Browsing by Author "Neeft, M."
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- Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsMunc13-4 is an effector of Rab27a and controls secretion of lysosomes in hematopoietic cells(Amer Soc Cell Biology, 2005)
;Neeft, M. ;Wieffer, M ;Jong, A. S. de ;Negroiu, G. ;Metz, C. H. G. ;van Loon, A. ;Griffith, J. ;Krijgsveld, J. ;Wulffraat, N ;Koch, H. ;Heckt, A. J. R.; ;Kleijmeer, M.van der Sluijs, P.Griscelli syndrome type 2 (GS2) is a genetic disorder in which patients exhibit life-threatening defects of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) whose lytic granules fail to dock on the plasma membrane and therefore do not release their contents. The disease is caused by the absence of functional rab27a, but how rab27a controls secretion of lytic granule contents remains elusive. Mutations in Munc13-4 cause familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis subtype 3 (FHL3), disease phenotypically related to GS2. We show that Munc13-4 is a direct partner of rab27a. The two proteins are highly expressed C3 homology in CTLs and mast cells where they colocalize on secretory lysosomes. The region comprising the Munc13 domains is essential for the localization of Munc13-4 to secretory lysosomes. The GS2 mutant rab27aW73G strongly reduced binding to Munc][34, whereas the FHL3 mutant Munc13-4Delta608-611 failed to bind rab27a. Overexpression of Munc13-4 enhanced degranulation of secretory lysosomes in mast cells, showing that it has a positive regulatory role in secretory lysosome fusion. We suggest that the secretion defects seen in GS2 and FHL3 have a common origin, and we propose that the rab27a/Munc13-4 complex is an essential regulator of secretory granule fusion with the plasma membrane in hernatopoietic cells. Mutations in either of the two genes prevent formation of this complex and abolish secretion. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsRabaptin-5 alpha/rabaptin-4 serves as a linker between rab4 and gamma(1)-adaptin in membrane recycling from endosomes(Oxford Univ Press, 2003)
;Deneka, M. ;Neeft, M. ;Popa, I. ;van Oort, M. ;Sprong, H. ;Oorschot, V. ;Klumperman, J.; van der Sluijs, P.Rab4 regulates recycling from early endosomes. We investigated the role of the rab4 effector rabaptin-5alpha and its putative partner gamma(1)-adaptin in membrane recycling. We found that rabaptin-5alpha forms a ternary complex with the gamma(1)-sigma(1) subcomplex of AP-1, via a direct interaction with the gamma(1)-subunit. The binding site for gamma(1)-adaptin is in the hinge region of rabaptin-5alpha, which is distinct from rab4- and rab5-binding domains. Endogenous or ectopically expressed gamma(1)- adaptin localized to both the trans-Golgi network and endosomes. Co-expressed rabaptin-5alpha and gamma(1)-adaptin, however, co-localized in a rab4-dependent manner on recycling endosomes. Transfection of rabaptin-5alpha caused enlarged endosomes and delayed recycling of transferrin. RNAi of rab4 had an opposing effect on transferrin recycling. Collectively, our data show that rab4-GTP acts as a scaffold for a rabaptin-5alpha- gamma(1)-adaptin complex on recycling endosomes and that interactions between rab4, rabaptin-5alpha and gamma(1)-adaptin regulate membrane recycling.