CONTROL OF MEMBRANE TRAFFIC IN REGULATED SECRETORY CELLS
Project Number5R01GM035239-12
Contact PI/Project LeaderMOORE, HSIAO-PING H
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BERKELEY
Description
Abstract Text
The long term goal of this proposal is to understand the molecular
machinery involved in intracellular membrane transport and secretion in
neural, endocrine, and exocrine cells. Most cells have the capacity to
secrete proteins, but not all cells utilize the same machinery. In
particular, secretion from mammalian cells can take many different forms.
The different pathways enable the cells to externalize molecules in a
timely and spatially regulated fashion. These pathways together control a
variety of cellular processes, including plasma membrane growth, cell-cell
communication, and regulation of cell surface transport activities.
Currently, little is known about the molecular components controlling
export from each pathway, and how the machinery differ from one another.
Neuroendocrine cells will be used as a model system to study two secretory
pathways: a constitutive pathway and a regulated pathway. Exocytotic
vesicles involved in these two secretory pathways are formed from the same
organelle, the trans-Golgi network. Thus, our studies will be aimed at
understanding the mechanisms for transport between the trans-Golgi network
and the cell surface along both paths. The specific goals of these studies
are: (1) to elucidate the mechanism for the formation of constitutive and
regulated vesicles from the trans-Golgi network; proteins that may
participate in these processes will be identified and their roles in
vesicle budding will be tested in an in vitro assay that reconstitutes
transport; (2) to study the components involved in vesicle targeting and
fusion. GTP binding proteins and their accessory proteins involved in
these processes will be identified and studied. Whether these factors are
unique to the individual pathway will be determined; (3) to study the
mechanism for sorting of proteins between the constitutive and the
regulated pathways. Structural determinants important for sorting will be
defined by mutagenesis studies. The current model for sorting will be
examined by an in vivo test to determine if sorting of hormones into the
regulated secretory pathway is achieved by formation of molecular
aggregates.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01GM035239-12
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