RRC ID 83081
Author Hata R, Sugawara A, Fukuda M.
Title Rab10 function in tubular endosome formation requires the N-terminal K3 residue and is disrupted by N-terminal tagging.
Journal J Cell Sci
Abstract Various N-terminal tags have often been used to identify the functions and localization of Rab small GTPases, but their impact on Rab proteins themselves has been poorly investigated. Here, we used a knockout (KO)-rescue approach to systematically evaluate the effect of N-terminal tagging of two Rabs, Rab10 and Rab27A, on RAB10-KO HeLa cells and Rab27A-deficient melanocytes (melan-ash cells), respectively. The results showed that all of the N-terminal-tagged Rab27A proteins mediated actin-based melanosome transport in the melan-ash cells, but none of the N-terminal-tagged Rab10 proteins fully rescued the defect in tubular endosome formation in RAB10-KO cells. Although the N-terminal-tagged Rab10 proteins had the ability to localize tubular endosomes in wild-type HeLa cells, they sometimes exhibited a dominant-negative effect on tubular endosome formation. We also found that a conserved lysine residue at amino acid position 3 (K3) in the Rab10 proteins of different species is required for tubular endosome formation. Thus, it will be important to determine whether other Rab isoforms with N-terminal tags behave similarly to their corresponding untagged isoforms by performing appropriate KO-rescue experiments in future studies.
Volume 138(3)
Published 2025-2-1
DOI 10.1242/jcs.263649
PII 364964
PMID 39783278
MeSH Animals Endosomes* / metabolism HeLa Cells Humans Melanocytes / metabolism Melanosomes / metabolism Protein Transport rab GTP-Binding Proteins* / genetics rab GTP-Binding Proteins* / metabolism rab27 GTP-Binding Proteins / genetics rab27 GTP-Binding Proteins / metabolism
IF 4.573
Resource
DNA material pEF-Rab10 (RDB20711) pEF-Rab10(delta K) (RDB20712)