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Vimentin intermediate filaments provide structural stability to the mammalian Golgi complex

Teresa Vitali, Rosa Sánchez‐Alvarez, Tomasz M. Witkos, Ioannis Bantounas, Marie F.A. Cutiongco, Michal Dudek, Guanhua Yan, Alexander A. Mirоnоv, Joe Swift, Martin Lowe

2023Journal of Cell Science11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Golgi complex comprises a connected ribbon of stacked cisternal membranes localized to the perinuclear region in most vertebrate cells. The position and morphology of this organelle depends upon interactions with microtubules and the actin cytoskeleton. In contrast, we know relatively little about the relationship of the Golgi complex with intermediate filaments (IFs). In this study, we show that the Golgi is in close physical proximity to vimentin IFs in cultured mouse and human cells. We also show that the trans-Golgi network coiled-coil protein GORAB can physically associate with vimentin IFs. Loss of vimentin and/or GORAB had a modest effect upon Golgi structure at the steady state. The Golgi underwent more rapid disassembly upon chemical disruption with brefeldin A or nocodazole, and slower reassembly upon drug washout, in vimentin knockout cells. Moreover, loss of vimentin caused reduced Golgi ribbon integrity when cells were cultured on high-stiffness hydrogels, which was exacerbated by loss of GORAB. These results indicate that vimentin IFs contribute to the structural stability of the Golgi complex and suggest a role for GORAB in this process.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGolgi apparatusIntermediate filamentVimentinCell biologyCytoskeletonBiochemistryCellEndoplasmic reticulumImmunologyImmunohistochemistryCellular transport and secretionSkin and Cellular Biology ResearchNuclear Structure and Function
Vimentin intermediate filaments provide structural stability to the mammalian Golgi complex | Litcius