Litcius/Paper detail

Proton-gated anion transport governs macropinosome shrinkage

Mariia Zeziulia, Sandy Blin, F. Schmitt, Martin Lehmann, Thomas J. Jentsch

2022Nature Cell Biology59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Intracellular organelles change their size during trafficking and maturation. This requires the transport of ions and water across their membranes. Macropinocytosis, a ubiquitous form of endocytosis of particular importance for immune and cancer cells, generates large vacuoles that can be followed optically. Shrinkage of macrophage macropinosomes depends on TPC-mediated Na + efflux and Cl − exit through unknown channels. Relieving osmotic pressure facilitates vesicle budding, positioning osmotic shrinkage upstream of vesicular sorting and trafficking. Here we identify the missing macrophage Cl − channel as the proton-activated Cl − channel ASOR/TMEM206. ASOR activation requires Na + -mediated depolarization and luminal acidification by redundant transporters including H + -ATPases and CLC 2Cl − /H + exchangers. As corroborated by mathematical modelling, feedback loops requiring the steep voltage and pH dependencies of ASOR and CLCs render vacuole resolution resilient towards transporter copy numbers. TMEM206 disruption increased albumin-dependent survival of cancer cells. Our work suggests a function for the voltage and pH dependence of ASOR and CLCs, provides a comprehensive model for ion-transport-dependent vacuole maturation and reveals biological roles of ASOR.

Topics & Concepts

VacuoleCell biologyEndocytosisBiophysicsCytosolVesicleCytoplasmOrganelleEndocytic cycleV-ATPaseChemistryBiologyMembraneBiochemistryCellATPaseEnzymeErythrocyte Function and PathophysiologyIon Transport and Channel RegulationLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior
Proton-gated anion transport governs macropinosome shrinkage | Litcius