Endocytosis blocks the vesicular secretion of exosome marker proteins

Author:

Ai Yiwei1ORCID,Guo Chenxu1ORCID,Garcia-Contreras Marta1ORCID,Sánchez B. Laura S.1ORCID,Saftics Andras2ORCID,Shodubi Oluwapelumi1ORCID,Raghunandan Shankar1ORCID,Xu Junhao1,Tsai Shang Jui1ORCID,Dong Yi3ORCID,Li Rong34ORCID,Jovanovic-Talisman Tijana2ORCID,Gould Stephen J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.

2. Department of Cancer Biology and Molecular Medicine, Beckman Research Institute, City of Hope, Duarte, CA 91010, USA.

3. Department of Cell Biology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.

4. Mechanobiology Institute and Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117558, Singapore.

Abstract

Exosomes are secreted vesicles of ~30 to 150 nm diameter that play important roles in human health and disease. To better understand how cells release these vesicles, we examined the biogenesis of the most highly enriched human exosome marker proteins, the exosomal tetraspanins CD81, CD9, and CD63. We show here that endocytosis inhibits their vesicular secretion and, in the case of CD9 and CD81, triggers their destruction. Furthermore, we show that syntenin, a previously described exosome biogenesis factor, drives the vesicular secretion of CD63 by blocking CD63 endocytosis and that other endocytosis inhibitors also induce the plasma membrane accumulation and vesicular secretion of CD63. Finally, we show that CD63 is an expression-dependent inhibitor of endocytosis that triggers the vesicular secretion of lysosomal proteins and the clathrin adaptor AP-2 mu2. These results suggest that the vesicular secretion of exosome marker proteins in exosome-sized vesicles occurs primarily by an endocytosis-independent pathway.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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