Assigning functions to distinct regions of the N-terminus of the prion protein that are involved in its copper-stimulated, clathrin-dependent endocytosis

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Abstract

The cellular prion protein (PrPC) is essential for the pathogenesis and transmission of prion diseases. Although PrPC is known to be located in detergent-insoluble lipid rafts at the surface of neuronal cells, the mechanism of its internalisation is unclear, with both raft/caveolae-based and clathrin-mediated processes being proposed. We have investigated the mechanism of copper-induced internalisation of PrPC in neuronal cells by immunofluorescence microscopy, surface biotinylation assays and buoyant sucrose density gradient centrifugation in the presence of Triton X-100. Clathrin-mediated endocytosis was selectively blocked with tyrphostin A23, which disrupts the interaction between tyrosine motifs in the cytosolic domains of integral membrane proteins and the adaptor complex AP2, and a dominant-negative mutant of the adaptor protein AP180. Both these agents inhibited the copper-induced endocytosis of PrPC. Copper caused PrPC to move laterally out of detergent-insoluble lipid rafts into detergent-soluble regions of the plasma membrane. Using mutants of PrPC that lack either the octapeptide repeats or the N-terminal polybasic region, and a construct with a transmembrane anchor, we show that copper binding to the octapeptide repeats promotes dissociation of PrPC from lipid rafts, whereas the N-terminal polybasic region mediates its interaction with a transmembrane adaptor protein that engages the clathrin endocytic machinery. Our results provide an experimental basis for reconciling the apparently contradictory observations that the prion protein undergoes clathrin-dependent endocytosis despite being localised in lipid rafts. In addition, we have been able to assign distinct functions in the endocytic process to separate regions of the protein.

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Taylor, D. R., Watt, N. T., Perera, W. S. S., & Hooper, N. M. (2005). Assigning functions to distinct regions of the N-terminus of the prion protein that are involved in its copper-stimulated, clathrin-dependent endocytosis. Journal of Cell Science, 118(21), 5141–5153. https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.02627

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