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BIOLOGY, Faculty of Pharmacy. 2014. 10. 13. László KŐHIDAI, Med. Habil. MD, PhD., Assoc. Prof. Department of Genetics, Cell- and Immunobiology Semmelweis University. Endocytosis - Exocytosis. Endocytosis. Phagocytosis – solid Pinocytosis – liquid (general) Endocytosis :
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BIOLOGY, Faculty of Pharmacy 2014. 10. 13. László KŐHIDAI, Med. Habil. MD, PhD., Assoc. Prof.Department of Genetics, Cell- andImmunobiologySemmelweis University Endocytosis - Exocytosis
Endocytosis • Phagocytosis – solid • Pinocytosis – liquid (general) Endocytosis: • Uptake of substances • Transport of protein or lipid components of compartments • Metabolic or division signaling • Defense to microorganisms
Predominant cells: unicellular cells macrophages osteoslats throphoblasts Functions: uptake of food partickles immuneresponses elimination of aged cells (RBC) Phagocytosis (1)
Phagocytosis (2) Required: • signal • membrane receptor (Fc receptor for Ab) • formation of pseudopodium • cortical actin network The formed vesicle: phagosome (hetero-; auto-)
Endocytosis • Clathrin-coated vesicles • Non-clathrin coated vesicles • Macropinocytosis • Potocytosis
Clathrin coated pits/vesicles
Function of clathrin coated vesicles • Receptor mediated endocytosis • Selective uptake of molecules • (low environmental conc.) • Membrane receptors • Concentration of ligand (1000x)
Sorting signals of secreted and membrane proteins to transport vesicles
Selective incorporation of membrane proteins Into the coated vesicles
Endosomal-Lysosomal compartmentStructure • tubular, vesicular • acidic pH - vacuolar H+ ATP-ase - proton pump • early-endosome (EE) and late-endosomes (LE) and lysosomes (L) • EE pH= 6; LE pH=5 • in EE no lysosomal membrane proteins or enzymes (in contrast LE)
Endosomal-Lysosomal compartmentFunction • sorting • transport • degradation • removal of clathrin layer • formation of EE in the EE: • dissociation of receptor-ligand complex - receptor-recycling (e.g. LDL, transferrin) • receptor-ligand complex transported together - receptor down regulation (e.g. EGF)
Pathway of LDL • insulin or other • hormones – • in receptor • mediated • endocytosis
Fate of LDL internalized by receptor-mediated endocytosis
Late endosome • early endosomes, TGN and autophagosomes feed late endosomes • lysosomal enzymes M-6-P signal is changed, the phosphate group is cleaved - receptors can not bind enzymes • the enzyme content of vacuoles is in the lumen lysosomes
Dissociation of receptor-ligand complex in late endosomes
De Duve, Ch. Nobel-prize - 1974 Lysosomes (TEM)
Lysosomes • enzymes - acidic hydrolases e.g. protease, nuclease, glycosidase, phosphatese • more than 40 types of enzymes • membrane proteins - highly glycosilated protects from the enzymes • transport molecules of the membranes - transports the products of proteolytic cleavage into the cytoplasm • the waste products are released or stored in the cytoplasm (inclusion - residual body)
LAMP = lysosome associated membrane proteins • integrant membrane proteins of • the lysosome • LAMP-2 – tarnsport of cholesterol • LAMP-2 defficiency- autophagy www.helsinki.fi/bioscience/biochemistry/eskelinen
Autophagy - Autophagosome • intake of own components • regulates the number of organells • toxic effects can also induce it
Formation of autophagosome www.helsinki.fi/bioscience/biochemistry/eskelinen E
Non-clathrin coated vesicles • There is no receptor or clathrin in the membrane • The uptake of substances is less selective • Primairly liquide-phase endocytosis
Macropinocytosis • Ruffling of the surface membrane forms inclusions • These „vacuoles” have no membrane • Size 0.2-5 mm - the mass/surface ratio is very good • Significance: • Liquide-phase pinocytosis • Taking probes from the • environment • – antigene recognition • in macrophages Film produced by F. Vilhardt and M. Grandahl.
Caveolae • 50-80 nm, bottle-like infoldings of the surface membrane • endothels, adipocytes • caveolin • potocytosis - caveolae close but not internalized, the materials enter the cytoplasm by a special carrier molecule e.g. vitamine B4 • some other caveolae enter the cell !!!
33 AA 44 AA C 101 AA N Caveolin oligomers and caveolae assembly
Functions of dynamin Clathrin-mediated endocytosis Membrane retrieval Endosome- to-Golgi transport Secretory vesicle formation in TGF Caveolae Fluid phase endocytosis
Structure of dynamin Interaction with membranes Interaction with cytosceleton Activation of GTP-ase domain
Dynamin requires GTP hydrolysis to pinching off coated vesicles • The not-hydrolysable GTP-gS is added • Dots represent binding of anti-dynamin antibodies • The long neck shows that however the coated pit was formed, • in the absence of GTP hydrolysis its pinching off is absence
Carrier mediated proteolysis • some molecules can enter lysosome directly from the cytoplasm • the signal of entry: KFERQ (Lys-Phe-Glu-Arg-Gln)
Proteasome • non-lysosomal cleavage of proteins • cylindric, multienzyme complex • parts: ATP binding-, substrate binding-, regulator-domain • location: close to the external part of ER-translocon • ubiquitin - degradation-signal - is required • the non-properly folded or damaged proteins • regulator - eliminator - role e.g. cyclins • cystic fibrosis - Cl- fac. transp. is affected as the responsible membrane protein is broken down in proteosome
Transcytosis • the ligands walk around the endosomal compartment • ligands transported from one surface to the other • e.g. immunoglobulins of the colostrum cross the intestinal epithelium by transcytosis