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Calcium levels in the Golgi complex regulate clustering and apical sorting of GPI-APs in polarized epithelial cells
Authors:Sté  phanie Lebreton,Simona Paladino,Dandan Liu,Maria Nitti,Julia von Blume,Paolo Pinton,Chiara Zurzolo
Abstract:Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) are lipid-associated luminal secretory cargoes selectively sorted to the apical surface of the epithelia where they reside and play diverse vital functions. Cholesterol-dependent clustering of GPI-APs in the Golgi is the key step driving their apical sorting and their further plasma membrane organization and activity; however, the specific machinery involved in this Golgi event is still poorly understood. In this study, we show that the formation of GPI-AP homoclusters (made of single GPI-AP species) in the Golgi relies directly on the levels of calcium within cisternae. We further demonstrate that the TGN calcium/manganese pump, SPCA1, which regulates the calcium concentration within the Golgi, and Cab45, a calcium-binding luminal Golgi resident protein, are essential for the formation of GPI-AP homoclusters in the Golgi and for their subsequent apical sorting. Down-regulation of SPCA1 or Cab45 in polarized epithelial cells impairs the oligomerization of GPI-APs in the Golgi complex and leads to their missorting to the basolateral surface. Overall, our data reveal an unexpected role for calcium in the mechanism of GPI-AP apical sorting in polarized epithelial cells and identify the molecular machinery involved in the clustering of GPI-APs in the Golgi.

Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) are localized on the apical surface of most epithelia, where they exert their physiological functions, which are regulated by their spatiotemporal compartmentalization.In polarized epithelial cells, the organization of GPI-APs at the apical surface is driven by the mechanism of apical sorting, which relies on the formation of GPI-AP homoclusters in the Golgi apparatus (1, 2). GPI-AP homoclusters (containing a single GPI-AP species) form uniquely in the Golgi apparatus of fully polarized cells (and not in nonpolarized cells) in a cholesterol-dependent manner (1, 3, 4). Once formed, GPI-AP homoclusters become insensitive to cholesterol depletion, suggesting that protein–protein interactions stabilize them (1, 2). At the apical membrane, newly arrived homoclusters coalesce into heteroclusters (containing at least two different GPI-AP species) that are sensitive to cholesterol depletion (1). Of importance, in the absence of homoclustering in the Golgi (e.g., in nonpolarized epithelial cells), GPI-APs remain in the form of monomers and dimers and do not cluster at the cell surface (1, 5). Thus, the organization of GPI-APs at the apical plasma membrane of polarized cells strictly depends on clustering mechanisms in the Golgi apparatus allowing their apical sorting. This is different from what was shown in fibroblasts where clustering of GPI-APs occurs from monomer condensation at the plasma membrane, indicating that distinct mechanisms regulate GPI-AP clustering in polarized epithelial cells and fibroblasts (1, 6, 7). Furthermore, in polarized epithelial cells, the spatial organization of clusters also appears to regulate the biological activity of the proteins (1) so that GPI-APs are fully functional only when properly sorted to the apical surface and less active in the case of missorting to the basolateral domain (1, 8, 9). Understanding the mechanism of GPI-AP apical sorting in the Golgi apparatus is therefore crucial to decipher their organization at the plasma membrane and the regulation of their activity. The determinants for protein apical sorting have been difficult to uncover compared to the ones for basolateral sorting (1014). Besides a role of cholesterol, the molecular factors regulating the clustering-based mechanism of GPI-AP sorting in polarized epithelial cells are unknown. Here, we analyzed the possible role of the actin cytoskeleton and of calcium levels in the Golgi. The actin cytoskeleton is not only critical for the maintenance of the Golgi structure and its mechanical properties but also provides the structural support favoring carrier biogenesis (1518). The Golgi exit of various cargoes is altered in cells treated with drugs either depolymerizing or stabilizing actin filaments (19, 20), and the post-Golgi trafficking is affected either by the knockdown of the expression of some actin-binding proteins, which regulate actin dynamics, or by the overexpression of their mutants (12, 2123), all together revealing the critical role of actin dynamics for protein trafficking. Only few studies have shown the involvement of actin remodeling proteins in polarized trafficking, mostly in selectively mediating the apical and basolateral trafficking of transmembrane proteins [refs. 2426; and reviewed in ref. 27]; thus, it remains unclear whether actin filaments play a role in protein sorting in polarized cells.On the other hand, the Golgi apparatus exhibits high calcium levels that have been revealed to be essential for protein processing and the sorting of some secreted soluble proteins in nonpolarized cells (2831). Moreover, a functional interplay between the actin cytoskeleton and Golgi calcium in modulating protein sorting in nonpolarized cells has been shown (22).In this study, we report that in epithelial cells, actin perturbation does not impair GPI-AP clustering capacity in the Golgi and therefore their apical sorting. In contrast, we found that the Golgi organization of GPI-APs is drastically perturbed upon calcium depletion and that the amount of calcium in the Golgi cisternae is critical for the formation of GPI-AP homoclusters. We further show that the TGN calcium/manganese pump, SPCA1 (secretory pathway Ca(2+)-ATPase pump type 1), which controls the Golgi calcium concentration (32), and Cab45, a calcium-binding luminal Golgi resident protein previously described to be involved in the sorting of a subset of soluble cargoes (33, 34), are essential for the formation of GPI-APs homoclusters in the Golgi and for their subsequent apical sorting. Indeed, down-regulation of SPCA1 or Cab45 expression impairs the oligomerization of GPI-APs in the Golgi complex and leads to their missorting to the basolateral surface but does not affect apical or basolateral transmembrane proteins. Overall, our data reveal an unexpected role for calcium in the mechanism of GPI-AP apical sorting in polarized epithelial cells and identify the molecular machinery involved in the clustering of GPI-APs in the Golgi.
Keywords:GPI-anchored proteins   protein sorting   calcium   protein clustering   polarized epithelial cells
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