Membrane traffic in eukaryotic cells requires the interaction of a vesicle-associated soluble NSF attachment protein receptor (v-SNARE) on transport vesicles with a SNARE on the target membrane (t-SNARE). Recently, we identified the yeast protein Vti1p as a v-SNARE that is involved in two transport reactions. Vti1p interacts with the prevacuolar t-SNARE Pep12p in Golgi to prevacuolar transport and with the cis-Golgi t-SNARE Sed5p in traffic to the cis-Golgi. Here we describe a human Vti1p homolog, hVti1. Whereas vti1δ cells are inviable, expression of hVti1 allows vti1δ cells to grow at nearly the wild-type growth rate. When expressed in yeast hVti1 can replace Vti1p in both Golgi to prevacuolar transport and in traffic to the cis-Golgi. Sequence comparisons with a Schizosaccharomyces pombe and two different mouse Vti1 homologs led to the identification of a very conserved predicted α-helix. Amino acid exchanges in vti1 mutant alleles defective either in one or both trafficking steps cluster in this domain, suggesting that this structure is probably the binding site for effector proteins.
CITATION STYLE
Von Mollard, G. F., & Stevens, T. H. (1998). A human homolog can functionally replace the yeast vesicle-associated SNARE Vti1p in two vesicle transport pathways. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273(5), 2624–2630. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.5.2624
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