4.5 Review

PMEL: a pigment cell-specific model for functional amyloid formation

Journal

PIGMENT CELL & MELANOMA RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 300-315

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/pcmr.12067

Keywords

Pmel17; Silver; multivesicular body; melanosome; fibrils; Alzheimer Disease; proprotein processing

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases [R01 AR048155]
  2. National Institutes of Health from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences [F31 GM081917, T32 GM007229]
  3. Foundation ARC pour la Recherche sur le Cancer
  4. Institut Curie
  5. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

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PMEL is a pigment cell-specific protein responsible for the formation of fibrillar sheets within the pigment organelle, the melanosome. The fibrillar sheets serve as a template upon which melanins polymerize as they are synthesized. The PMEL fibrils are required for optimal pigment cell function, as animals that either lack PMEL expression or express mutant PMEL variants show varying degrees of hypopigmentation and pigment cell inviability. The PMEL fibrils have biophysical properties of amyloid, a protein fold that is frequently associated with neurodegenerative and other diseases. However, PMEL is one of a growing number of non-pathogenic amyloid proteins that contribute to the function of the cell and/or organism that produces them. Understanding how PMEL generates amyloid in a non-pathogenic manner might provide insights into how to avoid toxicity due to pathological amyloid formation. In this review, we summarize and reconcile data concerning the fate of PMEL from its site of synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum to newly formed melanosomes and the role of distinct PMEL subdomains in trafficking and amyloid fibril formation. We then discuss how its progression through the secretory pathway into the endosomal system might allow for the regulated and non-toxic conversion of PMEL into an ordered amyloid polymer.

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