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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

The GDP-dependent Rab27a effector coronin 3 controls endocytosis of secretory membrane in insulin-secreting cell lines.

Rab27a is involved in the control of membrane traffic, a crucial step in the regulated secretion. Typically, the guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-bound form has been considered to be active and, therefore, searching for proteins binding to the GTP-form has been attempted to look for their effectors. Here, we have identified the actin-bundling protein coronin 3 as a novel Rab27a effector that paradoxically bound guanosine diphosphate (GDP)-Rab27a in the pancreatic beta-cell line MIN6. Coronin 3 directly bound GDP-Rab27a through its beta-propeller structure. The most important insulin secretagogue glucose promptly shifted Rab27a from the GTP- to GDP-bound form. Knockdown of coronin 3 by RNAi resulted in the inhibition of phogrin (an insulin-granule-associated protein) internalization and the uptake of FM4-64 (a marker of endocytosis). Similar results were reproduced by disruption of the coronin-3-GDP-Rab27a interaction with the dominant-negative coronin 3, and coexpression of the GDP-Rab27a mutant rescued these changes. Taken together, our results indicate that interaction of GDP-Rab27a and coronin 3 is important in stimulus-endocytosis coupling, and that GTP- and GDP-Rab27a regulates insulin membrane recycling at the distinct stages.[1]

References

  1. The GDP-dependent Rab27a effector coronin 3 controls endocytosis of secretory membrane in insulin-secreting cell lines. Kimura, T., Kaneko, Y., Yamada, S., Ishihara, H., Senda, T., Iwamatsu, A., Niki, I. J. Cell. Sci. (2008) [Pubmed]
 
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