TY - JOUR
T1 - Slow endocytosis of the LDL receptor-related protein 1B
T2 - Implications for a novel cytoplasmic tail conformation
AU - Knisely, Jane M.
AU - Li, Yonghe
AU - Griffith, Janice M.
AU - Geuze, Hans J.
AU - Schwartz, Alan L.
AU - Bu, Guojun
PY - 2007/9/10
Y1 - 2007/9/10
N2 - The LDL receptor-related protein 1B (LRP1B) is a putative tumor suppressor homologous to LRP1. Both LRP1 and LRP1B contain cytoplasmic tails with several potential endocytosis motifs. Although the positions of these endocytic motifs are similar in both receptors, LRP1B is internalized at a 15-fold slower rate than LRP1. To determine whether the slow endocytosis of LRP1B is due to the utilization of an endocytosis motif other than the YATL motif used by LRP1, we tested minireceptors with mutations in each of the five potential motifs in the LRP1B tail. Only mutation of both NPXY motifs together abolished LRP1B endocytosis, suggesting that LRP1B can use either of these motifs for internalization. LRP1B contains a unique insertion of 33 amino acids not present in LRP1 that could lead to altered recognition of trafficking motifs. Surprisingly, deletion of this insertion had no effect on the endocytosis rate of LRP1B. However, replacing either half of the LRP1B tail with the corresponding LRP1 sequence markedly accelerated LRP1B endocytosis. From these data, we propose that both halves of the LRP1B cytoplasmic tail contribute to a unique global conformation, which results in less efficient recognition by endocytic adaptors and a slow endocytosis rate.
AB - The LDL receptor-related protein 1B (LRP1B) is a putative tumor suppressor homologous to LRP1. Both LRP1 and LRP1B contain cytoplasmic tails with several potential endocytosis motifs. Although the positions of these endocytic motifs are similar in both receptors, LRP1B is internalized at a 15-fold slower rate than LRP1. To determine whether the slow endocytosis of LRP1B is due to the utilization of an endocytosis motif other than the YATL motif used by LRP1, we tested minireceptors with mutations in each of the five potential motifs in the LRP1B tail. Only mutation of both NPXY motifs together abolished LRP1B endocytosis, suggesting that LRP1B can use either of these motifs for internalization. LRP1B contains a unique insertion of 33 amino acids not present in LRP1 that could lead to altered recognition of trafficking motifs. Surprisingly, deletion of this insertion had no effect on the endocytosis rate of LRP1B. However, replacing either half of the LRP1B tail with the corresponding LRP1 sequence markedly accelerated LRP1B endocytosis. From these data, we propose that both halves of the LRP1B cytoplasmic tail contribute to a unique global conformation, which results in less efficient recognition by endocytic adaptors and a slow endocytosis rate.
KW - Endocytosis
KW - LRP1
KW - LRP1B
KW - Tumor suppressor
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000249201300012
UR - https://openalex.org/W2035054440
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/34548043304
U2 - 10.1016/j.yexcr.2007.05.026
DO - 10.1016/j.yexcr.2007.05.026
M3 - Journal Article
C2 - 17658514
SN - 0014-4827
VL - 313
SP - 3298
EP - 3307
JO - Experimental Cell Research
JF - Experimental Cell Research
IS - 15
ER -