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The Role of BP-80 and Homologs in Sorting Proteins to VacuolesLiwen Jianga and John C. Rogersaa Institute of Biological Chemistry Washington State University Pullman, WA 99164-6340
A recent article (
As was carefully discussed in both the paper and editorial, two pathways that carry soluble proteins from Golgi to vacuoles have been defined. One is followed by the vacuolar sorting receptor BP-80 and involves clathrin coated vesicles (CCVs) for at least a portion of the pathway. All evidence available to date indicates that this pathway leads to a prevacuolar compartment serving the lytic vacuole, defined together as organelles containing an acidic pH and proteases that can process barley proaleurain to mature form (
The second pathway is more complex. In developing pea cotyledon cells, dense vesicles (DVs) clearly define the pathway, and their purification and characterization is a major landmark in plant cell biology.
In cells that do not have a readily identifiable PSV, such as tobacco BY-2 suspension culture cells or leaf mesophyll cells, DVs have not yet been identified morphologically but a functional equivalent of the DV pathway clearly exists. This pathway is defined by its sensitivity to wortmannin and by the nature of sorting determinants that direct soluble proteins into it (reviewed by
To complicate the story further, a different class of storage proteins, vegetative storage proteins, are not directed to seed-type PSVs but rather accumulate in vacuoles that appear to be related to or derived from lytic vacuoles ( What all this means is that assays for traffic of a protein through the secretory pathway to a vacuole must assay for traffic through both pathways. In the case of Na-PI in stigma cells, where it associates with BP-80 homologs, the predominant vacuole destination is a place where Na-PI is proteolytically processed into small subunits. This observation would be consistent with the above model, where BP-80 traffics to vacuoles that store vegetative storage proteins, that is, vacuoles that may also have lytic functions. However, there is no evidence from that experiment that the tobacco BP-80 homologs bound Na-PI because they specifically recognized the C-terminal propeptide of Na-PI. Maybe they did, but we would argue from the following data that such a possibility is very unlikely.
When Na-PI was expressed in BY-2 tobacco suspension culture cells ( These conclusionsparticularly, those offered in the editorialare not warranted by the data. Specifically, the authors did not assess traffic of Na-PI to a lytic vacuole in BY-2 cells. That vacuole should have been a place where the protein would be cut into small pieces, as it is in stigma cells. Presumably because there was a high endogenous background of related small proteins (a warning sign that lytic vacuole processing of Na-PI was likely to occur), the authors could not measure which portion of the newly synthesized precursor was degraded in that manner; the precedent from stigma cells would indicate that this would be the preferred vacuole destination even in BY-2 cells. We argue that the tobacco BP-80 homologs would direct Na-PI to that destination by binding to the protein elsewhere than the C-terminal propeptide. In contrast, preservation of a portion of the precursor form in vacuoles would be fully consistent with traffic via the DV pathway, mediated by the C-terminal propeptide in a BP-80-independent manner, to a PSV equivalent. Thus, Na-PI is likely to carry two different sorting determinants, and is likely to follow two pathways to two separate vacuoles. Until this possibility is assessed in a critical manner, it is premature to conclude that vacuolar sorting receptors of the BP-80 family target Na-PI by binding to its C-terminal propeptide.
REFERENCES
Di Sansebastiano, G.P., Paris, N., Marc-Martin, S., and Neuhaus, J.-M. (1998) Specific accumulation of GFP in a non-acidic vacuolar compartment via a C-terminal propeptide-mediated sorting pathway. Plant J. 15:449-457[CrossRef][ISI][Medline].
Frigerio, L., de Virgilio, M., Prada, A., Faoro, F., and Vitale, A. (1998) Sorting of phaseolin to the vacuole is saturable and requires a short C-terminal peptide. Plant Cell 10:1031-1042
Hinz, G., Hillmer, S., Bäumer, M., and Hohl, I. (1999) Vacuolar storage proteins and the putative sorting receptor BP-80 exit the Golgi apparatus of developing pea cotyledons in different transport vesicles. Plant Cell 11:1509-1524
Jauh, G.-Y., Fischer, A.M., Grimes, H.D., Ryan, C.A., and Rogers, J.C. (1998) Jauh, G.-Y., Phillips, T., and Rogers, J.C. (1999) Tonoplast intrinsic protein isoforms as markers for vacuole functions. Plant Cell 11, in press..
Jiang, L., and Rogers, J.C. (1998) Integral membrane protein sorting to vacuoles in plant cells: Evidence for two pathways. J. Cell Biol. 143:1183-1199
Miller, E.A., Lee, M.C.S., and Anderson, M.A. (1999) Identification and characterization of a prevacuolar compartment in stigmas of Nicotiana alata.. Plant Cell 11:1499-1508 Neuhaus, J.M., and Rogers, J.C. (1998) Sorting of proteins to vacuoles in plant cells. Plant Mol. Biol. 38:127-144[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. Paris, N., Stanley, C.M., Jones, R.L., and Rogers, J.C. (1996) Plant cells contain two functionally distinct vacuolar compartments. Cell 85:563-572[CrossRef][ISI][Medline].
Smith, H.B. (1999) Vacuolar protein trafficking and vesicles: Continuing to sort it all out. Plant Cell 11:1377-1379
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