TY - JOUR
T1 - An ARF6/Rab35 GTPase cascade for endocytic recycling and successful cytokinesis
AU - Chesneau, Laurent
AU - Dambournet, Daphné
AU - MacHicoane, Mickaël
AU - Kouranti, Ilektra
AU - Fukuda, Mitsunori
AU - Goud, Bruno
AU - Echard, Arnaud
PY - 2012/1/24
Y1 - 2012/1/24
N2 - Cytokinesis bridge instability leads to binucleated cells that can promote tumorigenesis in vivo [1]. Membrane trafficking is crucial for animal cell cytokinesis [2-8], and several endocytic pathways regulated by distinct GTPases (Rab11, Rab21, Rab35, ARF6, RalA/B) [9-16] contribute to the postfurrowing steps of cytokinesis. However, little is known about how these pathways are coordinated for successful cytokinesis. The Rab35 GTPase controls a fast endocytic recycling pathway and must be activated for SEPTIN cytoskeleton localization at the intercellular bridge, and thus for completion of cytokinesis [12]. Here, we report that the ARF6 GTPase [17, 18] negatively regulates Rab35 activation and hence the Rab35 pathway. Human cells expressing a constitutively activated, GTP-bound ARF6 mutant display identical endocytic recycling and cytokinesis defects as those observed upon overexpression of the inactivated, GDP-bound Rab35 mutant. As a molecular mechanism, we identified the Rab35 GAP EPI64B as an effector of ARF6 in negatively regulating Rab35 activation. Unexpectedly, this regulation takes place at clathrin-coated pits, and activated ARF6 reduces Rab35 loading into the endocytic pathway. Thus, an effector of an ARF protein is a GAP for a downstream Rab protein, and we propose that this hierarchical ARF/Rab GTPase cascade controls the proper activation of a common endocytic pathway essential for cytokinesis.
AB - Cytokinesis bridge instability leads to binucleated cells that can promote tumorigenesis in vivo [1]. Membrane trafficking is crucial for animal cell cytokinesis [2-8], and several endocytic pathways regulated by distinct GTPases (Rab11, Rab21, Rab35, ARF6, RalA/B) [9-16] contribute to the postfurrowing steps of cytokinesis. However, little is known about how these pathways are coordinated for successful cytokinesis. The Rab35 GTPase controls a fast endocytic recycling pathway and must be activated for SEPTIN cytoskeleton localization at the intercellular bridge, and thus for completion of cytokinesis [12]. Here, we report that the ARF6 GTPase [17, 18] negatively regulates Rab35 activation and hence the Rab35 pathway. Human cells expressing a constitutively activated, GTP-bound ARF6 mutant display identical endocytic recycling and cytokinesis defects as those observed upon overexpression of the inactivated, GDP-bound Rab35 mutant. As a molecular mechanism, we identified the Rab35 GAP EPI64B as an effector of ARF6 in negatively regulating Rab35 activation. Unexpectedly, this regulation takes place at clathrin-coated pits, and activated ARF6 reduces Rab35 loading into the endocytic pathway. Thus, an effector of an ARF protein is a GAP for a downstream Rab protein, and we propose that this hierarchical ARF/Rab GTPase cascade controls the proper activation of a common endocytic pathway essential for cytokinesis.
U2 - 10.1016/j.cub.2011.11.058
DO - 10.1016/j.cub.2011.11.058
M3 - Article
C2 - 22226746
AN - SCOPUS:84856224381
SN - 0960-9822
VL - 22
SP - 147
EP - 153
JO - Current Biology
JF - Current Biology
IS - 2
ER -