4.5 Article

JIP4 is recruited by the phosphoinositide-binding protein Phafin2 to promote recycling tubules on macropinosomes

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 134, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.258495

Keywords

Endosomes; Macropinocytosis; Membrane recycling; Trafficking

Categories

Funding

  1. South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority [2018081, 2020038]
  2. Research Council of Norway [315103]
  3. European Research Council [788954]
  4. Norwegian Cancer Society [182698]
  5. Research Council of Norway through its Centres of Excellence funding scheme [262652]
  6. University of Oslo
  7. European Research Council (ERC) [788954] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study identifies JIP4 and Phafin2 as crucial components in the recycling pathway from macropinosomes, with their interaction and impact on PtdIns3P affecting the retention and processing of internalized cargoes in cells.
Macropinocytosis allows cells to take up extracellular material in a non-selective manner into large vesicles called macropinosomes. After internalization, macropinosomes acquire phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns3P) on their limiting membrane as they mature into endosomal-like vesicles. The molecularmechanisms that underlie recycling of membranes and transmembrane proteins from these macropinosomes still need to be defined. Here, we report that JIP4 (officially known as SPAG9), a protein previously described to bind to microtubule motors, is recruited to tubulating subdomains on macropinosomes by the PtdIns3P-binding protein Phafin2 (officially known as PLEKHF2). These JIP4-positive tubulating subdomains on macropinosomes contain F-actin, the retromer recycling complex and the retromer cargo VAMP3. Disruption of the JIP4-Phafin2 interaction, deletion of Phafin2 or inhibition of PtdIns3P production by VPS34 impairs JIP4 recruitment to macropinosomes. Whereas knockout of JIP4 suppresses tubulation, its overexpression enhances tubulation frommacropinosomes. JIP4-knockout cells display increased retention of macropinocytic cargo in both early and late macropinosomes. Collectively, these data identify JIP4 and Phafin2 as components of a tubular recycling pathway that operates from macropinosomes. This article has an associated First Person interviewwith the first author of the paper.

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