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ADP-ribosylation factor 1 of arabidopsis plays a critical role in intracellular trafficking and maintenance of endoplasmic reticulum morphology in Arabidopsis SCIE SCOPUS

Title
ADP-ribosylation factor 1 of arabidopsis plays a critical role in intracellular trafficking and maintenance of endoplasmic reticulum morphology in Arabidopsis
Authors
Lee, MHMin, MKLee, YJJin, JBShin, DHKim, DHLee, KHHwang, I
Date Issued
2002-08
Publisher
AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
Abstract
ADP-ribosylation factors (Arf), a family of small GTP-binding proteins, play important roles in intracellular trafficking in animal and yeast cells. Here, we investigated the roles of two Arf homologs, Arf1 and Arf3 of Arabidopsis, in intracellular trafficking in plant cells. We generated dominant negative mutant forms of Arf 1 and Arf3 and examined their effect on trafficking of reporter proteins in protoplasts. Arf1[T31N] inhibited trafficking of H+-ATPase:green fluorescent protein (GFP) and sialyltransferase (ST):GFP to the plasma membrane and the Golgi apparatus. In addition, Arf1[T31N] caused relocalization of the Golgi reporter protein ST:GFP to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In protoplasts expressing Arf1 [T31N], ST:red fluorescent protein remained in the ER, whereas H+-ATPase:GFP was mistargeted to another organelle. Also, expression of Arf1[T31N] in protoplasts resulted in profound changes in the morphology of the ER. The treatment of protoplasts with brefeldin A had exactly the same effect as Arf1[T31N] on various intracellular trafficking pathways. In contrast, Arf3[T31N] did not affect trafficking of any of these reporter proteins. Inhibition experiments using mutants with various domains swapped between Arf1 and Arf3 revealed that the N-terminal domain is interchangeable for trafficking inhibition. However, in addition to the T31N mutation, motifs in domains II, III, and IV of Arf1 were necessary for inhibition of trafficking of H+-ATPase:GFP. Together, these results strongly suggest that Arf1 plays a role in the intracellular trafficking of cargo proteins in Arabidopsis, and that Arf1 functions through a brefeldin A-sensitive factor.
Keywords
GUANINE-NUCLEOTIDE-EXCHANGE; TRANS-GOLGI NETWORK; GTP-BINDING PROTEIN; GREEN FLUORESCENT PROTEIN; PLANT-CELLS; BREFELDIN-A; SEC7 DOMAIN; TERMINAL PROPEPTIDE; STORAGE PROTEINS; SORTING SIGNALS
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/18938
DOI
10.1104/PP.003624
ISSN
0032-0889
Article Type
Article
Citation
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, vol. 129, no. 4, page. 1507 - 1520, 2002-08
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