The ras‐like GTP binding protein rab4 is the only known rab protein on endosomes that is phosphorylated during mitosis. Since a large fraction of rab4 accumulates in the cytosol in mitotic cells, we investigated the molecular mechanism controlling membrane association of rab4. We first show that human rab4 is phosphorylated by recombinant mammalian p34cdc2 kinase in vitro. Next, the actual site of phosphorylation and its functional significance were determined using stably transfected CHO cell lines producing high levels of wild type rab4 or rab4 mutants bearing alterations at Ser196, which occurs within a consensus site for p34cdc2 kinase phosphorylation (S196PRR). Mutation of Ser196 to glutamine or aspartic acid completely prevented rab4 phosphorylation in mitotic cells and also blocked its appearance in the cytosol. Neither C‐terminal isoprenylation nor carboxymethylation of rab4 was affected by the mutations or by phosphorylation. Finally, dephosphorylation and reassociation of soluble rab4 with membranes occurred upon exit of cells from mitosis. Thus, phosphorylation of Ser196 is directly responsible for the reversible translocation of rab4 into the cytosol of mitotic cells.
One of the major activities of developing neurons is the transport of new membrane to the growing axon. Candidates for playing a key role in the regulation of this intense traffic are the small GTP-binding proteins of the rab family. We have used hippocampal neurons in culture and analyzed membrane traffic activity after suppressing the expression of the small GTP-binding protein rab8. Inhibition of protein expression was accomplished by using sequence-specific antisense oligonucleotides. While rab8 depletion resulted in the blockage of morphological maturation in 95% of the neurons, suppression of expression of another rab protein, rab3a, had no effect, and all neurons developed normal axons and dendrites. The impairment of neuronal maturation by rab8 antisense treatment was due to inhibition of membrane traffic. Thus, by using video-enhanced differential interference contrast microscopy, we observed in the rab8-depleted cells a dramatic reduction in the number of vesicles undergoing anterograde transport. Moreover, by incubating antisense-treated neurons with Bodipy-labeled ceramide, a fluorescent marker for newly formed exocytic vesicles, we observed fluorescence labeling restricted to the Golgi apparatus, whereas in control cells labeling was found also in the neurites. These results show the role of the small GTPase rab8 in membrane traffic during neuronal process outgrowth.
Proteins of the YPT1/SEC4/rab family are well documented to be involved in the regulation of membrane transport. We have previously reported that rab5 regulates endosome-endosome recognition and/or fusion in vitro. Here, we show that this process depends on the rab5 N-terminal domain. Treatment of early endosomal membranes at a low trypsin concentration essentially abolished fusion and cleaved rab5 to a 1 kDa smaller polypeptide. Two-dimensional gel analysis suggested that rab5 is one of the few, if not the only, polypeptides cleaved by trypsin under these conditions. Whereas endosome fusion could be stimulated by cytosol prepared from cells overexpressing rab5 (and thus containing high amounts of the protein), this stimulation was abolished by trypsin-treatment of the cytosol. Trypsin-treated cytosol prepared from mock-transfected cells, which contains very low amounts of rab5, showed no inhibitory activity indicating that rab5 is the target of trypsin in these experiments. Purified rab5 prepared after expression in Escherichia coli was treated with trypsin, which cleaved the protein at the N-terminus. A synthetic peptide of rab5 N-terminal domain inhibited endosome fusion in our cell-free assay. A version of the same peptide truncated at the N-terminus or a peptide of rab3 N-terminal domain were without effects. Altogether, these observations suggest that the N-terminal domain of rab5 is involved in the process of early endosome recognition and/or fusion, presumably because it interacts with another component of the transport machinery.
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