PI4P/PS countertransport by ORP10 at ER–endosome membrane contact sites regulates endosome fission

Author:

Kawasaki Asami1,Sakai Akiko1ORCID,Nakanishi Hiroki2,Hasegawa Junya3ORCID,Taguchi Tomohiko4ORCID,Sasaki Junko3,Arai Hiroyuki4,Sasaki Takehiko23ORCID,Igarashi Michihiro1ORCID,Nakatsu Fubito1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurochemistry and Molecular Cell Biology, Niigata University School of Medicine and Graduate School of Medical/Dental Sciences, Niigata, Japan

2. Graduate School of Medicine and Research Center for Biosignal, Akita University, Akita, Japan

3. Department of Biochemical Pathophysiology, Medical Research Institute, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo, Japan

4. Laboratory of Health Chemistry, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Membrane contact sites (MCSs) serve as a zone for nonvesicular lipid transport by oxysterol-binding protein (OSBP)-related proteins (ORPs). ORPs mediate lipid countertransport, in which two distinct lipids are transported counterdirectionally. How such lipid countertransport controls specific biological functions, however, remains elusive. We report that lipid countertransport by ORP10 at ER–endosome MCSs regulates retrograde membrane trafficking. ORP10, together with ORP9 and VAP, formed ER–endosome MCSs in a phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PI4P)-dependent manner. ORP10 exhibited a lipid exchange activity toward its ligands, PI4P and phosphatidylserine (PS), between liposomes in vitro, and between the ER and endosomes in situ. Cell biological analysis demonstrated that ORP10 supplies a pool of PS from the ER, in exchange for PI4P, to endosomes where the PS-binding protein EHD1 is recruited to facilitate endosome fission. Our study highlights a novel lipid exchange at ER–endosome MCSs as a nonenzymatic PI4P-to-PS conversion mechanism that organizes membrane remodeling during retrograde membrane trafficking.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Takeda Science Foundation

Nakatani Foundation for Advancement of Measuring Technologies in Biomedical Engineering

Toray Science Foundation

Japan Foundation for Applied Enzymology

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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