Evidence for ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF) as a regulator of in vitro endosome-endosome fusion.
- J M Lenhard,
- R A Kahn and
- P D Stahl
- Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110.
Abstract
We have used an in vitro endosome fusion assay, recombinant ARF, synthetic peptides, and guanosine 5'-3-O-(thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S) to study the role of ARF during endocytosis. Previous work has shown that GTP gamma S stimulates in vitro endosome fusion in dilute cytosol (less than 0.5 mg/ml) but inhibits fusion in concentrated cytosol (greater than 1.0 mg/ml). Two peptides corresponding to the NH2-terminal 16 amino acids of human ARF1 and ARF4 blocked GTP gamma S stimulation of fusion in dilute cytosol and reversed GTP gamma S inhibition of fusion in concentrated cytosol. The addition of recombinant human ARF1 to endosomes in dilute or concentrated cytosol resulted in GTP gamma S-dependent inhibition of fusion. Only the myristoylated form of ARF inhibited fusion. The NH2-terminal ARF1 peptide reversed inhibition by recombinant ARF1. Preincubation experiments showed that endosomes could form an ARF-resistant intermediate during the fusion process. Western blot analysis revealed clathrin-coated vesicles extracted with detergent retained ARF. The results suggest that ARF is involved in both the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of GTP gamma S in dilute and concentrated cytosol, respectively. Furthermore, myristoylation, the NH2-terminal domain, and binding to GTP appear to be critical for ARF activity during an early prefusion step required for endocytosis.










