V-ATPase interacts with ARNO and Arf6 in early endosomes and regulates the protein degradative pathway.

Article Details

Citation

Hurtado-Lorenzo A, Skinner M, El Annan J, Futai M, Sun-Wada GH, Bourgoin S, Casanova J, Wildeman A, Bechoua S, Ausiello DA, Brown D, Marshansky V

V-ATPase interacts with ARNO and Arf6 in early endosomes and regulates the protein degradative pathway.

Nat Cell Biol. 2006 Feb;8(2):124-36. doi: 10.1038/ncb1348. Epub 2006 Jan 15.

PubMed ID
16415858 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The recruitment of the small GTPase Arf6 and ARNO from cytosol to endosomal membranes is driven by V-ATPase-dependent intra-endosomal acidification. The molecular mechanism that mediates this pH-sensitive recruitment and its role are unknown. Here, we demonstrate that Arf6 interacts with the c-subunit, and ARNO with the a2-isoform of V-ATPase. The a2-isoform is targeted to early endosomes, interacts with ARNO in an intra-endosomal acidification-dependent manner, and disruption of this interaction results in reversible inhibition of endocytosis. Inhibition of endosomal acidification abrogates protein trafficking between early and late endosomal compartments. These data demonstrate the crucial role of early endosomal acidification and V-ATPase/ARNO/Arf6 interactions in the regulation of the endocytic degradative pathway. They also indicate that V-ATPase could modulate membrane trafficking by recruiting and interacting with ARNO and Arf6; characteristics that are consistent with the role of V-ATPase as an essential component of the endosomal pH-sensing machinery.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
V-type proton ATPase 116 kDa subunit a isoform 2Q9Y487Details