A Binding Site for SH3 Domains Targets Dynamin to Coated Pits (*)

  1. Howard S. Shpetner(§),
  2. Jonathan S. Herskovits(1) and
  3. Richard B. Vallee
  1. From the Cell Biology Group, Worcester Foundation for Biomedical Research, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts 01545 and
  2. Department of Biochemistry, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01655
    • § Current address: Dept. of Cell Biology and Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, 373 Plantation St., Worcester, MA 01605.

    Abstract

    Dynamin is a GTPase that plays a critical role in the very early stages of endocytosis, regulating the scission of clathrin-coated and non-clathrin-coated pits from the plasma membrane. While the ligands through which dynamin exerts its in vivo effects are unknown, dynamin exhibits in vitro binding to several proteins containing Src homology 3 (SH3) domains, as well as to microtubules and anionic phospholipids, via a basic, proline-rich C-terminal domain. To begin to identify the in vivo binding partners of dynamin, we have examined by immunofluorescence the association of mutant and wild-type forms of dynamin with plasma membranes prepared by sonication of transiently transfected cells. Wild-type dynamin was found almost exclusively in association with clathrin-containing domains. Binding to these regions was abolished by removal of a nine-amino acid sequence within the C-terminal domain encoding a candidate SH3 domain binding site. Binding did not require clathrin and resisted extraction at both high and low ionic strength, consistent with an interaction with an SH3 domain. Surprisingly, we also find that dynamin contains multiple regions involved in binding to non-clathrin-containing domains, including a 13-amino acid sequence directly upstream of the C-terminal domain. These observations suggest that a protein containing an SH3 domain is involved in recruiting dynamin to coated pits and provide the first evidence for a biological role for SH3 domains in dynamin function.

    Footnotes

    • * Parts of this work were previously reported in abstract form (Shpetner, H. S., Burgess, C. C., and Vallee, R. B.(1992) Mol. Biol. Cell3, 4 (abstr.); Shpetner, H. S., Vaughan, K. T., Burgess, C. C., and Vallee, R. B.(1993) Mol. Biol. Cell4, 171 (abstr.)). The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore by hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

    • 1 The abbreviations used are:

      PH

      pleckstrin homology

      GTPGraphicS

      guanosine 5′-3-O-(thio)triphosphate.

      • Received October 11, 1995.
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