Interactions between adaptor protein-1 of the clathrin coat and microtubules via type 1a microtubule-associated proteins

Citation:

E Orzech, Livshits, L, Leyt, J, Okhrimenko, H, Reich, V, Cohen, S, Weiss, A, Melamed-Book, N, Lebendiker, M, Altschuler, Y, and Aroeti, B. 2001. “Interactions Between Adaptor Protein-1 Of The Clathrin Coat And Microtubules Via Type 1A Microtubule-Associated Proteins”. J Biol Chem, 276, 33, Pp. 31340-8. doi:10.1074/jbc.M101054200.

Abstract:

The classical view suggests that adaptor proteins of the clathrin coat mediate the sorting of cargo protein passengers into clathrin-coated pits and the recruitment of clathrin into budding areas in the donor membrane. In the present study, we provide biochemical and morphological evidence that the adaptor protein 1 (AP-1) adaptor of the trans-Golgi network clathrin interacts with microtubules. AP-1 in cytosolic extracts interacted with in vitro assembled microtubules, and these interactions were inhibited by ATP depletion of the extracts or in the presence of 5'-adenylylimidodiphosphate. An overexpressed gamma-subunit of the AP-1 complex associated with microtubules, suggesting that this subunit may mediate the interaction of AP-1 with the cytoskeleton. Purified AP-1 did not interact with purified microtubules, but interaction occurred when an isolated microtubule-associated protein fraction was added to the reaction mix. The gamma-adaptin subunit of AP-1 specifically co-immunoprecipitated with a microtubule-associated protein of type 1a from rat brain cytosol. This suggests that type 1a microtubule-associated protein may mediate the association of AP-1 with microtubules in the cytoplasm. The microtubule binding activity of AP-1 was markedly inhibited in cytosol of mitotic cells. By means of its interaction with microtubule-associated proteins, we propose novel roles for AP-1 adaptors in modulating the dynamics of the cytoskeleton, the stability and shape of coated organelles, and the loading of nascent AP-1-coated vesicles onto appropriate microtubular tracks.