ADP ribosylation factor regulates spectrin binding to the Golgi complex
- Anna Godi†,
- Ivana Santone†,
- Paolo Pertile†,
- Prasad Devarajan‡,
- Paul R. Stabach§,
- Jon S. Morrow§,
- Giuseppe Di Tullio†,
- Roman Polishchuk†,
- Tamara C. Petrucci¶,
- Alberto Luini†, and
- Maria Antonietta De Matteis†,‖
- †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
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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
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↵ ‖ 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
- Copyright © 1998, The National Academy of Sciences








