4.8 Article

COPI acts in both vesicular and tubular transport

Journal

NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages 996-U275

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncb2273

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM058615, AI071155, AR048632, HL061378, HL050040, GM051596]
  2. Telethon [GGPO823, GTF08001]
  3. AIRC [IG4700, IG4664, IG10233]
  4. European Grant Eucilia [HEALT-2-2007-201804]
  5. Italian Foundation for Cancer Research
  6. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Program in Translational Medicine

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Intracellular transport occurs through two general types of carrier, either vesicles(1,2) or tubules(3,4). Coat proteins act as the core machinery that initiates vesicle formation(1,2), but the counter part that initiates tubule formation has been unclear. Here, we find that the coat protein I (COPI) complex initially drives the formation of Golgi buds. Subsequently, a set of opposing lipid enzymatic activities determines whether these buds become vesicles or tubules. Lysophosphatidic acid acyltransferase-gamma (LPAAT gamma) promotes COPI vesicle fission for retrograde vesicular transport. In contrast, cytosolic phospholipase A2-alpha (cPLA2 alpha) inhibits this fission event to induce COPI tubules, which act in anterograde intra-Golgi transport and Golgi ribbon formation. These findings not only advance a molecular understanding of how COPI vesicle fission is achieved, but also provide insight into how COPI acts in intra-Golgi transport and reveal an unexpected mechanistic relationship between vesicular and tubular transport.

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