Istituto Nazionale della Nutrizione, 00178 Rome, Italy
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ABSTRACT |
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We
have identified the Dri 27 cDNA on the basis of its upregulated
expression during rat intestinal development. It encodes a hydrophobic
protein of 430 amino acids that shares significant homology with
members of the mammalian zinc transporter family ZnT. The murine
homologue of Dri 27 (named ZnT4) was recently associated with the mouse
mutation "lethal milk." The primary sequence of Dri 27/ZnT4
displays features characteristic of polytopic membrane
proteins. In this paper, we show that Dri 27/ZnT4 is localized in the
membrane of intracellular vesicles, the majority of which concentrate
in the basal cytoplasmic region of polarized enterocytes. A Dri 27/ZnT4
myc-tagged construct, transiently transfected in intestinal
Caco-2 cells, partially colocalizes with the transferrin receptor and
with the -subunits of the clathrin adaptor complexes AP-1 and AP-2
in a subpopulation of endosomal vesicles. By subcloning distinct
portions of the protein in frame with
glutathione-S-transferase, we also provide experimental
evidence of their function as zinc-binding and
protein-protein-interaction domains.
small intestine; zinc transport; endosomal trafficking
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE ESSENTIAL ROLE of intestinal epithelial cells is the regulated absorption of nutrients and their transfer to the circulation to meet body needs. Because of the wide variation in dietary nutrient composition, a key function of enterocytes is the selective absorption of those substances whose excessive intake could be harmful. The polarized cells that constitute the absorptive intestinal mucosa are constantly renewed by sequential cell division, migration, and exfoliation that occur continuously in the adult epithelium along the crypt-villus axis (28). Such processes are strictly associated with cell differentiation and increasing expression of genes involved in nutrient absorption and transport (15).
Metal ions are essential nutrients necessary for a multitude of biochemical processes, either as catalytic components for enzymatic reactions or as structural elements of metalloproteins (13). Adequate intake of these trace elements is therefore essential for normal functioning of cells and tissues, although in high concentrations they can display toxic effects, either by triggering uncontrolled redox reactions leading to the production of reactive oxygen species or by interfering with metal-dependent cellular processes. Intracellular homeostasis for the different transition metals is achieved through the coordinate regulation of specific proteins involved in their uptake, efflux, and intracellular compartmentalization. Understanding these complex regulatory mechanisms requires the identification and molecular characterization of the specific transporters involved in such processes.
Each metal ion displays a specific site of absorption along the adult gastrointestinal tract (27). The absorption of zinc occurs almost exclusively in the small intestine and displays both saturable and nonsaturable components (reviewed in Refs. 6, 38, and 41). A specific transporter responsible for the intestinal uptake of zinc has not yet been identified at the molecular level, although biochemical evidence has been provided in specific cell types (10). The recently cloned iron transporter DCT 1 was also shown to mediate the uptake, with lower affinity, of other ions, including zinc (17). The only characterized mammalian zinc transporters belong to the recently described ZnT protein family. Although none of them appears to be responsible for zinc uptake, the ZnT proteins are highly homologous and differ from each other in their tissue specificity and intracellular localization. ZnT1 and ZnT2 were cloned by functional complementation of the zinc sensitivity of a mutated BHK cell line (30, 32). ZnT1 appears to be localized to the plasma membrane, where it presumably mediates zinc efflux; ZnT2 is involved in vesicular sequestration of this ion. ZnT3 was identified by homology with ZnT2; its expression is restricted to the nervous system and testes (31), and the protein is responsible for zinc transport into synaptic vesicles (8, 44). Very little is known about the zinc transport mechanism mediated by ZnT4, the most recently isolated member of this family. This protein was shown to confer zinc resistance to yeast mutants, and a truncated form of the protein was found to represent the molecular basis of the recessive mouse mutation "lethal milk" (lm) (18). The milk produced by homozygous lm/lm females contains insufficient zinc to support the needs of the growing pups (1).
In a search for genes upregulated during intestinal epithelial differentiation, using a subtractive hybridization approach, we have isolated two novel cDNA clones that were named Dri 27 and Dri 42 (Dri stands for differentially expressed in rat intestine) (2, 4). In this study, we report the isolation of the full-length Dri 27 cDNA clone, its expression in the intestinal tissue, and the functional characterization of the encoded protein as the rat homologue of the recently described mouse ZnT4. Moreover, we provide the first experimental evidence for direct zinc binding to the histidine-rich domain of the Dri 27/ZnT4 transporter and for its localization to the membranes of intracellular vesicles in intestinal cells.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Tissue preparation and RNA extraction. The portion of small intestine between the pylorus and the ileocecal valve was dissected from Sprague-Dawley rats that were anesthetized by intraperitoneal injection of 20 mg/100 g body wt of Farmotal (Farmitalia-Carlo Erba, Milan, Italy). The dissected tissue was quickly rinsed in cold Hanks' buffered saline (Flow Laboratories, Irvine, UK) and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. Total RNA was extracted from frozen pulverized tissues as described by Chirgwin et al. (7).
cDNA libraries.
The rat intestinal cDNA library used in this study was previously
described (4). The rat brain cDNA library was purchased from Stratagene
(La Jolla, CA). Both libraries were cloned into the EcoR I site
of the phage vector ZAP II. Library screening and in vivo excision
of insert-containing pBluescript SK
from plaque-purified,
recombinant lambda phages were performed according to the
manufacturer's directions.
DNA sequence determination. The DNA sequence was determined on double-stranded templates either by the Sanger's method of dideoxy chain termination, as modified by the use of Sequenase (US Biochemicals, Cleveland, OH) and 35S-labeled dATP (40), or by automatic sequencing (Genenco sequencing service, M-Medical, Florence, Italy).
cDNA constructs and expression of fusion proteins.
The cDNA constructs used in this study were obtained either by
restriction digestion or from fragments generated by PCR, using Dri
27-specific primers. All constructs were verified by sequencing of
the fusion junctions. Taq polymerase (Perkin Elmer, Norwalk, CT) was used for amplification as recommended by the manufacturer. PCR
primers had 20 nt of identity with the template, 6 nt containing a
restriction site, and were all synthesized by Genenco (oligonucleotide synthesis service, M-Medical). Constructs
glutathione-S-transferase (GST)-His and GST-Leu, containing the
Dri 27 putative metal-binding domain (residues 231-283)
and the leucine zipper-containing segment (residues
29-135), respectively, were obtained by subcloning amplified Dri 27 fragments into the vector pGEX-2T (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden), in frame with the carboxy terminus of
bacterial GST. GST-HD-Zip1 was a kind gift of Ida Ruberti (Centro di
Studio per gli Acidi Nucleici, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche,
Rome, Italy) (39). All GST fusion proteins were expressed in the JM 109 strain of Escherichia coli by induction with 0.1 mM
isopropyl-1-thio--D-galactopiranoside for 3 h at
37°C. Bacterial cells were lysed in 1× PBS containing a
cocktail of protease inhibitors (Boehringer Mannheim), with the
addition of 1 mg/ml lysozyme on ice. After three cycles of freeze and
thaw, the lysate was centrifuged for 30 min at 10,000 g and the
supernatant was incubated for 5 min with glutathione-agarose matrix
(Sigma). GST-His was released from the matrix by addition of free
glutathione, whereas GST-Leu was used in the binding experiments still
bound to glutathione-agarose. The Dri 27-myc expression vector
was obtained by replacing the scFv coding sequence of ScFvex-447-cyt (a
kind gift of Silvia Biocca, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome,
Italy) with the EcoR I-AlwN I restriction fragment
containing the entire open reading frame (ORF) of the Dri 27 cDNA (residues 1-1551). Both the Not I-Nco
I-digested vector and the insert were blunted before ligation, and the
resulting plasmid contained the c-myc epitope in frame with
amino acid residue 430 of Dri 27. A restriction fragment containing the
epitope-tagged construct was further subcloned into the eukaryotic
expression vector pcDNA-3 (Invitrogen, Groningen, The Netherlands).
Cell culture, transfection, metabolic labeling, and antibodies.
Human colon adenocarcinoma Caco-2 cells (a kind gift of A. Zweibaum,
Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Villejuif, France) were used between passages 80 and
100 and cultured as previously described (37). Both Caco-2 and
Cos-1 cells were transiently transfected using polyethylenimine (PEI;
Aldrich Chemical, Milwaukee, WI) as transfection agent (5). Briefly,
plasmids were incubated in 1.5 mM PEI for 12 min at room temperature in 150 mM NaCl, and the mixture was diluted with serum-free medium and
added to mid-log phase cells. After 1 h at 37°C, cells were washed
and fed with fresh medium. Immunofluorescence and metabolic labeling
were performed 24-48 h after transfection. For metabolic labeling,
cells were incubated for 3 h with 100 µCi/ml of
[35S]methionine plus cysteine (NEN Life Science
Products, Boston, MA) in methionine-cysteine-free medium. The
polyclonal antibody KS was raised in rabbit against a synthetic
14-amino-acid peptide spanning residues 370-383 of the Dri
27 sequence (Fig. 2). Peptide synthesis, coupling to ovalbumin, and
immunization were performed by Neosystem Laboratoire (Strasbourg,
France). The immune serum was further purified by protein A-Sepharose
affinity chromatography according to standard procedures. The purified
serum was used at a 1:50 dilution for both immunofluorescence and
immunoprecipitation. The anti-c-myc monoclonal antibody (clone
9E10) was purchased from Sigma and used at 1:100 dilution for
immunofluorescence experiments and at 1:500 dilution for
immunoprecipitation. For double immunofluorescence experiments, the
following primary antibodies were employed: polyclonal anti-c-myc (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA),
monoclonal anti-transferrin receptor (Zymed, San Francisco, CA),
monoclonal anti-1- and
2-adaptins
(Sigma). Secondary antibodies were goat anti-rabbit IgG (Cappel,
Organon Tecknika, Durham, NC) and donkey anti-mouse IgG (Jackson
ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA). The secondary antibodies
were labeled with either tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate or FITC
and were both used at a 1:200 dilution.
Immunofluorescence. For subcellular localization, cells were seeded on glass coverslips in 24-well tissue culture plates and grown to 50% confluency. Twenty-four hours after transfection, cells were fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde in PBS+ (1× PBS containing 1 mM MgCl2 and 0.1 mM CaCl2) for 30 min at room temperature and treated by conventional immunofluorescent techniques. Primary and secondary antibodies were diluted in 1× PBS+, 2% BSA, and 0.05% Triton X-100. For tissue immunofluorescence, portions of proximal duodenum, jejunum, and distal ileum from 21-day-old rats were dissected, and longitudinal cryosections were prepared as described in Ref. 3. Sections were fixed and treated as described for cells.
Biochemical methods. To test the ability of Dri 27 to bind metal ions, chromatography columns were packed with chelating Sepharose fast flow (Pharmacia Biotech) and the gel was immobilized with metal ions according to the instructions from the manufacturer. Purified GST or GST-His (both 150 µg) were applied to the column in loading buffer (50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 8.0, and 300 mM NaCl), washed with the same buffer, and eluted with increasing concentrations of imidazole. To examine possible protein-protein interactions, metabolically labeled cells were extracted in NP-40 lysis buffer (50 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1 % NP-40, and 0.025 % SDS) containing a cocktail of proteinase inhibitors for 30 min on ice. GST-Leu and the control fusion GST-HD-Zip1, still bound to glutathione-agarose beads, were incubated overnight at 4°C with cell lysate. The protein complexes were washed with lysis buffer, boiled in denaturing sample buffer, and fractionated by SDS-PAGE.
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RESULTS |
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Isolation and molecular analysis of a full-length Dri 27 cDNA clone. The nucleotide sequence of the Dri 27 cDNA fragment originally isolated by subtractive hybridization had shown no homology with previously known sequences in the GenBank/EMBL database. Northern blot hybridizations using this cloned fragment as probe identified a single mRNA of ~5 kb (2). The cloned sequence appeared to represent the 3' end of this transcript, as it did not contain an ORF and terminated with a consensus poly(A) addition site. We were unable to isolate a full-length clone after repeated screening of a rat intestinal cDNA library, synthesized in our laboratory (4), and because the Dri 27 mRNA is very abundant also in the brain (Fig. 3), we screened a rat brain library using as hybridization probe the largest intestinal clone (1.7 kb). Screening of 120,000 plaques yielded 6 positives, one of which contained a 5.4-kb insert. The complete nucleotide sequence of this clone was determined and shown to represent the full-length cDNA. The main features of the Dri 27 cDNA are 267 bp of untranslated region (UTR) at the 5' end, with a very high GC content (80%) and a long 3' UTR of 3.9 kb, ending with a poly(A) stretch. The ATG codon at position 268 initiates an ORF of 1.3 kb, encoding a protein of 430 amino acids. This sequence was submitted to the EMBL, GenBank, and DDBJ nucleotide sequence databases, where it is listed under the accession number Y16774.
Dri 27 protein is homologous to eukaryotic metal ion transporters.
Homology searches within the GenBank/EMBL protein sequence database
revealed that the primary sequence of the Dri 27 protein shares
significant homology to a widely conserved protein family of metal ion
transporters (9, 18, 20, 30, 32, 42). The murine homologue of Dri 27, named ZnT4, is the most recently cloned member of this family (18).
Alignment of the primary sequences of the four rat ZnT proteins and the
two yeast transporters is shown in Fig.
1A. At the level of primary
sequence, the six proteins can be aligned according to three distinct
blocks of higher homology, which are evolutionarily conserved. The
overall length, as well as the spacing between the conserved blocks,
differs in each sequence. It is interesting to note that the similarity among these proteins is very strong at the structural level, as all of
them display six alternating hydrophobic/hydrophilic domains, indicative of polytopic membrane proteins (Fig.
1B). Such striking structural conservation had previously
emerged for the members of a wider family of heavy metal ion
transporters, which includes the ZnTs (CDF family), whose structure is
evolutionarily conserved from bacteria to mammals (33). Between the
putative transmembrane segments IV and V, a cluster of alternating
histidine residues is present in all the eukaryotic proteins (aligned
at Fig. 1A, bottom), which have been proposed to bind
metal ions through the imidazole ring.
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Dri 27/ZnT4 expression.
The Northern blot hybridizations in Fig.
3A show that the Dri 27 gene is transcribed to different extents in all the adult rat tissues
examined. The strongest expression is observed in brain and testes,
followed by small intestine, medulla, lung, kidney, and the proximal
and distal portions of the gastrointestinal tract (stomach and colon).
Other tissues display lower levels of transcription of the Dri
27 gene. To investigate whether transcription of this gene might be
affected by nutritional zinc deprivation, we compared the steady-state
levels of Dri 27/ZnT4 mRNA in zinc-deprived rats with respect
to those in the corresponding tissues of animals fed control diets.
Total RNA was extracted from tissues expressing the highest levels of
this transcript, namely the small intestine, brain, and testes. The
results in Fig. 3B show that transcription of the gene remains
unchanged in these tissues in response to zinc deprivation.
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Dri 27/ZnT4 is localized in the membrane of intracellular vesicles.
A construct containing the entire ORF of the Dri 27/ZnT4 cDNA
was tagged at the carboxy terminus with a 10-amino acid peptide epitope
from c-myc, and the resulting construct was transiently transfected into cells of the human adenocarcinoma cell line Caco-2 and
detected using an anti-myc monoclonal antibody that
immunoprecipitates a single band of the predicted molecular weight from
transfected cells (Fig. 4A). Figure
4B shows immunostaining of Dri 27/ZnT4 in an overexpressing
Caco-2 cell 48 h after transfection. The protein is clearly associated
with intracellular vesicles of heterogeneous size, mostly concentrated
in the perinuclear region and sparsely distributed throughout the
entire cytoplasm. No staining is detected on the plasma membrane. To
further investigate the nature of such vesicles, we performed
double-labeling experiments using antibodies specifically directed
against proteins whose association with specific intracellular
compartments is well characterized. The results in Fig.
5, top, show that a subpopulation
of Dri 27/ZnT4-containing vesicles also contain transferrin receptor
(TfR), which recycles between the endosomal compartment and the plasma
membrane (14). A monoclonal antibody recognizing both 1-
and
2-adaptins, subunits of the two clathrin-adaptor
complexes AP-1 and AP-2, respectively, also shows partially overlapping
localization with the transfected protein (Fig. 5, bottom). The
anti-
-adaptin antibody does not allow distinction between AP-1 and
AP-2, which mediate clathrin assembly on coated vesicles budding from
the trans-Golgi network or from the plasma membrane (26). As expected,
a smaller extent of overlap is observed with TfR than with the
-adaptins, because the transfected protein and TfR are
simultaneously present as specific cargo proteins in only a subset of
endosomal vesicles, whereas AP-1 and AP-2 associate with all
clathrin-coated vesicles that traffic along the same route. Although
these experiments do not allow more precise determination of the
endpoint of Dri 27/ZnT4 vesicle trafficking, they provide a strong
indication of their association with the endosomal compartment.
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Immunolocalization of Dri 27/ZnT4 in rat small intestine.
The epithelial cells that layer the small intestinal mucosa display
morphological and functional polarization of cellular components. To
investigate whether Dri 27/ZnT4-containing vesicles show a polarized
distribution in differentiated enterocytes, we next stained sections of
small intestinal epithelium with a specifically raised antipeptide
antibody. The antibody preparation was first tested by
immunoprecipitation (Fig. 4A). Both the antipeptide antibody
and the commercial anti-myc antibody select a single immunoprecipitated band from the extracts of Cos cells transfected with
the myc-tagged Dri 27/ZnT4 cDNA. The antipeptide
antibody KS failed to immunoprecipitate the endogenous protein from
either simian Cos cells (Fig. 4A) or human Caco-2 cells (data
not shown), thus demonstrating species specificity towards the rat
epitope. Immunostaining of the protein by indirect immunofluorescence
on cryosections of rat small intestine, using the KS antibody, is shown
in Fig. 6. Along the crypt-villus axis, the
distribution of the protein (Fig. 6A) parallels the synthesis
of its mRNA, visualized by in situ hybridization (Fig. 6C). The
protein is absent in the proliferative cells of the crypts; its
expression starts at the crypt-villus junction and is maintained in the
differentiating enterocytes along the villus. Specific staining is
concentrated mainly at the basal side of epithelial cells,
although weaker staining is observed also throughout the apical
cytoplasm. Diffuse fluorescence is detected in the microvillar
membrane, the significance of which is unclear at present because it is
also observed in sections stained with the preimmune serum (Fig.
6D). A phase-contrast photograph of the same field in Fig.
6A is shown in Fig. 6B as a control for the integrity
of the tissue.
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Amino-terminal segment of Dri 27/ZnT4 mediates specific
protein-protein interactions.
To test the ability of Dri 27/ZnT4 to participate in protein-protein
interactions, we used the fusion protein GST-Leu, which contains 120 amino acids in the amino-terminal segment of the rat zinc transporter,
including the leucine-zipper motif (Fig. 2). Total proteins were
extracted from metabolically labeled Caco-2 or Cos cells. The extract
was incubated with either the purified recombinant GST-Leu protein or
with a control GST fusion containing a heterologous leucine zipper from
Arabidopsis thaliana [GST-HD-Zip1 (39)], under
conditions allowing specific protein-protein interactions (described in
MATERIALS AND METHODS). Because both GST fusion proteins
were still bound to glutathione-agarose beads, after incubation the
isolated complexes were pulled down by centrifugation and fractionated
on SDS-PAGE gels. The results in Fig. 8
show that two prominent bands with molecular masses of ~80 and ~100 kDa, respectively, were specifically selected by GST-Leu from the
protein extracts of either Caco-2 (lanes 1 and 2) or
Cos cells (lanes 3-6). The presence of a band of
comparable size to the entire Dri 27/ZnT4 protein in the complexes
selected by GST-Leu does not allow us to rule out entirely the
possibility of homodimerization. However, we believe that this case is
rather unlikely because the intensity of this band is not increased in
Cos cells overexpressing Dri 27/ZnT4 by transfection (lanes 5 and 6). Parallel immunoprecipitation of myc-tagged Dri
27/ZnT4 from transfected and nontransfected Cos cells is shown in
lanes 7 and 8 to account for the amount of protein
expressed by transfected cells. The binding specificity of GST-Leu
toward the two polypeptide bands shown in Fig. 8 was reproducible also
when using GST alone in place of GST-HD-Zip1 as negative control (data
not shown). We have observed that the relative intensity of the two
specific bands varies in independent experiments; therefore, we cannot
exclude the possibility that the 80-kDa band might represent a
degradation product of the 100-kDa polypeptide. In conclusion, our
results show a role of the amino-terminal portion of Dri 27/ZnT4, which
contains the leucine-zipper motif, in heterodimeric interactions with
at least one specific partner.
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DISCUSSION |
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We have reported in this paper the isolation and functional analysis of the rat protein Dri 27, a zinc transporter whose mouse homologue, ZnT4, was recently cloned and identified as the molecular basis of the lm mouse mutation (18). Homozygous lm/lm females produce zinc-deficient milk, thus causing the death of their pups before weaning (1, 36). Although this is the most severe phenotype of the mutants, homozygous lm/lm mice fostered by wild-type mothers can survive throughout adult life displaying a minor pleiotropic phenotype that is still poorly understood (12). The initial studies on the expression of ZnT4 were carried out in mammary tissue and cell lines, and the cellular mechanisms by which the mutant protein interferes with zinc metabolism are still an open question.
Our laboratory has been primarily concerned with the isolation and molecular characterization of genes that are upregulated during intestinal epithelial differentiation (2-4). Because the absorptive intestinal mucosa is the primary site of zinc uptake and we originally isolated the Dri 27 cDNA from this tissue on the basis of its upregulation during intestinal epithelial differentiation, we have sought to understand the role that its gene product might play in differentiated enterocytes through a detailed analysis of its intracellular localization and of its distinct functional domains.
We have shown that Dri 27/ZnT4 is expressed almost ubiquitously in rat tissues and that transcription of the corresponding gene is not affected by zinc deprivation. Within the ZnT family, ubiquitous expression was reported only for ZnT1, whereas both ZnT2 and ZnT3 display tissue-restricted expression (31). Because ZnT4 and ZnT2 expression profiles overlap in the gut and both proteins appear to be localized in endosomal vesicle membranes (Ref. 23 and this study), it would be interesting to investigate whether in this tissue they might perform similar functions. The two proteins are in fact predicted to display the same topological configuration within the membrane bilayer, their zinc binding domains are both cytoplasmically oriented, and ZnT2-coated vesicles have been shown to accumulate zinc (30). A possible, even partial redundancy between the functions of the two proteins might explain the lack of a major intestinal phenotype in lm mice.
The results presented in this paper show for the first time the
vesicular localization of Dri 27/ZnT4 and the partial overlap of such
vesicles with markers of vesicular trafficking. Immunofluorescence on
cryosections of rat small intestinal mucosa reveals that the majority
of the Dri 27/ZnT4-containing vesicles are clustered in the basal side
of polarized enterocytes in vivo, although staining is observed also
throughout the apical cytoplasm of enterocytes. We cannot rule out at
present that translocation of Dri 27/ZnT4-containing vesicles to
different membrane compartments might occur in vivo in response to
specific stimuli that are absent in the tissue-culture medium. A
regulatory mechanism of this kind has been described for the glucose
transporter GLUT4, which has a vesicular localization in adipose cells
and muscle cells, but it is rapidly translocated to the plasma membrane
in response to insulin (Ref. 34 and references therein). In the case of
ZnT4, the first likely candidate for a regulatory response of this kind
is zinc, as other metal ions have been already reported to induce
trafficking of their own transporters. The human Menkes protein, which
plays a key role in copper transport, is localized on intracellular
vesicles that show a reversible, copper-dependent redistribution from
the Golgi apparatus to the plasma membrane (25, 35). Several mammalian diseases related to metal ion transport and homeostasis have been recently associated with defects in intracellular trafficking, and
increasing experimental evidence points to cargo selection as a key
regulatory mechanism for proper sorting of metal ion-loaded intracellular vesicles. The Acrodermatitis enteropathica
mutation (AE), resulting in defective intestinal uptake of zinc in
humans, was recently associated with the absence from fibroblasts of AE patients of TIP47, a protein involved in cargo selection for
mannose-6-phosphate receptor trafficking (11, 16). Moreover, the mouse
mutation mocha, which results in lack of expression of the
-subunit of the AP-3 complex, simultaneously affects endosomal
transport, zinc concentration in synaptic vesicles, as well as the
expression levels of ZnT3 (22). In light of these studies, future work should be aimed at elucidating the regulatory mechanisms
underlying vesicular compartmentalization of zinc and the expression of
specific zinc transporters.
The alternating histidine residues in the ZnT proteins had been postulated to represent metal ion-binding domains, but this function had never been shown experimentally. The data presented in this paper provide therefore the first experimental evidence that zinc and other metal ions specifically bind in vitro the histidine residues in the putative metal ion-binding domain that characterizes the ZnT family of transporters. Moreover, with this experiment we have demonstrated that the binding specificity toward a specific ion is not always conferred by the length or the composition of the His-rich sequence per se but rather likely by the structural features of the protein in which it resides.
A unique feature of Dri 27/ZnT4 is the presence of a leucine-zipper motif in the amino-terminal cytoplasmic region, which is absent in the other ZnT proteins. The presence of a leucine zipper in a transporter protein is not unusual (Ref. 21 and references therein), although in this latter class of proteins the function of this sequence motif has not been investigated thoroughly. By expressing the leucine zipper-containing fragment of Dri 27/ZnT4 as a GST fusion protein, we have demonstrated specific binding to two polypeptide bands of apparent molecular masses of 80 kDa and 100 kDa in the extracts of metabolically labeled Caco-2 and Cos cells. The identity of these protein bands is presently under study, and it would be extremely interesting to elucidate whether their interaction with Dri 27/ZnT4 could either lead to the formation of a multisubunit transporter complex or play a role in functional regulation or intracellular compartimentalization of the transporter protein.
Having determined the colocalization of Dri 27/ZnT4 with -adaptins,
we have investigated whether the 100-kDa band might correspond to one
of the subunits of equivalent molecular mass in the AP complexes
(reviewed in Ref. 26). However, the results of immunoblotting experiments using antibodies against the adaptins
,
1,
2, and
did not show identity of
any of these subunits of AP-1 and AP-2 with the Dri 27/ZnT4 interacting
polypeptides. Future work should be aimed at the molecular
characterization of these interacting proteins, as well as at
identifying which of the amino acid residues in the amino-terminal
segment of the zinc transporter are responsible for such interaction.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank A. Leone for useful comments and suggestions throughout this work and R. Palmiter for sharing unpublished results. We thank E. Mengheri for providing us with zinc-deficient animals and S. Biocca and I. Ruberti for DNA constructs and helpful suggestions. We thank M. Bianchi, G. Morelli, and Y. Sambuy for critical reading of the manuscript. We also thank P. Rami and R. Rami for taking expert care of the animals.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was supported in part by Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Target Project on Biotechnology.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: G. Perozzi, Istituto Nazionale della Nutrizione, Via Ardeatina 546, 00178 Rome, Italy (E-mail: giuditta{at}inn.ingrm.it).
Received 8 March 1999; accepted in final form 26 August 1999.
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