[PDF][PDF] Annexin A2-dependent polymerization of actin mediates endosome biogenesis

E Morel, RG Parton, J Gruenberg - Developmental cell, 2009 - cell.com
Developmental cell, 2009cell.com
Early endosomes give rise to multivesicular intermediates during transport toward late
endosomes. Much progress has been made in understanding the sorting of receptors into
these intermediates, but the mechanisms responsible for their biogenesis remain unclear.
Here, we report that F-actin is necessary for transport beyond early endosomes and
endosome formation. We found that endosomes captured by actin cables were essentially
stationary, but early endosomes also exhibited patches of F-actin and facilitated selective F …
Summary
Early endosomes give rise to multivesicular intermediates during transport toward late endosomes. Much progress has been made in understanding the sorting of receptors into these intermediates, but the mechanisms responsible for their biogenesis remain unclear. Here, we report that F-actin is necessary for transport beyond early endosomes and endosome formation. We found that endosomes captured by actin cables were essentially stationary, but early endosomes also exhibited patches of F-actin and facilitated selective F-actin nucleation and polymerization. Our data show that nucleation of actin patches by early endosomes is strictly dependent on annexin A2, a protein involved in early-to-late endosome transport. It also requires the actin nucleation factor Spire1 and involves Arp2/3, which is needed for filament branching. We conclude that actin patches are nucleated on early endosomes via annexin A2 and Spire1, and that these patches control endosome biogenesis, presumably by driving the membrane remodeling process.
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