KDEL receptor (Erd2p)-mediated retrograde transport of the cholera toxin A subunit from the Golgi involves COPI, p23, and the COOH terminus of Erd2p

142Citations
Citations of this article
55Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

A cholera toxin mutant (CTX-K63) unable to raise cAMP levels was used to study in Vero cells the retrograde transport of the toxin A subunit (CTXA- K63), which possesses a COOH-terminal KDEL retrieval signal. Microinjected GTP-γ-S inhibits the internalization as well as Golgi-ER transport of CTXA- K63. The appearance of CTX-A-K63 in the Golgi induces a marked dispersion of Erd2p and p53 but not of the Golgi marker giantin. Erd2p is translocated under these conditions most likely to the intermediate compartment as indicated by an increased colocalization of Erd2p with mSEC13, a member of the mammalian coat protein II complex. IgGs as well as F(ab) fragments directed against Erd2p, β-COP, or p23, a new member of the p24 protein family, inhibit or block retrograde transport of CTX-A-K63 from the Golgi without affecting its internalization or its transport to the Golgi. Anti- Erd2p antibodies do not affect the binding of CTX-A to Erd2p, but inhibit the CTX-K63-induced translocation of Erd2p and p53.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Majoul, I., Sohn, K., Wieland, F. T., Pepperkok, R., Pizza, M., Hillemann, J., & Söling, H. D. (1998). KDEL receptor (Erd2p)-mediated retrograde transport of the cholera toxin A subunit from the Golgi involves COPI, p23, and the COOH terminus of Erd2p. Journal of Cell Biology, 143(3), 601–612. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.143.3.601

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free