4.5 Review

Clathrin-independent endocytosis, retrograde trafficking, and cell polarity

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 65, Issue -, Pages 112-121

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceb.2020.05.009

Keywords

Endocytosis; Intracellular trafficking; Retrograde transport; Polarity; Glycobiology; Galectin; Shiga toxin

Categories

Funding

  1. European Research Council [340485]
  2. Human Frontier Science Program [RGP0029-2014]
  3. Swedish Research Council [K2015-99X-22877-01-6]
  4. Mizutani Foundation for Glycosciences [200014]
  5. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-16-CE23-0005-02, ANR-19-CE13-000101]
  6. Institut National Du Cancer [2018-1-PLBIO-01-ICR-1, 2019-1PL BIO-05-CEA-1]
  7. Plan Cancer program LipoCanPredict

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Several mechanisms allow for cargo internalization into cells within membrane-bound endocytic carriers. How these internalization processes couple to specific pathways of intracellular distribution remains poorly explored. Here, we review uptake reactions that are independent of the conventional clathrin machinery. We discuss how these link to retrograde trafficking from endosomes to the Golgi apparatus and exemplify biological situations in which the polarized secretion capacity of the Golgi apparatus allows for retrograde cargoes to be delivered to specialized areas of the plasma membrane, such as the leading edge of migratory cells or the immunological synapse of immune cells. We also address the evidence that allows to position apicobasal polarity of epithelial cells in this context. The underlying theme is thereby the functional coupling between specific types of endocytosis to intracellular retrograde trafficking for protein cargoes that need to be localized in a highly polarized and dynamic manner to plasmalemmal subdomains.

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