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Papers In Press, published online ahead of print February 16, 2006
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M513723200
Submitted on December 27, 2005
Revised on February 15, 2006
Accepted on February 16, 2006

Arno through its coiled-coil domain regulates endocytosis at the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells

Shmuel Miriam, Lorraine C. Santy, Scott Frank, Dana Avrahami, James E. Casanova, and Yoram Altschuler

Pharmacology Dept., Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Ein-Kerem, Jerusalem 91120

Corresponding Author: yoram11{at}md.huji.ac.il

ARNO is a guanine nucleotide exchange protein for the ARF family of GTPases. Here we show that in polarized epithelial cells, ARNO is localized exclusively to the apical plasma membrane, where it regulates endocytosis. Expression of ARNO stimulates apical endocytosis of the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor, and co-expression of ARF6 with ARNO leads to a synergistic stimulation of apical endocytosis. Expression of a dominant negative ARF6 mutant, ARF6-T27N, antagonizes this stimulatory effect. Deletion of the N-terminal coiled-coil (CC) domain of ARNO causes the mutant ARNO to localize to both the apical and basolateral plasma membranes. Expression of the CC domain alone abolishes ARNO-induced apical endocytosis as well as colocalization of IgA/receptor complexes with ARNO and clathrin. These results suggest that the CC domain contributes to the specificity of apical localization of ARNO through association with components of the apical plasma membrane. We conclude that ARNO acts together with ARF6 to regulate apical endocytosis.


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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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