Role of the AP2 β-Appendage Hub in Recruiting Partners for Clathrin-Coated Vesicle Assembly


Journal article


Eva M. Schmid, Marijn G. J. Ford, Anne Burtey, Gerrit J. K. Praefcke, S. Peak-Chew, I. Mills, Alexandre Benmerah, H. McMahon
PLoS Biology, 2006

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APA   Click to copy
Schmid, E. M., Ford, M. G. J., Burtey, A., Praefcke, G. J. K., Peak-Chew, S., Mills, I., … McMahon, H. (2006). Role of the AP2 β-Appendage Hub in Recruiting Partners for Clathrin-Coated Vesicle Assembly. PLoS Biology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Schmid, Eva M., Marijn G. J. Ford, Anne Burtey, Gerrit J. K. Praefcke, S. Peak-Chew, I. Mills, Alexandre Benmerah, and H. McMahon. “Role of the AP2 β-Appendage Hub in Recruiting Partners for Clathrin-Coated Vesicle Assembly.” PLoS Biology (2006).


MLA   Click to copy
Schmid, Eva M., et al. “Role of the AP2 β-Appendage Hub in Recruiting Partners for Clathrin-Coated Vesicle Assembly.” PLoS Biology, 2006.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{eva2006a,
  title = {Role of the AP2 β-Appendage Hub in Recruiting Partners for Clathrin-Coated Vesicle Assembly},
  year = {2006},
  journal = {PLoS Biology},
  author = {Schmid, Eva M. and Ford, Marijn G. J. and Burtey, Anne and Praefcke, Gerrit J. K. and Peak-Chew, S. and Mills, I. and Benmerah, Alexandre and McMahon, H.}
}

Abstract

Adaptor protein complex 2 α and β-appendage domains act as hubs for the assembly of accessory protein networks involved in clathrin-coated vesicle formation. We identify a large repertoire of β-appendage interactors by mass spectrometry. These interact with two distinct ligand interaction sites on the β-appendage (the “top” and “side” sites) that bind motifs distinct from those previously identified on the α-appendage. We solved the structure of the β-appendage with a peptide from the accessory protein Eps15 bound to the side site and with a peptide from the accessory cargo adaptor β-arrestin bound to the top site. We show that accessory proteins can bind simultaneously to multiple appendages, allowing these to cooperate in enhancing ligand avidities that appear to be irreversible in vitro. We now propose that clathrin, which interacts with the β-appendage, achieves ligand displacement in vivo by self-polymerisation as the coated pit matures. This changes the interaction environment from liquid-phase, affinity-driven interactions, to interactions driven by solid-phase stability (“matricity”). Accessory proteins that interact solely with the appendages are thereby displaced to areas of the coated pit where clathrin has not yet polymerised. However, proteins such as β-arrestin (non-visual arrestin) and autosomal recessive hypercholesterolemia protein, which have direct clathrin interactions, will remain in the coated pits with their interacting receptors.


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