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Acute COG complex inactivation unveiled its immediate impact on Golgi and illuminated the nature of intra-Golgi recycling vesicles.

Authors :
Sumya FT
Pokrovskaya ID
D'Souza Z
Lupashin VV
Source :
Traffic (Copenhagen, Denmark) [Traffic] 2023 Feb; Vol. 24 (2), pp. 52-75. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 15.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Conserved Oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex controls Golgi trafficking and glycosylation, but the precise COG mechanism is unknown. The auxin-inducible acute degradation system was employed to investigate initial defects resulting from COG dysfunction. We found that acute COG inactivation caused a massive accumulation of COG-dependent (CCD) vesicles that carry the bulk of Golgi enzymes and resident proteins. v-SNAREs (GS15, GS28) and v-tethers (giantin, golgin84, and TMF1) were relocalized into CCD vesicles, while t-SNAREs (STX5, YKT6), t-tethers (GM130, p115), and most of Rab proteins remained Golgi-associated. Airyscan microscopy and velocity gradient analysis revealed that different Golgi residents are segregated into different populations of CCD vesicles. Acute COG depletion significantly affected three Golgi-based vesicular coats-COPI, AP1, and GGA, suggesting that COG uniquely orchestrates tethering of multiple types of intra-Golgi CCD vesicles produced by different coat machineries. This study provided the first detailed view of primary cellular defects associated with COG dysfunction in human cells.<br /> (© 2022 The Authors. Traffic published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1600-0854
Volume :
24
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Traffic (Copenhagen, Denmark)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36468177
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/tra.12876