4.7 Article

SHIP164 is a chorein motif lipid transfer protein that controls endosome-Golgi membrane traffic

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 221, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202111018

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [NS36251, DA18343, DK45735]
  2. Kavli Institute for Neuroscience
  3. Parkinson's Foundation
  4. NIH [T32GM008283, R35GM131715, F32NS108448]
  5. Aligning Science Across Parkinson's grant through the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research [ASAP000580]

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Cellular membranes differ in protein and lipid composition, and the transfer of lipids between membranes may play a role in their trafficking. Recent studies on the VPS13 family proteins and SHIP164 suggest that lipid transfer between membranes can occur independently of vesicular traffic.
Cellular membranes differ in protein and lipid composition as well as in the protein-lipid ratio. Thus, progression of membranous organelles along traffic routes requires mechanisms to control bilayer lipid chemistry and their abundance relative to proteins. The recent structural and functional characterization of VPS13-family proteins has suggested a mechanism through which lipids can be transferred in bulk from one membrane to another at membrane contact sites, and thus independently of vesicular traffic. Here, we show that SHIP164 (UHRF1BP1L) shares structural and lipid transfer properties with these proteins and is localized on a subpopulation of vesicle clusters in the early endocytic pathway whose membrane cargo includes the cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor (MPR). Loss of SHIP164 disrupts retrograde traffic of these organelles to the Golgi complex. Our findings raise the possibility that bulk transfer of lipids to endocytic membranes may play a role in their traffic.

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