Vesicular Calcium Regulates Coat Retention, Fusogenicity, and Size of Pre-Golgi Intermediates

Author:

Bentley Marvin1,Nycz Deborah C.1,Joglekar Ashwini2,Fertschai Ismene3,Malli Roland3,Graier Wolfgang F.3,Hay Jesse C.1

Affiliation:

1. *Division of Biological Sciences and Center for Structural and Functional Neuroscience, The University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812-4824;

2. Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; and

3. Center of Molecular Medicine, Medical University of Graz, 8010 Graz, Austria

Abstract

The significance and extent of Ca2+regulation of the biosynthetic secretory pathway have been difficult to establish, and our knowledge of regulatory relationships integrating Ca2+with vesicle coats and function is rudimentary. Here, we investigated potential roles and mechanisms of luminal Ca2+in the early secretory pathway. Specific depletion of luminal Ca2+in living normal rat kidney cells using cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) resulted in the extreme expansion of vesicular tubular cluster (VTC) elements. Consistent with this, a suppressive role for vesicle-associated Ca2+in COPII vesicle homotypic fusion was demonstrated in vitro using Ca2+chelators. The EF-hand–containing protein apoptosis-linked gene 2 (ALG-2), previously implicated in the stabilization of sec31 at endoplasmic reticulum exit sites, inhibited COPII vesicle fusion in a Ca2+-requiring manner, suggesting that ALG-2 may be a sensor for the effects of vesicular Ca2+on homotypic fusion. Immunoisolation established that Ca2+chelation inhibits and ALG-2 specifically favors residual retention of the COPII outer shell protein sec31 on pre-Golgi fusion intermediates. We conclude that vesicle-associated Ca2+, acting through ALG-2, favors the retention of residual coat molecules that seem to suppress membrane fusion. We propose that in cells, these Ca2+-dependent mechanisms temporally regulate COPII vesicle interactions, VTC biogenesis, cargo sorting, and VTC maturation.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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