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Golgin45-Syntaxin5 Interaction Contributes to Structural Integrity of the Golgi Stack.

Citation
Tiwari, N., et al. “Golgin45-Syntaxin5 Interaction Contributes To Structural Integrity Of The Golgi Stack.”. Scientific Reports, p. 12465.
Center Yale University
Author Neeraj Tiwari, Morven Graham, Xinran Liu, Xihua Yue, Lianhui Zhu, Dipak Meshram, Sunkyu Choi, Yi Qian, James E Rothman, Intaek Lee
Abstract

The unique stacked morphology of the Golgi apparatus had been a topic of intense investigation among the cell biologists over the years. We had previously shown that the two Golgin tethers (GM130 and Golgin45) could, to a large degree, functionally substitute for GRASP-type Golgi stacking proteins to sustain normal Golgi morphology and function in GRASP65/55-double depleted HeLa cells. However, compared to well-studied GM130, the exact role of Golgin45 in Golgi structure remains poorly understood. In this study, we aimed to further characterize the functional role of Golgin45 in Golgi structure and identified Golgin45 as a novel Syntaxin5-binding protein. Based primarily on a sequence homology between Golgin45 and GM130, we found that a leucine zipper-like motif in the central coiled-coil region of Golgin45 appears to serve as a Syntaxin5 binding domain. Mutagenesis study of this conserved domain in Golgin45 showed that a point mutation (D171A) can abrogate the interaction between Golgin45 and Syntaxin5 in pull-down assays using recombinant proteins, whereas this mutant Golgin45 binding to Rab2-GTP was unaffected in vitro. Strikingly, exogenous expression of this Syntaxin5 binding deficient mutant (D171A) of Golgin45 in HeLa cells resulted in frequent intercisternal fusion among neighboring Golgi cisterna, as readily observed by EM and EM tomography. Further, double depletion of the two Syntaxin5-binding Golgin tethers also led to significant intercisternal fusion, while double depletion of GRASP65/55 didn't lead to this phenotype. These results suggest that certain tether-SNARE interaction within Golgi stack may play a role in inhibiting intercisternal fusion among neighboring cisternae, thereby contributing to structural integrity of the Golgi stack.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Scientific reports
Volume
9
Issue
1
Number of Pages
12465
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
2045-2322
DOI
10.1038/s41598-019-48875-x
Alternate Journal
Sci Rep
PMID
31462665
PMCID
PMC6713708
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