Publication | Open Access
CDC50 Proteins Are Critical Components of the Human Class-1 P4-ATPase Transport Machinery
162
Citations
39
References
2010
Year
Proteinlipid InteractionMolecular BiologyLipid MovementCellular PhysiologyYeast PProteomicsSecretory PathwayCell SignalingHuman Cdc50Protein FunctionBiochemistryMolecular PathwayMembrane Lipid AsymmetryProtein TransportCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionNatural SciencesCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Members of the P(4) subfamily of P-type ATPases catalyze phospholipid transport and create membrane lipid asymmetry in late secretory and endocytic compartments. P-type ATPases usually pump small cations and the transport mechanism involved appears conserved throughout the family. How this mechanism is adapted to flip phospholipids remains to be established. P(4)-ATPases form heteromeric complexes with CDC50 proteins. Dissociation of the yeast P(4)-ATPase Drs2p from its binding partner Cdc50p disrupts catalytic activity (Lenoir, G., Williamson, P., Puts, C. F., and Holthuis, J. C. (2009) J. Biol. Chem. 284, 17956-17967), suggesting that CDC50 subunits play an intimate role in the mechanism of transport by P(4)-ATPases. The human genome encodes 14 P(4)-ATPases while only three human CDC50 homologues have been identified. This implies that each human CDC50 protein interacts with multiple P(4)-ATPases or, alternatively, that some human P(4)-ATPases function without a CDC50 binding partner. Here we show that human CDC50 proteins each bind multiple class-1 P(4)-ATPases, and that in all cases examined, association with a CDC50 subunit is required for P(4)-ATPase export from the ER. Moreover, we find that phosphorylation of the catalytically important Asp residue in human P(4)-ATPases ATP8B1 and ATP8B2 is critically dependent on their CDC50 subunit. These results indicate that CDC50 proteins are integral part of the P(4)-ATPase flippase machinery.
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