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Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life

Intracellular traffic in Aspergillus nidulans hyphae must cope with the challenges that the high rates of apical extension (1μm/min) and the long intracellular distances (>100 μm) impose. Understanding the ways in which the hyphal tip cell coordinates traffic to meet these challenges is of basic...

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Autores principales: Hernández-González, Miguel, Bravo-Plaza, Ignacio, Pinar, Mario, de los Ríos, Vivian, Arst, Herbert N., Peñalva, Miguel A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5880334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29608571
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007291
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author Hernández-González, Miguel
Bravo-Plaza, Ignacio
Pinar, Mario
de los Ríos, Vivian
Arst, Herbert N.
Peñalva, Miguel A.
author_facet Hernández-González, Miguel
Bravo-Plaza, Ignacio
Pinar, Mario
de los Ríos, Vivian
Arst, Herbert N.
Peñalva, Miguel A.
author_sort Hernández-González, Miguel
collection PubMed
description Intracellular traffic in Aspergillus nidulans hyphae must cope with the challenges that the high rates of apical extension (1μm/min) and the long intracellular distances (>100 μm) impose. Understanding the ways in which the hyphal tip cell coordinates traffic to meet these challenges is of basic importance, but is also of considerable applied interest, as fungal invasiveness of animals and plants depends critically upon maintaining these high rates of growth. Rapid apical extension requires localization of cell-wall-modifying enzymes to hyphal tips. By combining genetic blocks in different trafficking steps with multidimensional epifluorescence microscopy and quantitative image analyses we demonstrate that polarization of the essential chitin-synthase ChsB occurs by indirect endocytic recycling, involving delivery/exocytosis to apices followed by internalization by the sub-apical endocytic collar of actin patches and subsequent trafficking to TGN cisternae, where it accumulates for ~1 min before being re-delivered to the apex by a RAB11/TRAPPII-dependent pathway. Accordingly, ChsB is stranded at the TGN by Sec7 inactivation but re-polarizes to the apical dome if the block is bypassed by a mutation in geaA(gea1) that restores growth in the absence of Sec7. That polarization is independent of RAB5, that ChsB predominates at apex-proximal cisternae, and that upon dynein impairment ChsB is stalled at the tips in an aggregated endosome indicate that endocytosed ChsB traffics to the TGN via sorting endosomes functionally located upstream of the RAB5 domain and that this step requires dynein-mediated basipetal transport. It also requires RAB6 and its effector GARP (Vps51/Vps52/Vps53/Vps54), whose composition we determined by MS/MS following affinity chromatography purification. Ablation of any GARP component diverts ChsB to vacuoles and impairs growth and morphology markedly, emphasizing the important physiological role played by this pathway that, we propose, is central to the hyphal mode of growth.
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spelling pubmed-58803342018-04-13 Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life Hernández-González, Miguel Bravo-Plaza, Ignacio Pinar, Mario de los Ríos, Vivian Arst, Herbert N. Peñalva, Miguel A. PLoS Genet Research Article Intracellular traffic in Aspergillus nidulans hyphae must cope with the challenges that the high rates of apical extension (1μm/min) and the long intracellular distances (>100 μm) impose. Understanding the ways in which the hyphal tip cell coordinates traffic to meet these challenges is of basic importance, but is also of considerable applied interest, as fungal invasiveness of animals and plants depends critically upon maintaining these high rates of growth. Rapid apical extension requires localization of cell-wall-modifying enzymes to hyphal tips. By combining genetic blocks in different trafficking steps with multidimensional epifluorescence microscopy and quantitative image analyses we demonstrate that polarization of the essential chitin-synthase ChsB occurs by indirect endocytic recycling, involving delivery/exocytosis to apices followed by internalization by the sub-apical endocytic collar of actin patches and subsequent trafficking to TGN cisternae, where it accumulates for ~1 min before being re-delivered to the apex by a RAB11/TRAPPII-dependent pathway. Accordingly, ChsB is stranded at the TGN by Sec7 inactivation but re-polarizes to the apical dome if the block is bypassed by a mutation in geaA(gea1) that restores growth in the absence of Sec7. That polarization is independent of RAB5, that ChsB predominates at apex-proximal cisternae, and that upon dynein impairment ChsB is stalled at the tips in an aggregated endosome indicate that endocytosed ChsB traffics to the TGN via sorting endosomes functionally located upstream of the RAB5 domain and that this step requires dynein-mediated basipetal transport. It also requires RAB6 and its effector GARP (Vps51/Vps52/Vps53/Vps54), whose composition we determined by MS/MS following affinity chromatography purification. Ablation of any GARP component diverts ChsB to vacuoles and impairs growth and morphology markedly, emphasizing the important physiological role played by this pathway that, we propose, is central to the hyphal mode of growth. Public Library of Science 2018-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5880334/ /pubmed/29608571 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007291 Text en © 2018 Hernández-González et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hernández-González, Miguel
Bravo-Plaza, Ignacio
Pinar, Mario
de los Ríos, Vivian
Arst, Herbert N.
Peñalva, Miguel A.
Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life
title Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life
title_full Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life
title_fullStr Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life
title_full_unstemmed Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life
title_short Endocytic recycling via the TGN underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life
title_sort endocytic recycling via the tgn underlies the polarized hyphal mode of life
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5880334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29608571
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007291
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