Distribution and Function of AP-1 Clathrin Adaptor Complexes in Polarized Epithelial Cells

Heike Fölscha, Marc Pypaerta, Peter Schub, and Ira Mellmana
a Department of Cell Biology and Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06520
b Center for Biochemistry and Molecular Cell Biology, Biochemistry Department II, University of Göttingen, D-37073 Göttingen, Germany

Correspondence to: Ira Mellman, Department of Cell Biology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St., New Haven, CT 06510. Tel:(203) 785-4303 Fax:(203) 785-4301 E-mail:ira.mellman{at}yale.edu.


  Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References

Expression of the epithelial cell–specific heterotetrameric adaptor complex AP-1B is required for the polarized distribution of many membrane proteins to the basolateral surface of LLC-PK1 kidney cells. AP-1B is distinguished from the ubiquitously expressed AP-1A by exchange of its single 50-kD µ subunit, µ1A, being replaced by the closely related µ1B. Here we show that this substitution is sufficient to couple basolateral plasma membrane proteins, such as a low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR), to the AP-1B complex and to clathrin. The interaction between LDLR and AP-1B is likely to occur in the trans-Golgi network (TGN), as was suggested by the localization of functional, epitope-tagged µ1 by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. Tagged AP-1A and AP-1B complexes were found in the perinuclear region close to the Golgi complex and recycling endosomes, often in clathrin-coated buds and vesicles. Yet, AP-1A and AP-1B localized to different subdomains of the TGN, with only AP-1A colocalizing with furin, a membrane protein that uses AP-1 to recycle between the TGN and endosomes. We conclude that AP-1B functions by interacting with its cargo molecules and clathrin in the TGN, where it acts to sort basolateral proteins from proteins destined for the apical surface and from those selected by AP-1A for transport to endosomes and lysosomes.

Key Words: cell polarity, Golgi complex, furin, trans-Golgi network, endosomes


  Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References

Epithelial cells generate and maintain at least two biochemically distinct plasma membrane domains that reside within a continuous lipid bilayer (Rodriguez-Boulan and Powell 1992 ; Drubin and Nelson 1996 ; Yeaman et al. 1999 ). The polarized distribution of membrane proteins and lipids to the apical or basolateral domain depends on several factors. First, most epithelial cells have the ability to sort newly synthesized plasma membrane components as they exit the TGN and package them into transport vesicles that are delivered to the correct target membrane. Second, to ensure that this polarized distribution is maintained despite rapid endocytosis at both the apical and basolateral surfaces, endosomes in epithelial cells are likewise capable of polarized sorting and transport to allow for recycling of internalized proteins and lipids to their correct domains. Finally, some membrane proteins may achieve polarity by selective retention at the apical or basolateral surface. Although less well understood, this may reflect interactions with extracellular ligands or with intracellular scaffolds, such as cytoskeletal elements or arrays of PDZ domain–containing proteins (Mays et al. 1995 ; Cohen et al. 1998 ; Setou et al. 2000 ). For each of these mechanisms, polarity depends critically on the existence of specific signals encoded within the membrane proteins themselves.

It is well established that distinct types of signals determine apical versus basolateral sorting on the endocytic and secretory pathways. Apical sorting is thought to reflect selective segregation into glycolipid- and cholesterol-enriched raft domains, facilitated by the presence of critical N- or O-linked carbohydrate moieties in a protein's extracellular region or by the physical properties of the transmembrane domain (Scheiffele et al. 1995 ; Simons and Ikonen 1997 ). Basolateral sorting signals are far better understood and frequently lie in a membrane protein's cytoplasmic domain (Matter and Mellman 1994 ; Mostov et al. 1999 ; Matter 2000 ). When present, they are also generally cis-dominant to apical signals. Although basolateral signals can contain critical tyrosine or di-leucine residues, their sequence motif appears to be degenerate, with no universal consensus or features having as yet emerged. It is nevertheless intriguing that these signals are similar to the tyrosine and dileucine-based signals which specify inclusion in clathrin-coated vesicles at the plasma membrane or in the TGN. Such signals are known to interact with well characterized clathrin-associated adaptor complexes (Hirst and Robinson 1998 ; Bonifacino and Dell'Angelica 1999 ).

Adaptor complexes are heterotetrameric complexes that comprise two large, one medium, and one small subunit. By yeast two-hybrid and structural analysis, it is the medium or µ subunit that interacts with at least tyrosine-based sorting signals (Ohno et al. 1995 , Ohno et al. 1996 ; Owen and Evans 1998 ). So far, several families of adaptor complexes (AP-1A/AP-1B, AP-2, AP-3A/AP-3B, and AP-4) have been described, one of them being the epithelial cell–specific AP-1B complex (Hirst and Robinson 1998 ; Bonifacino and Dell'Angelica 1999 ; Dell'Angelica et al. 1999a ; Folsch et al. 1999 ; Hirst et al. 1999 ; Ohno et al. 1999 ). AP-1B shares with the ubiquitously expressed AP-1A complex the large and small subunits, but contains its own medium subunit, µ1B. We have found recently that AP-1B ({gamma}, ß1, µ1B, {sigma}1) is required for the proper polarity of many basolateral membrane proteins, with the mistargeting seen in µ1B-deficient LLC-PK1 porcine kidney epithelial cells corrected by transfection of a µ1B cDNA (Folsch et al. 1999 ).

Each adaptor complex has a characteristic distribution in the cell that belies its function and signal selectivity. AP-2 complexes are found primarily at the plasma membrane, where they interact with cell surface receptors to concentrate them in clathrin-coated pits. AP-1, or at least AP-1A, complexes are found in the TGN and to a lesser extent in endosomes. Here, via their µ1A subunits, they interact with cargo such as mannose 6-phosphate receptor, leading to accumulation in clathrin-coated buds and transport to endosomes. AP-3 complexes are similarly distributed since they also bind lysosome-directed cargo and mediate transport to endocytic organelles with or without involving clathrin (Simpson et al. 1996 ; Dell'Angelica et al. 1998 ; Drake et al. 2000 ). We have now examined the cargo specificity and distribution of AP-1B complexes. Although similar to AP-1A complexes in general, with respect to intracellular localization and association with clathrin AP-1B complexes can be found to interact biochemically with basolateral targeting signals and, seemingly, to define a domain of the TGN distinct from that defined by AP-1A.


  Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References


Cloning of HA-tagged µ1A and µ1B
Hemagglutinin (HA)1-tagged versions of µ1A and µ1B were cloned by PCR using mouse µ1A cDNA (sequence data available from EMBL/GenBank/DDBJ under accession no. M62419) or human µ1B cDNA (ID 123283; IMAGE consortium, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) as templates and the plaque forming unit (pfu)-polymerase (Stratagene). The internal HA tags were introduced into µ1A and µ1B between amino acids 230 and 231. First, the COOH termini were amplified using 5'-GCGCGAATTCATCGATGTGGAGCTGGAGGATGTGAAATTC-3' and 5'-GCGCAAGCTTTCACTGGGTCCGGAGCTG-3' as NH2- and COOH-terminal primers, respectively, for µ1A; 5'-GCGCGAATTCATCGATGTAGAGCTGGAGGATGTAAAATTC-3' as NH2-terminal primer combined with 5'-GCGCAAGCTTCTAGCTGGTACGAAGTTG-3' as COOH-terminal primer were used for µ1B. Both fragments were cloned into pCB6 as EcoRIHindIII fragments. In a second PCR reaction the NH2-termini of both proteins were amplified using 5'-GCGCGAATTCCTCGAGATGTCCGCCAGCGCCGTCTACGTA-3' as NH2-terminal primer and 5'-GCGCATCGATGGCGTAGTCTGGGACGTCGTATGGGTATGACTTGCTCTTCCCTCGGCCTGT-3' as COOH-terminal primer, respectively, for µ1A cloning. For cloning of µ1B, the NH2 terminal primer 5'-GCGCGAATTCCTCGAGATGTCCGCCTCGGCTGTCTTCATT-3' and the COOH-terminal primer 5'-GCGCATCGATGGCGTAGTCTGGGACGTCGTATGGGTATGATTTGTTCTTGCTGCGGCCAGT-3' were used. The PCR products were cloned in front of the respective COOH termini as EcoRIClaI fragments, introducing an additional spacer of the two amino acids Ile/Asp after the HA tag.

For expression in LLC-PK1 cells or µ1A-/- fibroblasts stably transfected with mouse µ1B cDNA, the plasmids encoding the HA-tagged µ1A or µ1B were transfected using calcium phosphate precipitation as described previously (Folsch et al. 1999 ; Meyer et al. 2000 ). Cells lines expressing wild-type (i.e., nontagged) µ1A or µ1B were as described previously (Folsch et al. 1999 ).


Recombinant Adenoviruses and Antibodies
Defective recombinant adenoviruses encoding the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) (adLDLR), transferrin receptor (adTfnR), and FcLR(CT22) (adFcLR[CT22]) were as described previously (Folsch et al. 1999 ).

Monoclonal anti-HA antibodies (clone 16B12) were purchased from BabCo. Specific anti-µ1B antibodies directed against the COOH terminus of µ1B were as described previously (Folsch et al. 1999 ) and µ1A/B cross-reacting antibodies were the kind gift of Linton Traub (Washington University, St. Louis, MO). Polyclonal antibodies against GM130 (ML07) were obtained from Graham Warren (Yale University). Polyclonal antibodies against furin (PA1-062) were purchased from ABR. Monoclonal anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (clone 100/3, for detection of {gamma}-adaptin in LLC-PK1 cells) or Transduction Laboratories (clone 88, for detection of {gamma}-adaptin in µ1A-/- fibroblasts). Polyclonal anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies were the generous gift of Margaret Robinson (University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK). Clone 100/3 was used for immunoprecipitations and Western blotting, the polyclonal anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibody was used for immunofluorescence analysis in LLC-PK1 cells, and clone 88 was used for immunofluorescence analysis in µ1A-/- fibroblasts (Meyer et al. 2000 ). Monoclonal anticlathrin heavy chain antibodies (TD.1) were obtained from Pietro De Camilli (Yale University).

Hybridoma cell lines producing the monoclonal antibodies anti-LDLR (C7 for immunoprecipitations, 4A4 for Western blots) and anti-FcLR (2.4G2), were purchased from the American Type Culture Collection.

Secondary antibodies labeled with Alexa 488 or Alexa 594 and Texas red–labeled human transferrin (Tfn) were purchased from Molecular Probes.


Cell Culture
Stably transfected LLC-PK1 cells were maintained in {alpha}-MEM containing 10% (vol/vol) fetal bovine serum (FBS), 2 mM L-glutamine, and 1.8 mg/ml geneticin. µ1A-/- fibroblasts (Meyer et al. 2000 ) stably transfected with mouse µ1B cDNA or mouse µ1B cDNA and mouse µ1A-HA cDNA, were maintained in DME containing 10% (vol/vol) FBS, 2 mM L-glutamine, 200 µg/ml hygromycin or 200 µg/ml hygromycin, plus 200 µg/ml geneticin, respectively. All cell lines were incubated at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator.

For immunofluorescence experiments, cells were seeded on Alcian blue–coated coverslips and cultured for 3–4 d. To allow for polarization, cells were plated on polycarbonate membrane filters at a density of 4 x 105 cells per 12-mm filter (0.4-µm pore size; Corning-Costar Transwell units) and cultured for 4–6 d with changes of medium in the basolateral chamber every day. If needed, cells were infected with defective adenoviruses (50–100 pfu/cell) as described previously (Folsch et al. 1999 ).

Usually, the cells were fixed in 3% paraformaldehyde/PBS++ (PBS [2 g/liter KCl, 2 g/liter KH2PO4, 8 g/liter NaCL, 1.15 g/liter Na2HPO4, pH 7.4] plus 147 g/liter CaCl2 x 2 H2O, MgCl2 x 6 H2O) for 15 min; cell surface staining or total staining was performed as described previously (Folsch et al. 1999 ). Permeabilization of the cells was achieved with the addition of 0.1% (filter-grown cells) or 0.2% (cells grown on coverslips) saponin (wt/vol) to the blocking and antibody solutions.

For double-labeling of HA-tagged µ1 with Tfn, cells seeded on coverslips were infected with a defective adenovirus (~100 pfu/cell) encoding human TfnR. 2 d after infection, cells were analyzed for Tfn uptake and subsequently stained with anti-HA antibodies. First, cells were starved in serum-free medium for 30 min at 37°C, then serum-free medium with TR-labeled Tfn (1:75) was added to allow for Tfn uptake for 30 min at 37°C. The cell surface was cleared by incubating the cells for an additional 2 min at room temperature in serum-free medium with an excess of unlabeled human Tfn (1 mg/ml). Cells were washed with ice-cold PBS++ and fixed in 3% paraformaldehyde for 15 min. The cells were permeabilized and labeled for immunofluorescence microcopy as described above.

Filter-grown cells were analyzed using a ZEISS confocal microscope (Microsystem LSM) with an Axiovert 100 microscope and a ZEISS Plan-Neofluar 40x oil immersion objective. Preparations of cells grown on coverslips were analyzed using a ZEISS confocal microscope equipped with an Axiovert 100 microscope and a water immersion 63x objective (LSM 150 software; ZEISS). Images were enhanced and combined using Adobe Photoshop®.


Electron Microscopy and Immunocytochemistry Using Frozen Thin Sections
Cells were fixed for 2 d at 4°C with 4% paraformaldehyde (Electron Microscopy Sciences) in 0.25 M Hepes, pH 7.4, washed in PBS, scraped, and embedded in 10% gelatin. Small pieces of the gelatin pellets were infiltrated overnight at 4°C with 2.3 M sucrose in PBS, and then frozen in liquid nitrogen. Gold sections (95 nm thick) were cut using a Leica ultracut ultramicrotome with an FCS cryoattachment at -108°C and collected on formvar- and carbon-coated nickel grids using a 1:1 mixture of 2% methyl cellulose (25 centipoises; Sigma-Aldrich) and 2.3 M sucrose in PBS (Liou et al. 1996 ).

After quenching with 0.1 M NH4Cl in PBS for 10 min, the grids were incubated for 20 min with a solution of 1% fish skin gelatin (FSG; Sigma-Aldrich) in PBS. They were then incubated with anti-HA antibodies (1:100 in PBS-FSG), washed four times for 4 min in PBS, incubated for 30 min at room temperature with rabbit anti–mouse IgGs (1:50 in PBS-FSG; Cappel/ICN Biomedicals), washed another four times for 4 min in PBS, and finally incubated for 30 min at room temperature with 5 nm protein A–gold (from the laboratory of J. Slot, University of Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands) in PBS-FSG. After four final washes in PBS, the sections were fixed in 1% glutaraldehyde in PBS for 10 min, washed three times in water and stained for 10 min at room temperature with 2% neutral uranyl acetate (Electron Microscopy Sciences). After three short washes in water, the sections were infiltrated with a mixture of 1.8% methylcellulose and 0.5% uranyl acetate and air-dried.


Biochemical Procedures
Procedures such as preparing cells for Western blot analysis or immunoprecipitation experiments of radiolabeled samples were performed as described previously (Folsch et al. 1999 ). HA-tagged µ1A was immunoprecipitated using the monoclonal anti-HA antibody 16B12, and HA-tagged µ1B by using the µ1B specific polyclonal antibody.

For cross-linking experiments, cells were split 1:1 into 6-well plates. 1 d after seeding, cells were infected with defective adenoviruses encoding wild-type or mutant LDLR as follows. Cells were washed once with serum-free medium and 100–200 pfu of the virus were added. After 1 h at 37°C, the cultures were fed with serum-containing medium and analyzed 21–22 h later. Cells were first washed once in ice-cold PBS++ and then incubated for 20 min at 4°C in glycerol buffer (10% glycerol, 0.1% saponin, 1 mM orthovanadate in PBS++). Cells were washed once with this buffer and the cross-linking buffer was added (0.25 M sucrose, 1 mM orthovanadate in PBS++). The cleavable cross-linker 3,3'-dithio-bis(sulfosuccinimidyl propionate) (DTSSP) was added from a freshly made 100x stock solution in DMSO to a final concentration of 100 µM. Cross-linking was allowed for 2 h at 4°C. After cross-linking, cells were washed once in PBS++, and a buffer containing 100 mM glycine/pH 8.0 in PBS++ was added to stop the cross-linking reaction. After 20 min at 4°C, the cells were washed again in PBS++ and 1.25 ml lysis buffer (2.5% Triton X-100, 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 1x protease inhibitors [Boehringer] in PBS++) was added to the samples. The cells were scraped with a cell scraper and passed four times through a 22.5-gauge needle and a 1-ml syringe. Lysis was completed for 30 min on ice followed by a clarifying spin (15 min at 13,000 rpm, Eppendorf centrifuge at 4°C). Cross-linking adducts were immunoprecipitated by incubating the lysis supernatant with anti-LDLR antibodies bound to protein G beads for 1.5 h end-over-end at 4°C. Immunoprecipitates were washed two times with lysis buffer containing 1% Triton X-100 and one time with lysis buffer without Triton X-100. The samples were resuspended in SDS sample buffer, vigorously shaken for 20 min at 4°C, boiled for 5 min, and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting.

For coimmunoprecipitation experiments, the cells were treated exactly as for cross-linking experiments, but without the addition of a cross-linker.

Determination of protein concentration or detection of proteins after blotting onto nitrocellulose was performed using the BCA protein determination assay or the supersignal detection system, respectively, according to the supplier's instructions (Pierce Chemical Co.).


  Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References


HA-tagged µ1 Subunits Are Functionally Incorporated into AP-1 Complexes
In a previous study, we described two antipeptide antibodies that were specific for µ1B (Folsch et al. 1999 ). Unfortunately, neither was suitable for immunofluorescence, a common problem with antibodies raised against the µ chains (Simpson et al. 1996 ; Dell'Angelica et al. 1999a , Dell'Angelica et al. 1999b ). To establish the intracellular localization of µ1B-containing AP-1 complexes, we introduced internal HA tags into µ1A and µ1B between amino acids 230 and 231 (Fig 1 A). These amino acids lie in a stretch of a weakly conserved region, presumably exposed at the surface of the protein by analogy to the crystal structure of µ2 (Owen and Evans 1998 ). In addition, the corresponding site in µ2 did not prevent its incorporation into AP-2 complexes (Nesterov et al. 1999 ).



View larger version (42K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 1. Expression and function of m1-HA. (A) Diagram showing the position of the internal HA-tag in µ1 protein (423 amino acids total). (B) Nontransfected LLC-PK1 cells, as well as LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA and LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA transfectants, were lysed in RIPA buffer and 5 and 10 µg of total protein were analyzed by Western blotting. {gamma}-Adaptin, µ1-HA, and µ1 proteins were detected by immunodecoration with anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies, anti-HA antibodies, and an antibody that cross-reacts with µ1A and µ1B, respectively. (C) LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA and LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA transfectants were metabolically labeled with [35S]methionine/cysteine overnight and lysed in Triton X-100 buffer. AP-1 complexes were immunoprecipitated using anti–{gamma}-adaptin. The immunoprecipitates were boiled in SDS and one half of the extract was directly subjected to SDS-PAGE analysis. The remaining extract was diluted 20-fold in lysis buffer and µ1A-HA or µ1B-HA proteins were recaptured using anti-HA antibodies or specific anti-µ1B antibodies directed against the COOH terminus of µ1B, respectively. Immunoprecipitates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and autoradiography. (D) LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA (top) and LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA (bottom) transfectants were grown on Transwell filters and infected with recombinant adenoviruses encoding the FcLR(CT22) chimera (left) or the LDLR (right). 2 d after the infection viable cells were incubated with antibodies directed against the ectodomain of FcLR or LDLR, respectively, fixed, and incubated with Alexa 488–labeled secondary antibodies as described in Material and Methods. Specimens were analyzed by confocal microscopy. Representative X–Z sections are shown.

The cDNAs encoding the tagged proteins µ1A-HA and µ1B-HA were stably transfected into LLC-PK1 cells. First, cell lysates of parental and transfected LLC-PK1 cells were analyzed by Western blot. The transfected cell lines, LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA and LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA, were found to express similar amounts of the HA-tagged µ1 proteins when blotted with an anti-HA antibody (Fig 1 B, anti-HA). In addition, both cell lines expressed slightly higher levels of {gamma}-adaptin, one of the large 100-kD subunits of AP-1, than the parental LLC-PK1 cells (Fig 1 B, anti–{gamma}-adaptin). Decoration of the Western blot with an anti-µ1 antibody that detects both µ1A and µ1B revealed that µ1A-HA was present in great excess relative to its endogenous, untagged counterpart (Fig 1 B, lanes 3 and 4). Indeed, the amount of endogenous µ1A appeared to have been decreased relative to untransfected parental cells (Fig 1 B, lanes 1 and 2), suggesting that the excess HA-tagged µ1A competed with the untagged protein for assembly into AP-1 complexes. Unincorporated adaptor subunits are often degraded, perhaps accounting for the presumptive degradation product seen in Fig 1 B (lane 4) (Zizioli et al. 1999 ; Meyer et al. 2000 ).

In contrast, endogenous µ1A expression in LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA cells was comparable to that found in the parental cells (Fig 1 B, lanes 5 and 6). Yet again, presumptive degradation products were detected using the anti-µ1A/B antiserum, suggesting that not all of the transfected or endogenous proteins had been successfully incorporated into AP-1 complexes (Fig 1 B, lane 6). These degradation products were not observed when untagged µ1A or µ1B were expressed in LLC-PK1 cells (Folsch et al. 1999 ).

Next, we asked directly if the HA-tagged µ1 protein would incorporate into AP-1 complexes. For this purpose, LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA and LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA transfectants were metabolically labeled with [35S]methionine/cysteine. Labeled cells were lysed and AP-1 was immunoprecipitated with anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies. The labeled bands that coimmunoprecipitated with {gamma}-adaptin corresponded in molecular weight to ß1-adaptin and {sigma}1-adaptin, as well as µ1A-HA (Fig 1 C, lane 2) or µ1A and µ1B-HA (Fig 1 C, lane 6). To confirm the identities of µ1A-HA and µ1B-HA, the precipitates were boiled in SDS to disrupt the complex, the SDS was diluted with excess nonionic detergent, and the medium subunits were reprecipitated using anti-HA antibodies (µ1A-HA; Fig 1 C, lane 4) or anti-µ1B antibodies (µ1B-HA; Fig 1 C, lane 8). Thus, the transfected, epitope-tagged µ1 subunits appeared to assemble together with ß-, {gamma}-, and {sigma}1-adaptins to form tagged AP-1A–HA or AP-1B–HA complexes.

Finally, we asked if HA-tagged µ1 would be functional in intact cells. For this purpose, polarized LLC-PK1 transfectants grown on filters were transfected with defective adenoviruses encoding either the LDLR or the apically targeted FcLR(CT22). The FcLR(CT22) is a chimera between the extracellular region and the membrane anchor of murine Fc receptor (FcRII) and the cytoplasmic tail of LDLR truncated at position 22. This truncation is known to remove all basolateral sorting information and the chimera is therefore sorted to the apical membrane of MDCK cells (Matter et al. 1994 ). 2 d after infection, the cells were analyzed by immunofluorescence using confocal microscopy for cell surface appearance of the receptors. As shown in the x/z-axis images in Fig 1 D, expression of µ1B-HA but not of µ1A-HA restored basolateral localization of wild-type LDLR, indicating that the epitope-tagged µ1B could facilitate basolateral targeting in a fashion similar to that of the untagged protein (Folsch et al. 1999 ). In contrast, FcLR(CT22) remained apically located in both µ1A-HA– and µ1B-HA–expressing cell lines.

In summary, we obtained stable LLC-PK1 cell lines expressing HA-tagged µ1A or µ1B subunits. Both µ1A-HA and µ1B-HA are incorporated into AP-1 complexes. Furthermore, AP-1B–HA is active in mediating basolateral targeting.


AP-1B Interacts with LDLR
The simplest explanation for how the AP-1B complex mediates basolateral targeting is that µ1B exerts an affinity for basolateral targeting signals, thereby converting the cargo specificity of AP-1 adaptors from endosome/lysosome-directed proteins to a subset of plasma membrane proteins. Yet, basolateral targeting signals can be highly divergent from signals for endosome/lysosome targeting, whereas µ1A and µ1B are closely homologous. Thus, it is not obvious that AP-1B complexes interact directly or indirectly with basolateral cargo. To investigate the relationship between AP-1B and LDLR, we performed a series of coimmunoprecipitation and cross-linking experiments.

LLC-PK1 cells stably expressing µ1A or µ1B (Folsch et al. 1999 ) were infected with a defective adenovirus encoding LDLR. At times of maximal receptor expression (~21 h after infection), the infected cells were lysed in Triton X-100 and LDLR-immunoprecipitated. The precipitates were then analyzed by Western blot to visualize the LDLR and to determine if any AP-1B subunits were coprecipitated.

As expected, the LDLR was detected as two bands, the upper band representing the terminally glycosylated mature LDLR (160 kD) and the lower band corresponding to the immature form of the receptor (140 kD) (Fig 2 A). In LLC-PK1 cells transfected with µ1A, no AP-1 was coprecipitated, as indicated by the absence of staining for {gamma}-adaptin (Fig 2 A, lane 2); however, dependent on the expression levels in the infected cells, a weak staining for {gamma}-adaptin could be observed (data not shown). Thus, AP-1A interacts only weakly with the LDLR. In LLC-PK1::µ1B transfectants, however, substantially more AP-1 ({gamma}-adaptin) was brought down with anti-LDLR antibodies (Fig 2 A, compare {gamma}-adaptin bands in lanes 2 and 4). Most importantly, µ1B was also coprecipitated.



View larger version (35K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 2. AP-1B directly interacts with LDLR. (A) LLC-PK1::µ1A or LLC-PK1::µ1B transfectants were infected with defective adenoviruses encoding the LDLR. 1 d after the infections the cells were lysed and the LDLR was immunoprecipitated (IP) with anti-LDLR antibody (see Materials and Methods for details). Immunoprecipitates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting. LDLR, {gamma}-adaptin, and µ1B were detected by immunodecoration with anti-LDLR antibodies, anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies, or specific anti-µ1B antibodies raised against the COOH terminus of µ1B, respectively. Samples representing equivalent amounts of starting cell protein were added to each lane. (B) LLC-PK1 cells transfected with µ1B (lanes 1–4) or µ1B-HA (lanes 5 and 6) were infected with adLDLR. 1 d after infection the cells were incubated with the cross-linker DTSSP (100 µM). After quenching, the cells were lysed and the LDLR was immunoprecipitated as in A (details are described in Materials and Methods). Immunoprecipitates were analyzed as described in A. Clathrin heavy chain was detected by immunodecoration with anticlathrin heavy chain antibodies. (C) LLC-PK1::µ1B transfectants were infected with adLDLR (lanes 1 and 2) or adLDLR(Y18A/G34D) (lanes 3 and 4) and analyzed as described in B.

To further characterize the interaction between AP-1B and LDLR, we performed chemical cross-linking using the cleavable cross-linker DTSSP. As shown in Fig 2 B, addition of DTSSP greatly enhanced the amount of {gamma}-adaptin coprecipitated with the anti-LDLR antibodies and modestly enhanced coprecipitation of µ1B. This suggests, as expected, that the cross-linking would occur predominantly between LDLR and the large subunits of the adaptor complex, rather than between the LDLR and the potentially interacting µ1B subunit. Upon cell lysis, complexes between LDLR and AP-1, as well as AP-1 complexes themselves, may dissociate and therefore we observe an enhancement of {gamma}-adaptin only and not of µ1B in the immunoprecipitates after cross-linking. Similar results were obtained for cells stably transfected with µ1B or the epitope-tagged µ1B-HA construct (Fig 2 B).

In addition to AP-1B subunits, we observed cross-link products between LDLR and clathrin (Fig 2 B, lanes 4 and 6), suggesting that clathrin is involved in the formation of AP-1B–containing vesicles. Under the same conditions, no cross-link products to AP-2 were observed (data not shown). However, cross-linking to clathrin was observed when LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA transfectants were used, confirming that complexes containing µ1B-HA behaved similarly to those containing the untagged µ1B.

We next tested if the interaction between LDLR and AP-1B was dependent on either of the LDLR's two tyrosine-based sorting signals. LLC-PK1::µ1B transfectants were infected with an adenovirus encoding a mutant form of LDLR (Y18A/G34D) in which the tyrosine at position 18 was changed to an alanine and the glycine residue at position 34 was changed to a glutamic acid. Thus, both the "proximal" and "distal" basolateral targeting signals were disrupted, resulting in a receptor that was largely expressed at the apical surface of MDCK cells and even µ1B-transfected LLC-PK1 cells (Matter et al. 1994 ; Koivisto, U.-M., and I. Mellman, manuscript in preparation; H. Fölsch and Mellman, I., unpublished observations). Neither AP-1B nor clathrin could be cross-linked to the mutant LDLR, indicating that AP-1B specifically interacts with its basolateral sorting signals (Fig 2 C, lane 4).

Taken together, these results suggest that AP-1B mediates basolateral targeting by directly interacting with the basolateral targeting motifs of cargo molecules, and also that clathrin is involved in the formation of transport vesicles targeted to the basolateral plasma membrane.


AP-1B Complexes Localize to a Perinuclear Region Adjacent to the Golgi Complex
Having demonstrated that µ1B-HA behaves functionally like the nontagged protein, we next used the µ1A-HA– and µ1B-HA–transfected cell lines to determine their intracellular distribution. Cells grown on coverslips were double-labeled with anti-HA antibodies to visualize the AP-1A–HA or AP-1B–HA complexes (green) together with antibodies against various endogenous marker proteins (red) and analyzed using confocal microscopy.

Labeling with anti-HA antibodies produced perinuclear staining patterns in both AP-1A–HA– and AP-1B–HA–expressing cell lines (Fig 3 A, left). As shown in Fig 3, both µ1A-HA (top) and µ1B-HA (bottom) exhibited good regional colocalization with {gamma}-adaptin. However, the extent of colocalization was not complete, with some µ1 labeling found in the periphery, particularly in the case of µ1B. This might simply reflect different sensitivities of the HA and {gamma}-adaptin antibodies used, relative accessibility of the epitopes, or possibly a somewhat differential distribution of AP-1A and AP-1B complexes.




View larger version (99K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 3. AP-1–HA localizes to a perinuclear region. LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA transfectants (A–C, top) and LLC-PK1 cells transfected with µ1B-HA (bottom) were fixed and incubated with anti-HA antibodies (A, left) in combination with (A) anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies (middle), (B) anti-GM130 antibodies, or (C) Texas red–labeled Tfn. These incubations were followed by an incubation with Alexa 488–labeled (anti-HA staining) and Alexa 594–labeled (anti–{gamma}-adaptin and anti-GM130 staining) secondary antibodies. Specimens were analyzed by confocal microscopy and representative images are shown.

Next, we performed double labeling of AP-1–HA and GM130, a structural protein of cisternal elements of the Golgi complex (Nakamura et al. 1995 ). GM130 antibodies showed characteristic perinuclear staining (Fig 3 B, red). As might be expected for TGN markers, the AP-1 complexes localized to one side of the Golgi complex, adjacent to but distinct from the GM130-positive structures.

To determine if any AP-1A or AP-1B complexes were associated with endosomes, stable transfectants were grown on coverslips and infected with a defective adenovirus encoding the human TfnR. 2 d after infection, the cells were incubated with Texas red–labeled Tfn for 30 min at 37°C under conditions that would stain the entire early endosome/recycling endosome pathway (Sheff et al. 1999 ). Early endosomes are punctate structures throughout the cell, whereas the recycling endosomes are generally clustered in a perinuclear region (Fig 3 C, red). Although some AP-1A–HA and AP-1B–HA colocalized regionally with Texas red–labeled Tfn, it was evident that AP-1 and recycling endosomes did not colocalize completely in perinuclear and especially in peripheral early endosome–containing regions of the cytoplasm. This is consistent with previously reported localizations of AP-1, in which some localization to endosomes has been observed (Futter et al. 1998 ). Thus, both AP-1A and AP-1B may be similarly distributed with respect to the more perinuclear recycling endosomes.


AP-1B Is Found Associated with Clathrin-coated Buds of the TGN
To further characterize the intracellular localization of AP-1B, we performed immunoelectron microscopy on frozen sections of LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA or LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA transfectants. Most of the labeling for both AP-1A–HA (Fig 4 A) and AP-1B–HA (Fig 4 B) complexes with protein A–gold (arrowheads) was associated with buds, vesicles, and tubules on one side of the Golgi stack. This side of the stack was also characterized by morphologically identifiable clathrin coats, strongly suggesting that it corresponds to the trans side. Indeed, and as expected from previous work for untagged AP-1A complexes, many of the gold particles were associated with clathrin coats (denoted by arrows) (Hirst and Robinson 1998 ). We conclude that, like AP-1A and AP-1B, complexes can associate with clathrin coats in the TGN, suggesting that their function is associated with clathrin assembly. Often, apparently free-coated vesicles seemed to be more heavily stained for either µ1A or µ1B than were the clathrin-coated tubules that emerged from the TGN. This might reflect either the relative densities or accessibilities of the µ1 or the epitope tags at different stages of coat assembly.



View larger version (190K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 4. AP-1–HA is found on clathrin-coated structures. LLC-PK1::µ1A-HA (A) or LLC-PK1::µ1B-HA transfectants (B) were analyzed by immunoelectron microscopy (see Materials and Methods for details). HA-tagged µ1 proteins were visualized using anti-HA antibodies, followed by incubations with anti–mouse IgG antibodies and protein A–gold. Arrowheads highlight gold particles and arrows denote clathrin-coated structures. Bar, 100 nm.


AP-1A and AP-1B May Localize to Different Regions of the TGN
We next attempted to assess the distributions of AP-1A and AP-1B relative to each other. Since we were unable to generate cell lines that expressed differentially tagged µ1 chains, we examined their distribution in single transfectants relative to a common endogenous marker. For this purpose we used furin, a proprotein convertase that recycles between the TGN and endosomes. Furin has been shown to interact with AP-1A through the adaptor protein PACS-1 during retrieval of furin from endosomes to the TGN and is thought to interact directly with AP-1A during transfer from the TGN to the endosomes (Molloy et al. 1999 ; Teuchert et al. 1999 ). Thus, furin should colocalize, at least in part, with AP-1 in the TGN.

As shown in Fig 5, AP-1A–HA and furin exhibited overlapping, albeit somewhat distinct, distributions, suggesting that they were at least partly localized to the same regions of the TGN and/or endosomes (top). In contrast, the staining pattern of AP-1B–HA was almost entirely different from that of furin (Fig 5, bottom).



View larger version (57K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 5. AP-1A–HA, but not AP-1B-HA, colocalizes with furin. LLC-PK1 cells transfected with µ1A-HA (top) or µ1B-HA (bottom) were double-labeled with anti-HA antibodies (left) and antifurin antibodies (middle) in combination with Alexa 488–labeled (anti-HA staining) and Alexa 594–labeled (antifurin staining) secondary antibodies. Specimens were analyzed by confocal microscopy. Representative images are shown (merged images are shown on right).

Although we have yet to achieve furin staining at the electron microscopic level, these results suggest that AP-1A and AP-1B may define at least partially distinct subdomains of the TGN and/or endosomes. In any event, given that AP-1A–HA and AP-1B–HA exhibited distributions relative to furin that were distinct, it is apparent that the two adapter complexes do not share identical distributions. This situation may reflect differences in cargo specificity of the AP-1A and AP-1B complexes.


TGN Localization of Furin Is Dependent on m1A Expression
Recently, Meyer et al. 2000 generated a cell line of mouse embryonic fibroblasts that were deficient in µ1A (µ1A-/- fibroblasts) and exhibited a loss of perinuclear {gamma}-adaptin staining. The diffuse {gamma}-adaptin staining observed in these cells could be rescued by stably transfecting the cells with untagged mouse µ1B cDNA (Schu, P., unpublished observations; Fig 6), suggesting that µ1B could substitute for µ1A in recruiting the other three AP-1 subunits to the TGN. Therefore, we tested whether µ1B expression in the absence of µ1A would also affect the distribution of furin, which, based on our localization experiments (Fig 5), would appear to be more likely to interact with AP-1A than with AP-1B.



View larger version (49K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 6. AP-1A is necessary for furin localization at the TGN. µ1A-/- fibroblasts stably transfected with µ1B alone (top) or with µ1B and µ1A-HA (bottom) were double-labeled with anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies (left) and antifurin antibodies (middle) in combination with Alexa 488–labeled (anti-{gamma} staining) and Alexa 594–labeled (antifurin staining) secondary antibodies. Specimens were analyzed by confocal microscopy and representative images are shown. The arrows denote regions in the AP-1B/AP-1A–HA transfectants that are positive for AP-1 but negative for furin.

µ1A-/- fibroblasts stably transfected with µ1B, with or without cotransfected µ1A, were thus labeled with antibodies against {gamma}-adaptin (as a marker for assembled AP-1B complexes) and furin. As shown in Fig 6 (top), there was virtually no overlap between AP-1B and furin in the absence of AP-1A. In fact, furin was no longer even localized to the TGN region, but rather was found associated with punctate structures, possibly endosomes, that were devoid of {gamma}-adaptin (i.e., AP-1B) staining. Thus, normal localization of furin to the TGN does not occur when only AP-1B is expressed.

However, the furin phenotype could be reversed by expressing µ1A-HA in the µ1A-/-, µ1B+ fibroblasts (Fig 6, bottom). Fibroblasts expressing AP-1A–HA in addition to AP-1B showed a more typical perinuclear staining pattern for furin. Indeed, furin now colocalized extensively with {gamma}-adaptin in the perinuclear region. Given the inability of µ1B alone to complement the ectopic distribution of furin in µ1A-/- cells, the coordinate distribution of furin and {gamma}-adaptin seemed likely to reflect furin's colocalization with AP-1A rather than AP-1B. Indeed, we often noted many regions of the TGN that were stained only for {gamma}-adaptin and not for furin in cells expressing both AP-1A and -1B (Fig 6, bottom, arrows). Conceivably, these areas represented regions of the TGN which were enriched in AP-1B relative to AP-1A. Double-labeling of these cells with antibodies against furin and µ1A-HA revealed complete colocalization of furin and AP-1A–HA (data not shown).

Taken together, the strict dependence of furin on AP-1A for its intracellular distribution may suggest that AP-1A and AP-1B may not only localize to different subdomains in the TGN, but that this different localization reflects their involvement in different pathways from the TGN to endosomes/lysosomes or the basolateral plasma membrane, respectively.


  Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References

We have addressed two questions critical for understanding how AP-1B mediates basolateral targeting in polarized epithelial cells. First, we provided biochemical evidence to support the likelihood that µ1B directly recognizes basolateral targeting signals on membrane proteins such as LDLR. This was a critical unknown given that a previous yeast two-hybrid assay suggested that the sequences recognized by µ1B represented a subset of the canonical YXX{Phi} motif (Ohno et al. 1999 ). Although the LDLR contains two basolateral determinants that are tyrosine dependent, neither conforms to this motif (Matter et al. 1992 ). We have shown that wild-type LDLR physically interacts with AP-1B, but not AP-1A, both by coprecipitation with and without the use of a chemical cross-linking agent. Moreover, the interaction was greatly reduced by point mutations affecting critical residues required for efficient basolateral targeting. Thus, the AP-1B complex specifically binds to either or both basolateral targeting signals found on LDLR and presumably other basolateral plasma membrane proteins. It is also clear that this interaction is due to the presence of the µ1B subunit in the complex, further suggesting that it is this subunit which binds directly to the basolateral targeting signal. If so, one might imagine that µ1B may interact with these signals in a fashion somewhat dissimilar to that inferred from the structure of µ2 interaction with clathrin-coated pit signals (Owen and Evans 1998 ). Alternatively, we cannot yet exclude that the interaction between LDLR and µ1B is facilitated by an additional as yet unidentified adaptor protein (Wan et al. 1998 ).

Whatever the precise nature of the interaction, it appears likely that AP-1B acts to facilitate cargo selection into nascent basolateral vesicles which are also invested by a clathrin coat. Since we could visualize µ1B associated with clathrin-coated buds that were connected to the TGN, we suspect that an interaction between newly synthesized basolateral proteins and AP-1B occurs upon exit from the Golgi complex. That the TGN serves as the primary site for sorting of apical and basolateral proteins in many types of epithelial cells has been long known (Keller and Simons 1997 ), but a role for clathrin in this process has not before been established. Indeed, clathrin has for years been thought to play no role in biosynthetic membrane traffic to the plasma membrane, based on its apparent failure to associate with vesicular stomatitis virus G protein accumulated in the TGN of fibroblasts at 20°C (Griffiths et al. 1985 ). However, these classical experiments were conducted in cells expected to be negative for µ1B; µ1A-containing clathrin buds, based on the evidence shown here, would not be expected to accumulate vesicular stomatitis virus G protein, despite the fact that it has a basolateral targeting signal. In this respect, it is interesting to note that at least one other basolateral protein, polymeric immunoglobulin receptor, has been reported to coimmunoprecipitate with {gamma}-adaptin after accumulation in the TGN (Orzech et al. 1999 ), although this association was not demonstrated to be AP-1B specific.

Our results are also consistent with the localization of at least some AP-1B to endosomes. This would be in accord with previous work showing that clathrin coats, together with the AP-1 subunit {gamma}-adaptin, can be found on TfnR-positive endosome populations, especially in polarized MDCK cells (Stoorvogel et al. 1996 ; Futter et al. 1998 ). Endosomes in epithelial cells are capable of decoding the same signals for polarized transport as is the TGN, a feature which ensures the maintenance of polarity despite continued endocytosis and recycling (Matter et al. 1993 ; Aroeti and Mostov 1994 ). It would appear that this in fact might be a clathrin-dependent process, as suggested earlier (Futter et al. 1998 ). Additional mechanisms may yet be discovered as it is the case that endosomes in hepatocytes mediate basolateral sorting, despite the fact that these cells appear not to express µ1B (Ohno et al. 1999 ).

Although electron microscopy failed to indicate any obvious differences in the overall organization of the Golgi complex in cells that do or do not express AP-1B, the degree to which AP-1B and AP-1A appeared to define distinct intracellular domains was striking. Although it has not yet been possible to localize the two adaptor complexes relative to each other directly, at the level of immunofluorescence they did exhibit different patterns relative to the TGN marker furin. AP-1A staining showed significant colocalization with furin, whereas AP-1B did not. In addition, in fibroblasts expressing AP-1B as the only AP-1 complex, TGN staining of furin was lost but could be restored by exogenously expression of µ1A. This is perhaps not surprising, since the budding of furin-containing vesicles from the TGN is mediated by AP-1A. Furin transport from endosomes also involves AP-1A, albeit in association with the coadaptor PACS-1 (Wan et al. 1998 ; Molloy et al. 1999 ). The fact that AP-1B staining showed little, if any, overlap with furin is remarkable given the high degree of structural relatedness between the AP-1A and AP-1B complexes. This result emphasizes the importance of the µ subunits in determining not only the functional specificity, but even the intracellular localization of a given adaptor complex. The two complexes clearly mediate different functions, as AP-1A will not substitute for AP-1B in basolateral transport nor will AP-1B substitute for AP-1A in at least retrieval of furin back to the TGN.

Conceivably, cargo selection by AP-1 adaptors and adaptor recruitment to membranes are closely linked events. Indeed, there is evidence that the recruitment of AP-1A onto TGN membranes may be dependent both on the presence of activated ARF-1 and AP-1A cargo molecules (Le Borgne et al. 1996 ; Le Borgne and Hoflack 1997 ), although this point remains controversial (Zhu et al. 1999 ). If cargo proteins did participate in coat recruitment, the expression of µ1B might itself help generate a TGN subdomain, in which nascent basolateral proteins become concentrated. Alternatively, such subdomains might preexist, perhaps by the selective localization of a putative "docking protein" that first binds AP-1B to the membrane, which in turn concentrates basolateral cargo such as LDLR. It is interesting that the TGN has already been observed to exhibit morphologically distinct subdomains with clathrin-coated and nonclathrin-coated vesicles budding from physically different regions (Ladinsky et al. 1994 , Ladinsky et al. 1999 ). Sorting of basolateral membrane proteins, be they cargo or docking proteins, into different areas of the TGN would have as a precedent the lateral segregation of recycling receptors and related molecules into tubular elements of endosomes (Geuze et al. 1987 , Geuze et al. 1988 ; Sonnichsen et al. 2000 ).

It seems that the fate of a TGN-derived coated vesicle is most likely to depend on the predominant adaptor complex it contains. Targeting molecules (SNAREs, Rabs) might be recruited by direct or indirect interactions with adaptor complexes. In this respect it is interesting to note that the v-SNARE VAMP-7 has a potential adaptor complex binding motif in its cytoplasmic domain (Advani et al. 1999 ). Thus, AP-1B may directly determine the fate of the vesicles it helps to form by specifying the inclusion of those proteins needed for targeting and fusion at the basolateral plasma membrane.


  Footnotes

1 Abbreviations used in this paper: FSG; fish skin gelatin; HA, hemagglutinin; LDLR, low-density lipoprotein receptor; pfu, plaque forming unit; Tfn, transferrin; TfnR, Tfn receptor.


  Acknowledgements
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References

We would like to thank Kimberly Murphy and Melanie Ebersold for their assistance in preparing immunoelectron micrographs, and James Wilson (University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA) for providing us with the wild-type LDLR adenovirus stocks. Ulla-Maija Koivisto (Yale University) generously provided the mutant LDLR adenovirus used for these studies and Hiroshi Ohno (Kanazawa University, Kanazawa, Japan) kindly provided the mouse µ1B cDNA. We are also grateful to Margaret Robinson (University of Cambridge), Linton Traub (Washington University), Graham Warren, and Pietro De Camilli (both Yale University) for the polyclonal anti–{gamma}-adaptin antibodies, anti-µ1A/B antibodies, antibodies to GM130, and anticlathrin heavy chain antibodies. We are indebted to Graham Warren for helpful discussions and the entire Mellman/Warren laboratory for support.

This work was funded by research grants from the National Institutes of Health (GM29765) to I. Mellman and a postdoctoral fellowship from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (H. Fölsch). I. Mellman is a Member of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research.

Submitted: 26 September 2000
Revised: 5 December 2000
Accepted: 22 December 2000


  References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgements
References

  1. Advani, R.J., Yang, B., Prekeris, R., Lee, K.C., Klumperman, J., and Scheller, R.H. 1999. VAMP-7 mediates vesicular transport from endosomes to lysosomes. J. Cell Biol 146:765-776[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  2. Aroeti, B., and Mostov, K.E. 1994. Polarized sorting of the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor in the exocytotic and endocytotic pathways is controlled by the same amino acids. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J 13:2297-2304[Abstract].

  3. Bonifacino, J.S., and Dell'Angelica, E.C. 1999. Molecular bases for the recognition of tyrosine-based sorting signals. J. Cell Biol 145:923-926[Free Full Text].

  4. Cohen, A.R., and Woods, D.F., Marfatia, S.M., Walther, Z., Chishti, A.H., Anderson, J.M., Woods, D.F. 1998. Human CASK/LIN-2 binds syndecan-2 and protein 4.1 and localizes to the basolateral membrane of epithelial cells. J. Cell Biol 142:129-138[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  5. Dell'Angelica, E.C., Klumperman, J., Stoorvogel, W., and Bonifacino, J.S. 1998. Association of the AP-3 adaptor complex with clathrin. Science 280:431-434[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  6. Dell'Angelica, E.C., Mullins, C., and Bonifacino, J.S. 1999a. AP-4, a novel protein complex related to clathrin adaptors. J. Biol. Chem 274:7278-7285[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  7. Drake, M.T., Zhu, Y., and Kornfeld, S. 2000. The assembly of AP-3 adaptor complex-containing clathrin-coated vesicles on synthetic liposomes. Mol. Biol. Cell 11:3723-3736[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  8. Futter, C.E., Gibson, A., Allchin, E.H., Maxwell, S., Ruddock, L.J., Odorizzi, G., Domingo, D., Trowbridge, I.S., and Hopkins, C.R. 1998. In polarized MDCK cells basolateral vesicles arise from clathrin-{gamma}-adaptin–coated domains on endosomal tubules. J. Cell Biol 141:611-623[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  9. Geuze, H.J., Slot, J.W., and Schwartz, A.L. 1987. Membranes of sorting organelles display lateral heterogeneity in receptor distribution. J. Cell Biol 104:1715-1723[Abstract].

  10. Geuze, H.J., Stoorvogel, W., Strous, G.J., Slot, J.W., Bleekemolen, J.E., and Mellman, I. 1988. Sorting of mannose 6-phosphate receptors and lysosomal membrane proteins in endocytic vesicles. J. Cell Biol 107:2491-2501[Abstract].

  11. Griffiths, G., Pfeiffer, S., Simons, K., and Matlin, K. 1985. Exit of newly synthesized membrane proteins from the trans cisterna of the Golgi complex to the plasma membrane. J. Cell Biol 101:949-964[Abstract].

  12. Hirst, J., Bright, N.A., Rous, B., and Robinson, M.S. 1999. Characterization of a fourth adaptor-related protein complex. Mol. Biol. Cell 10:2787-2802[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  13. Keller, P., and Simons, K. 1997. Post-Golgi biosynthetic trafficking. J. Cell Sci 110:3001-3009[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  14. Ladinsky, M.S., Kremer, J.R., Furcinitti, P.S., McIntosh, J.R., and Howell, K.E. 1994. HVEM tomography of the trans-Golgi network: structural insights and identification of a lace-like vesicle coat. J. Cell Biol 127:29-38[Abstract].

  15. Ladinsky, M.S., Mastronarde, D.N., McIntosh, J.R., Howell, K.E., and Staehelin, L.A. 1999. Golgi structure in three dimensions: functional insights from the normal rat kidney cell. J. Cell Biol 144:1135-1149[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  16. Le Borgne, R., and Hoflack, B. 1997. Mannose 6-phosphate receptors regulate the formation of clathrin-coated vesicles in the TGN. J. Cell Biol 137:335-345[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  17. Le Borgne, R., Griffiths, G., and Hoflack, B. 1996. Mannose 6-phosphate receptors and ADP-ribosylation factors cooperate for high affinity interaction of the AP-1 Golgi assembly proteins with membranes. J. Biol. Chem 271:2162-2170[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  18. Matter, K., Yamamoto, E.M., and Mellman, I. 1994. Structural requirements and sequence motifs for polarized sorting and endocytosis of LDL and Fc receptors in MDCK cells. J. Cell Biol 126:991-1004[Abstract].

  19. Mays, R.W., Siemers, K.A., Fritz, B.A., Lowe, A.W., van Meer, G., and Nelson, W.J. 1995. Hierarchy of mechanisms involved in generating Na/K-ATPase polarity in MDCK epithelial cells. J. Cell Biol 130:1105-1115[Abstract].

  20. Meyer, C., Zizioli, D., Lausmann, S., Eskelinen, E.L., Hamann, J., Saftig, P., von Figura, K., and Schu, P. 2000. µ1A-adaptin-deficient mice: lethality, loss of AP-1 binding and rerouting of mannose 6-phosphate receptors. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J 19:2193-2203[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  21. Nakamura, N., Rabouille, C., Watson, R., Nilsson, T., Hui, N., Slusarewicz, P., Kreis, T.E., and Warren, G. 1995. Characterization of a cis-Golgi matrix protein, GM130. J. Cell Biol 131:1715-1726[Abstract].

  22. Nesterov, A., Carter, R.E., Sorkina, T., Gill, G.N., and Sorkin, A. 1999. Inhibition of the receptor-binding function of clathrin adaptor protein AP-2 by dominant-negative mutant µ2 subunit and its effects on endocytosis. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J. 18:2489-2499[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  23. Ohno, H., Fournier, M.C., Poy, G., and Bonifacino, J.S. 1996. Structural determinants of interaction of tyrosine-based sorting signals with the adaptor medium chains. J. Biol. Chem 271:29009-29015[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  24. Orzech, E., Schlessinger, K., Weiss, A., Okamoto, C.T., and Aroeti, B. 1999. Interactions of the AP-1 Golgi adaptor with the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor and their possible role in mediating brefeldin A-sensitive basolateral targeting from the trans-Golgi network. J. Biol. Chem 274:2201-2215[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  25. Owen, D.J., and Evans, P.R. 1998. A structural explanation for the recognition of tyrosine-based endocytotic signals. Science 282:1327-1332[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  26. Rodriguez-Boulan, E., and Powell, S.K. 1992. Polarity of epithelial and neuronal cells. Annu. Rev. Cell Biol 8:395-427.

  27. Setou, M., Nakagawa, T., Seog, D.H., and Hirokawa, N. 2000. Kinesin superfamily motor protein KIF17 and mLin-10 in NMDA receptor-containing vesicle transport. Science 288:1796-1802[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  28. Sheff, D.R., Daro, E.A., Hull, M., and Mellman, I. 1999. The receptor recycling pathway contains two distinct populations of early endosomes with different sorting functions. J. Cell Biol 145:123-139[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  29. Simpson, F., Bright, N.A., West, M.A., Newman, L.S., Darnell, R.B., and Robinson, M.S. 1996. A novel adaptor-related protein complex. J. Cell Biol 133:749-760[Abstract].

  30. Sönnichsen, B., De Renzis, S., Nielsen, E., Rietdorf, J., and Zerial, M. 2000. Distinct membrane domains on endosomes in the recycling pathway visualized by multicolor imaging of Rab4, Rab5, and Rab11. J. Cell Biol 149:901-914[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  31. Stoorvogel, W., Oorschot, V., and Geuze, H.J. 1996. A novel class of clathrin-coated vesicles budding from endosomes. J. Cell Biol 132:21-33[Abstract].

  32. Teuchert, M., Schafer, W., Berghofer, S., Hoflack, B., Klenk, H.D., and Garten, W. 1999. Sorting of furin at the trans-Golgi network. Interaction of the cytoplasmic tail sorting signals with AP-1 Golgi-specific assembly proteins. J. Biol. Chem 274:8199-8207[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  33. Yeaman, C., Grindstaff, K.K., and Nelson, W.J. 1999. New perspectives on mechanisms involved in generating epithelial cell polarity. Physiol. Rev 79:73-98[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  34. Zhu, Y., Traub, L.M., and Kornfeld, S. 1999. High-affinity binding of the AP-1 adaptor complex to trans-golgi network membranes devoid of mannose 6-phosphate receptors. Mol. Biol. Cell 10:537-549[Abstract/Free Full Text].

  35. Zizioli, D., Meyer, C., Guhde, G., Saftig, P., von Figura, K., and Schu, P. 1999. Early embryonic death of mice deficient in {gamma}-adaptin. J. Biol. Chem 274:5385-5390[Abstract/Free Full Text].