperatively and processively to fulfilling its function on individual CCPs before being freed to move to other maturing CCPs. Thus CCPs with some initial GAK associated will tend to recruit more GAK from the reduced pool, whereas CCPs with no GAK will have to wait even longer. Thus, the very-long lived CCPs may represent the subpopulation most depleted of GAK. This interpretation is consistent with TIRF-based analyses of the dynamics of GAK/auxilin association with CCPs in which these proteins were shown to be recruited with burst kinetics at very late stages during CCP invagination (Massol et al., 2006
; Lee et al., 2006
). Alternatively, the broad lifetime distribution of the productive CCP population under control conditions may reflect functionally and/or compositionally distinct subpopulations of CCPs. In this scenario, it may be that a preexisting subclass of productive CCPs is differentially sensitive to GAK depletion. Further studies will be needed to resolve these possibilities and/or to identify other mechanisms accounting for these observations.
Depletion of GAK also significantly increased the rate of turnover of abortive CCP intermediates. This observation is consistent with its role in mediating assembly of multiple constituents of CCPs and its function in clathrin exchange during early stages of maturation (Lee et al., 2005
, 2006
). This early function for GAK is also consistent with reports that fluorescently labeled GAK transiently associates with CCPs during early stages of maturation (Massol et al., 2006
). In addition, GAK interacts directly with dynamin in a nucleotide-dependent manner, and this interaction has been proposed to function at early stages of CCV formation (Newmyer et al., 2003
). Thus, GAK is poised to feed information into dynamin and thus to affect the endocytosis restriction/checkpoint decision.
CLCa and CLCb Function Differentially as Regulators of CME
The two light-chain isomers, CLCa and CLCb, share only 60% sequence identity, but are highly conserved between species, retaining 95–98% isoform-specific sequence identity. Although CLCs are an integral part of the basic subunit of a clathrin coat, the triskelion, their precise role is still unknown. It has been suggested that they act as negative regulators of clathrin (Brodsky et al., 2001
), and this is consistent with our finding that knockdown of CLCa increases the proportion of productive CCPs, whereas CLCb depletion decreases their mean lifetime. Previous biochemical studies were unable to detect a clear phenotype for either single or double siRNA knockdown of CLCs (Huang et al., 2004
). However, there was an increase in the rate of Tfn uptake after CLCb depletion that was not commented on by the authors, but is nonetheless consistent with our findings.
Differential effects of depletion of the CLC isoforms have thus far proven difficult to detect using biochemical assays. However, we find that knockdown of CLCa or CLCb resulted in opposite effects on the rate of turnover of abortive CCPs. The relative absence of CLCa triggers rapid turnover of abortive CCPs, whereas the relative absence of CLCb delays decision making and prolongs the lifetime of abortive species. These data suggest that both CLC isoforms can signal to the endocytosis restriction/checkpoint to either negatively or positively regulate the timing of the checkpoint decision. Further work is needed to shed light on the precise function of these two CLC isoforms.
Further Evidence for the Existence of an Endocytosis Restriction/Checkpoint
Previous studies established that the rate of turnover of abortive CCPs is dependent on the basal GTP binding and hydrolysis activities of dynamin (Loerke et al., 2009
). On the basis of these findings, we proposed that dynamin functions as a fidelity monitor of CCP maturation to mediate endocytosis restriction point/checkpoint decisions that gate progression to functional CCPs. As originally defined from cell cycle studies, the term "restriction point" suggests that the process will not proceed until all required steps are completed (e.g., DNA synthesis before "Start"). By comparison, the term "checkpoint" suggests that defects in the decision-making machinery would result in progression beyond the checkpoint even if essential processes are not completed (e.g., the "spindle checkpoint"), resulting in the formation of aberrant products (e.g., chromosome instability). As we do not know whether defective CCVs can be formed as a consequence of a defective checkpoint apparatus, we here use the two terms interchangeably. We further proposed (Loerke et al., 2009
) that dynamin—as an integral part of the checkpoint apparatus—receives input from a subset of accessory factors that sense and/or mediate coat assembly, membrane curvature, and cargo selection to determine the suitability of CCP intermediates for progression beyond the restriction/checkpoint. Of the 10 accessory proteins analyzed here, we identified seven proteins whose depletion affected either the relative contributions and/or lifetimes of abortive structures. Proteins (e.g., CALM, SNX9, and epsin1) whose depletion affects only the relative contributions of abortive versus productive events are likely to mediate different aspects of early CCP maturation that can be sensed by the checkpoint apparatus. By comparison, proteins whose knockdown affects the lifetimes of abortive species (e.g., CLCa, CLCb, GAK, and endophilin) are more likely to directly sense critical aspects of CCP maturation and to trigger CCP turnover through the checkpoint apparatus.
Our data suggests that curvature, coat assembly, and cargo may be important determining factors in CCP maturation. Of four accessory factors whose depletion strongly affected the lifetimes of abortive CCPs, three (CLCa, CLCb, and GAK) are positioned to sense clathrin assembly. The fourth (endophilin) encodes a curvature-sensing domain. Two of these proteins (GAK and endophilin) directly interact with dynamin, providing a potential mechanism for input into the checkpoint decision. CALM, SNX9, and epsin1 also encode curvature-sensing and/or curvature-generating domains. Knockdown of these proteins did not alter the rate of turnover, but increased the proportion of abortive CCPs; thus these proteins likely mediate early stages of CCP maturation that are sensed by the restriction/checkpoint apparatus. Interestingly, depletion of CALM, which functions in both coat assembly (Meyerholz et al., 2005
) and in recruitment of the v-SNARE, a cargo molecule that must be included in CCVs to direct fusion with their intracellular targets, also affected the turnover of early abortive CCPs. Thus, we suggest that this subset of seven proteins may provide functionally relevant input, either directly or indirectly, into the restriction/checkpoint signaling apparatus. Further biochemical studies as well as detailed image analyses of the effects of point mutations in these proteins will be needed to establish their putative roles as sensors and modulators of dynamin's enzymatic activities in order to determine how they might function as components of an endocytosis checkpoint.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
* These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
Author contributions: M.S., C.A., and M.M. performed all the cell biological, biochemical, and microscopic assays; D.L. designed and wrote the lifetime analysis software; M.M., M.S., and D.L. carried out data processing; S.L.S. and G.D. provided experimental design and assistance in interpretation; M.M. prepared the figures; M.M., M.S., D.L., G.D., and S.L.S. wrote the manuscript.
Present address: ETH, Institute for Biochemistry, Schafmattstraße, 18, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland. ![]()
Address correspondence to: Sandra L. Schmid (slschmid{at}scripps.edu)
Abbreviations used: CCP, clathrin-coated pit; CCV, clathrin-coated vesicle; CME, clathrin-mediated endocytosis; TIR-FM, total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Brodsky, F. M., Chen, C. Y., Knuehl, C., Towler, M. C., and Wakeham, D. E. (2001). Biological basket weaving: formation and function of clathrin-coated vesicles. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol 17, 517–568.[CrossRef][Medline]
Carbone, R., Fre, S., Iannolo, G., Belleudi, F., Mancini, P., Pelicci, P. G., Torrisi, M. R., and Di Fiore, P. P. (1997). eps15 and eps15R are essential components of the endocytic pathway. Cancer Res 57, 5498–5504.
Chen, C., and Zhuang, X. (2008). Epsin 1 is a cargo-specific adaptor for the clathrin-mediated endocytosis of the influenza virus. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 105, 11790–11795.
Chen, H., Fre, S., Slepnev, V. I., Capua, M. R., Takei, K., Butler, M. H., Di Fiore, P. P., and De Camilli, P. (1998). Epsin is an EH-domain-binding protein implicated in clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Nature 394, 793–797.[CrossRef][Medline]
Chetrit, D., Ziv, N., and Ehrlich, M. (2009). Dab2 regulates clathrin assembly and cell spreading. Biochem. J 418, 701–715.[CrossRef][Medline]
Conner, S. D., and Schmid, S. L. (2002). Identification of an adaptor-associated kinase, AAK1, as a regulator of clathrin-mediated endocytosis. J. Cell Biol 156, 921–929.
Conner, S. D., and Schmid, S. L. (2003). Regulated portals of entry into the cell. Nature 422, 37–44.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ehrlich, M., Boll, W., Van Oijen, A., Hariharan, R., Chandran, K., Nibert, M. L., and Kirchhausen, T. (2004). Endocytosis by random initiation and stabilization of clathrin-coated pits. Cell 118, 591–605.[CrossRef][Medline]
Engqvist-Goldstein, A. E., Zhang, C. X., Carreno, S., Barroso, C., Heuser, J. E., and Drubin, D. G. (2004). RNAi-mediated Hip1R silencing results in stable association between the endocytic machinery and the actin assembly machinery. Mol. Biol. Cell 15, 1666–1679.
Ford, M. G., Mills, I. G., Peter, B. J., Vallis, Y., Praefcke, G. J., Evans, P. R., and McMahon, H. T. (2002). Curvature of clathrin-coated pits driven by epsin. Nature 419, 361–366.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gaidarov, I., Santini, F., Warren, R. A., and Keen, J. H. (1999). Spatial control of coated-pit dynamics in living cells. Nat. Cell Biol 1, 1–7.[CrossRef][Medline]
Gallop, J. L., Jao, C. C., Kent, H. M., Butler, P. J., Evans, P. R., Langen, R., and McMahon, H. T. (2006). Mechanism of endophilin N-BAR domain-mediated membrane curvature. EMBO J 25, 2898–2910.[CrossRef][Medline]
Guipponi, M., Scott, H. S., Chen, H., Schebesta, A., Rossier, C., and Antonarakis, S. E. (1998). Two isoforms of a human intersectin (ITSN) protein are produced by brain-specific alternative splicing in a stop codon. Genomics 53, 369–376.[CrossRef][Medline]
Harel, A., Wu, F., Mattson, M. P., Morris, C. M., and Yao, P. J. (2008). Evidence for CALM in directing VAMP2 trafficking. Traffic 9, 417–429.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hawryluk, M. J., Keyel, P. A., Mishra, S. K., Watkins, S. C., Heuser, J. E., and Traub, L. M. (2006). Epsin 1 is a polyubiquitin-selective clathrin-associated sorting protein. Traffic 7, 262–281.[CrossRef][Medline]
Hinrichsen, L., Meyerholz, A., Groos, S., and Ungewickell, E. J. (2006). Bending a membrane: how clathrin affects budding. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 103, 8715–8720.
Howard, L., Nelson, K. K., Maciewicz, R. A., and Blobel, C. P. (1999). Interaction of the metalloprotease disintegrins MDC9 and MDC15 with two SH3 domain-containing proteins, endophilin I and SH3PX1. J. Biol. Chem 274, 31693–31699.
Huang, F., Khvorova, A., Marshall, W., and Sorkin, A. (2004). Analysis of clathrin-mediated endocytosis of epidermal growth factor receptor by RNA interference. J. Biol. Chem 279, 16657–16661.
Hussain, N. K. et al. (2001). Endocytic protein intersectin-l regulates actin assembly via Cdc42 and N-WASP. Nat. Cell Biol 3, 927–932.[CrossRef][Medline]
Itoh, T., and De Camilli, P. (2006). BAR, F-BAR (EFC) and ENTH/ANTH domains in the regulation of membrane-cytosol interfaces and membrane curvature. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1761, 897–912.[Medline]
Jaqaman, K., Loerke, D., Mettlen, M., Kuwata, H., Grinstein, S., Schmid, S. L., and Danuser, G. (2008). Robust single-particle tracking in live-cell time-lapse sequences. Nat. Methods 5, 695–702.[CrossRef][Medline]
Jiang, R., Gao, B., Prasad, K., Greene, L. E., and Eisenberg, E. (2000). Hsc70 chaperones clathrin and primes it to interact with vesicle membranes. J. Biol. Chem 275, 8439–8447.
Kaksonen, M., Sun, Y., and Drubin, D. G. (2003). A pathway for association of receptors, adaptors, and actin during endocytic internalization. Cell 115, 475–487.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kaksonen, M., Toret, C. P., and Drubin, D. G. (2005). A modular design for the clathrin- and actin-mediated endocytosis machinery. Cell 123, 305–320.[CrossRef][Medline]
Kazazic, M., Bertelsen, V., Pedersen, K. W., Vuong, T. T., Grandal, M. V., Rodland, M. S., Traub, L. M., Stang, E., and Madshus, I. H. (2009). Epsin 1 is involved in recruitment of ubiquitinated EGF receptors into clathrin-coated pits. Traffic 10, 235–245.[CrossRef][Medline]
Keyel, P. A., Watkins, S. C., and Traub, L. M. (2004). Endocytic adaptor molecules reveal an endosomal population of clathrin by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. J. Biol. Chem 279, 13190–13204.
Le Clainche, C., Pauly, B. S., Zhang, C. X., Engqvist-Goldstein, A. E., Cunningham, K., and Drubin, D. G. (2007). A Hip1R-cortactin complex negatively regulates actin assembly associated with endocytosis. EMBO J 26, 1199–1210.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lee, D. W., Wu, X., Eisenberg, E., and Greene, L. E. (2006). Recruitment dynamics of GAK and auxilin to clathrin-coated pits during endocytosis. J. Cell Sci 119, 3502–3512.
Lee, D. W., Zhao, X., Zhang, F., Eisenberg, E., and Greene, L. E. (2005). Depletion of GAK/auxilin 2 inhibits receptor-mediated endocytosis and recruitment of both clathrin and clathrin adaptors. J. Cell Sci 118, 4311–4321.
Loerke, D., Mettlen, M., Yarar, D., Jaqaman, K., Jaqaman, H., Danuser, G., and Schmid, S. L. (2009). Cargo and dynamin regulate clathrin-coated pit maturation. PLoS. Biol 7, e57.[CrossRef][Medline]
Lundmark, R., and Carlsson, S. R. (2009). SNX9—a prelude to vesicle release. J. Cell Sci 122, 5–11.
Massol, R. H., Boll, W., Griffin, A. M., and Kirchhausen, T. (2006). A burst of auxilin recruitment determines the onset of clathrin-coated vesicle uncoating. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 103, 10265–10270.
McGavin, M. K., Badour, K., Hardy, L. A., Kubiseski, T. J., Zhang, J., and Siminovitch, K. A. (2001). The intersectin 2 adaptor links Wiskott Aldrich Syndrome protein (WASp)-mediated actin polymerization to T cell antigen receptor endocytosis. J. Exp. Med 194, 1777–1787.
McPherson, P. S. (2002). The endocytic machinery at an interface with the actin cytoskeleton: a dynamic, hip intersection. Trends Cell Biol 12, 312–315.[CrossRef][Medline]
Merrifield, C. J., Feldman, M. E., Wan, L., and Almers, W. (2002). Imaging actin and dynamin recruitment during invagination of single clathrin-coated pits. Nat. Cell Biol 4, 691–698.[CrossRef][Medline]
Meyerholz, A., Hinrichsen, L., Groos, S., Esk, P. C., Brandes, G., and Ungewickell, E. J. (2005). Effect of clathrin assembly lymphoid myeloid leukemia protein depletion on clathrin coat formation. Traffic 6, 1225–1234.[CrossRef][Medline]
Miliaras, N. B., and Wendland, B. (2004). EH proteins: multivalent regulators of endocytosis (and other pathways). Cell Biochem. Biophys 41, 295–318.[CrossRef][Medline]
Miller, K., Shipman, M., Trowbridge, I. S., and Hopkins, C. R. (1991). Transferrin receptors promote the formation of clathrin lattices. Cell 65, 621–632.[CrossRef][Medline]
Nakashima, S., Morinaka, K., Koyama, S., Ikeda, M., Kishida, M., Okawa, K., Iwamatsu, A., Kishida, S., and Kikuchi, A. (1999). Small G protein Ral and its downstream molecules regulate endocytosis of EGF and insulin receptors. EMBO J 18, 3629–3642.[CrossRef][Medline]
Newmyer, S. L., Christensen, A., and Sever, S. (2003). Auxilin-dynamin interactions link the uncoating ATPase chaperone machinery with vesicle formation. Dev. Cell 4, 929–940.[CrossRef][Medline]
Okamoto, M., Schoch, S., and Sudhof, T. C. (1999). EHSH1/intersectin, a protein that contains EH and SH3 domains and binds to dynamin and SNAP-25. A protein connection between exocytosis and endocytosis? J. Biol. Chem 274, 18446–18454.[CrossRef]
Pucadyil, T. J., and Schmid, S. L. (2008). Real-time visualization of dynamin-catalyzed membrane fission and vesicle release. Cell 135, 1263–1275.[CrossRef][Medline]
Rappoport, J. Z., Heyman, K. P., Kemal, S., and Simon, S. M. (2008). Dynamics of dynamin during clathrin mediated endocytosis in PC12 cells. PLoS. ONE 3, e2416.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ringstad, N., Gad, H., Low, P., Di, P. G., Brodin, L., Shupliakov, O., and De Camilli, P. (1999). Endophilin/SH3p4 is required for the transition from early to late stages in clathrin-mediated synaptic vesicle endocytosis. Neuron 24, 143–154.[CrossRef][Medline]
Schmid, E. M., and McMahon, H. T. (2007). Integrating molecular and network biology to decode endocytosis. Nature 448, 883–888.[CrossRef][Medline]
Sengar, A. S., Wang, W., Bishay, J., Cohen, S., and Egan, S. E. (1999). The EH and SH3 domain Ese proteins regulate endocytosis by linking to dynamin and Eps15. EMBO J 18, 1159–1171.[CrossRef][Medline]
Soulet, F., Yarar, D., Leonard, M., and Schmid, S. L. (2005). SNX9 regulates dynamin assembly and is required for efficient clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Mol. Biol. Cell 16, 2058–2067.
Stahelin, R. V., Long, F., Peter, B. J., Murray, D., De Camilli, P., McMahon, H. T., and Cho, W. (2003). Contrasting membrane interaction mechanisms of AP180 N-terminal homology (ANTH) and epsin N-terminal homology (ENTH) domains. J. Biol. Chem 278, 28993–28999.
Thomson, D. J., and Chave, A. D. (1991). Extraction of spots in biological images using multiscale products. In: Advances in Spectrum Analysis and Array Processing, S. Haykin, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 58–113.
Umeda, A., Meyerholz, A., and Ungewickell, E. (2000). Identification of the universal cofactor (auxilin 2) in clathrin coat dissociation. Eur. J. Cell Biol 79, 336–342.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ungewickell, E., Ungewickell, H., Holstein, S. E., Lindner, R., Prasad, K., Barouch, W., Martin, B., Greene, L. E., and Eisenberg, E. (1995). Role of auxilin in uncoating clathrin-coated vesicles. Nature 378, 632–635.[CrossRef][Medline]
Ungewickell, E. J., and Hinrichsen, L. (2007). Endocytosis: clathrin-mediated membrane budding. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol 19, 417–425.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wang, M. Q., Kim, W., Gao, G., Torrey, T. A., Morse, H. C., III, De, C. P., and Goff, S. P. (2003). Endophilins interact with Moloney murine leukemia virus Gag and modulate virion production. J. Biol 3, 4.[CrossRef][Medline]
Wilbur, J. D., Chen, C. Y., Manalo, V., Hwang, P. K., Fletterick, R. J., and Brodsky, F. M. (2008). Actin binding by Hip1 (huntingtin-interacting protein 1) and Hip1R (Hip1-related protein) is regulated by clathrin light chain. J. Biol. Chem 283, 32870–32879.
Yamabhai, M., Hoffman, N. G., Hardison, N. L., McPherson, P. S., Castagnoli, L., Cesareni, G., and Kay, B. K. (1998). Intersectin, a novel adaptor protein with two Eps15 homology and five Src homology 3 domains. J. Biol. Chem 273, 31401–31407.
Yarar, D., Surka, M. C., Leonard, M. C., and Schmid, S. L. (2008). SNX9 activities are regulated by multiple phosphoinositides through both PX and BAR domains. Traffic 9, 133–146.[CrossRef][Medline]
Yarar, D., Waterman-Storer, C. M., and Schmid, S. L. (2005). A dynamic actin cytoskeleton functions at multiple stages of clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Mol. Biol. Cell 16, 964–975.
Yarar, D., Waterman-Storer, C. M., and Schmid, S. L. (2007). SNX9 couples actin assembly to phosphoinositide signals and is required for membrane remodeling during endocytosis. Dev. Cell 13, 43–56.[CrossRef][Medline]
Zhang, C. X., Engqvist-Goldstein, A. E., Carreno, S., Owen, D. J., Smythe, E., and Drubin, D. G. (2005). Multiple roles for cyclin G-associated kinase in clathrin-mediated sorting events. Traffic 6, 1103–1113.[CrossRef][Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
H. E. M. Stimpson, C. P. Toret, A. T. Cheng, B. S. Pauly, and D. G. Drubin Early-Arriving Syp1p and Ede1p Function in Endocytic Site Placement and Formation in Budding Yeast Mol. Biol. Cell, November 15, 2009; 20(22): 4640 - 4651. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||