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Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation

A well-characterized cell-free assay that reconstitutes Golgi transport is shown to require physically fragmented Golgi fractions for maximal activity. A Golgi fraction containing large, highly stacked flattened cisternae associated with coatomer-rich components was inactive in the intra-Golgi trans...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dominguez, Michel, Fazel, Ali, Dahan, Sophie, Lovell, Jacque, Hermo, Louis, Claude, Alejandro, Melançon, Paul, Bergeron, J.J.M.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2133190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10330398
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author Dominguez, Michel
Fazel, Ali
Dahan, Sophie
Lovell, Jacque
Hermo, Louis
Claude, Alejandro
Melançon, Paul
Bergeron, J.J.M.
author_facet Dominguez, Michel
Fazel, Ali
Dahan, Sophie
Lovell, Jacque
Hermo, Louis
Claude, Alejandro
Melançon, Paul
Bergeron, J.J.M.
author_sort Dominguez, Michel
collection PubMed
description A well-characterized cell-free assay that reconstitutes Golgi transport is shown to require physically fragmented Golgi fractions for maximal activity. A Golgi fraction containing large, highly stacked flattened cisternae associated with coatomer-rich components was inactive in the intra-Golgi transport assay. In contrast, more fragmented hepatic Golgi fractions of lower purity were highly active in this assay. Control experiments ruled out defects in glycosylation, the presence of excess coatomer or inhibitory factors, as well as the lack or consumption of limiting diffusible factors as responsible for the lower activity of intact Golgi fractions. Neither Brefeldin A treatment, preincubation with KCl (that completely removed associated coatomer) or preincubation with imidazole buffers that caused unstacking, activated stacked fractions for transport. Only physical fragmentation promoted recovery of Golgi fractions active for transport in vitro. Rate-zonal centrifugation partially separated smaller transport-active Golgi fragments with a unique v-SNARE pattern, away from the bulk of Golgi-derived elements identified by their morphology and content of Golgi marker enzymes (N-acetyl glucosaminyl and galactosyl transferase activities). These fragments released during activation likely represent intra-Golgi continuities involved in maintaining the dynamic redistribution of resident enzymes during rapid anterograde transport of secretory cargo through the Golgi in vivo.
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spelling pubmed-21331902008-05-01 Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation Dominguez, Michel Fazel, Ali Dahan, Sophie Lovell, Jacque Hermo, Louis Claude, Alejandro Melançon, Paul Bergeron, J.J.M. J Cell Biol Regular Articles A well-characterized cell-free assay that reconstitutes Golgi transport is shown to require physically fragmented Golgi fractions for maximal activity. A Golgi fraction containing large, highly stacked flattened cisternae associated with coatomer-rich components was inactive in the intra-Golgi transport assay. In contrast, more fragmented hepatic Golgi fractions of lower purity were highly active in this assay. Control experiments ruled out defects in glycosylation, the presence of excess coatomer or inhibitory factors, as well as the lack or consumption of limiting diffusible factors as responsible for the lower activity of intact Golgi fractions. Neither Brefeldin A treatment, preincubation with KCl (that completely removed associated coatomer) or preincubation with imidazole buffers that caused unstacking, activated stacked fractions for transport. Only physical fragmentation promoted recovery of Golgi fractions active for transport in vitro. Rate-zonal centrifugation partially separated smaller transport-active Golgi fragments with a unique v-SNARE pattern, away from the bulk of Golgi-derived elements identified by their morphology and content of Golgi marker enzymes (N-acetyl glucosaminyl and galactosyl transferase activities). These fragments released during activation likely represent intra-Golgi continuities involved in maintaining the dynamic redistribution of resident enzymes during rapid anterograde transport of secretory cargo through the Golgi in vivo. The Rockefeller University Press 1999-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC2133190/ /pubmed/10330398 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Articles
Dominguez, Michel
Fazel, Ali
Dahan, Sophie
Lovell, Jacque
Hermo, Louis
Claude, Alejandro
Melançon, Paul
Bergeron, J.J.M.
Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation
title Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation
title_full Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation
title_fullStr Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation
title_full_unstemmed Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation
title_short Fusogenic Domains of Golgi Membranes Are Sequestered into Specialized Regions of the Stack that Can Be Released by Mechanical Fragmentation
title_sort fusogenic domains of golgi membranes are sequestered into specialized regions of the stack that can be released by mechanical fragmentation
topic Regular Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2133190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10330398
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