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ER–plasma membrane contact sites deliver ER lipids and proteins for rapid cell surface expansion

Madison Smith, Lincoln Gay, Markus Babst

2024The Journal of Cell Biology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As a consequence of hypoosmotic shock, yeast cells swell rapidly and increase the surface area by ∼20% in 20 s. Approximately, 35% of this surface increase is mediated by the ER-plasma membrane contact sites, specifically the tricalbins, which are required for the delivery of both lipids and the GPI-anchored protein Crh2 from the cortical ER to the plasma membrane. Therefore, we propose a new function for the tricalbins: mediating the fusion of the ER to the plasma membrane at contact sites. This proposed fusion is triggered by calcium influx via the stretch-gated channel Cch1 and is supported by the anoctamin Ist2.

Topics & Concepts

MembraneChemistryFusionCell biologyPlasmaBiophysicsMembrane proteinLipid bilayer fusionBiochemistryBiologyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsLinguisticsPhilosophyEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and DiseaseFungal and yeast genetics researchCellular transport and secretion
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