ADP ribosylation factor regulates spectrin binding to the Golgi complex

  1. Anna Godi,
  2. Ivana Santone,
  3. Paolo Pertile,
  4. Prasad Devarajan,
  5. Paul R. Stabach§,
  6. Jon S. Morrow§,
  7. Giuseppe Di Tullio,
  8. Roman Polishchuk,
  9. Tamara C. Petrucci,
  10. Alberto Luini, and
  11. Maria Antonietta De Matteis,
  1. Department of Cell Biology and Oncology, Consorzio Mario Negri Sud, Santa Maria Imbaro (Chieti), Italy 66030; Departments of §Pathology and Pediatrics, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520; and Laboratory of Cell Biology, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy 00161
  1. Communicated by Joseph F. Hoffman, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT (received for review October 6, 1997)

Abstract

Homologues of two major components of the well-characterized erythrocyte plasma-membrane-skeleton, spectrin (a not-yet-cloned isoform, βIΣ* spectrin) and ankyrin (AnkG119 and an ≈195-kDa ankyrin), associate with the Golgi complex. ADP ribosylation factor (ARF) is a small G protein that controls the architecture and dynamics of the Golgi by mechanisms that remain incompletely understood. We find that activated ARF stimulates the in vitro association of βIΣ* spectrin with a Golgi fraction, that the Golgi-associated βIΣ* spectrin contains epitopes characteristic of the βIΣ2 spectrin pleckstrin homology (PH) domain known to bind phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PtdInsP2), and that ARF recruits βIΣ* spectrin by inducing increased PtdInsP2 levels in the Golgi. The stimulation of spectrin binding by ARF is independent of its ability to stimulate phospholipase D or to recruit coat proteins (COP)-I and can be blocked by agents that sequester PtdInsP2. We postulate that a PH domain within βIΣ* Golgi spectrin binds PtdInsP2 and acts as a regulated docking site for spectrin on the Golgi. Agents that block the binding of spectrin to the Golgi, either by blocking the PH domain interaction or a constitutive Golgi binding site within spectrin’s membrane association domain I, inhibit the transport of vesicular stomatitis virus G protein from endoplasmic reticulum to the medial compartment of the Golgi complex. Collectively, these results suggest that the Golgi-spectrin skeleton plays a central role in regulating the structure and function of this organelle.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: dematteis{at}cmns.mnegri.it.

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    ARF,
    ADP ribosylation factor;
    MAD,
    membrane association domain;
    PtdIns,
    phosphatidylinositol;
    PH,
    pleckstrin homology;
    ER,
    endoplasmic reticulum;
    VSV,
    vesicular stomatitis virus;
    COP,
    coat protein(s);
    BFA,
    brefeldin A;
    GST,
    glutathione S-transferase;
    Btk,
    Bruton’s tyrosine kinase;
    PLD,
    phospholipase D;
    OSBP,
    oxysterol-binding protein
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