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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2000//507 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 151, Number 3,
, 2000 507-518
Original Article |
Evidence for Segregation of Sphingomyelin and Cholesterol during Formation of Copi-Coated Vesicles
In higher eukaryotes, phospholipid and cholesterol synthesis occurs mainly in the endoplasmic reticulum, whereas sphingomyelin and higher glycosphingolipids are synthesized in the Golgi apparatus. Lipids like cholesterol and sphingomyelin are gradually enriched along the secretory pathway, with their highest concentration at the plasma membrane. How a cell succeeds in maintaining organelle-specific lipid compositions, despite a steady flow of incoming and outgoing transport carriers along the secretory pathway, is not yet clear. Transport and sorting along the secretory pathway of both proteins and most lipids are thought to be mediated by vesicular transport, with coat protein I (COPI) vesicles operating in the early secretory pathway. Although the protein constituents of these transport intermediates are characterized in great detail, much less is known about their lipid content. Using nano-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry for quantitative lipid analysis of COPI-coated vesicles and their parental Golgi membranes, we find only low amounts of sphingomyelin and cholesterol in COPI-coated vesicles compared with their donor Golgi membranes, providing evidence for a significant segregation from COPI vesicles of these lipids. In addition, our data indicate a sorting of individual sphingomyelin molecular species. The possible molecular mechanisms underlying this segregation, as well as implications on COPI function, are discussed.
Key Words: COPI-coated vesicles sphingomyelin cholesterol lipid sorting nano-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
| Introduction |
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It is generally assumed that net transport of lipids occurs mainly via vesicular transport (Pagano 1990; Trotter and Voelker 1994; van Helvoort and van Meer 1995; Rothman and Wieland 1996). According to this model, both cell surface proteins and lipids would use the same kind of intracellular carriers. However, in the case of some lipids, like cholesterol, a nonvesicular pathway seems to play a major role in transport (for a review see Liscum and Munn 1999). Two types of vesicular carriers have been implicated in protein transport in the early secretory pathway: coat protein (COP)I-coated vesicles, which are thought to function in bidirectional transport within the Golgi complex (Orci et al. 1986, Orci et al. 1989, Orci et al. 1997; Ostermann et al. 1993; Nickel et al. 1998; Warren and Malhotra 1998; Volchuk et al. 2000) and retrograde transport from the Golgi apparatus to the ER (Cosson and Letourneur 1994, Cosson and Letourneur 1997; Letourneur et al. 1994; Lowe and Kreis 1998; Nickel and Wieland 1998; Pelham 1998), and COPII-coated vesicles, which mediate export of newly synthesized proteins from the ER (Barlowe et al. 1994; Kuge et al. 1994; Aridor et al. 1995; Kuehn and Schekman 1997; Bannykh et al. 1998; Barlowe 1998). SM is synthesized in the Golgi apparatus (Futerman et al. 1990; Jeckel et al. 1990; Allan and Obradors 1999), and thus COPI-coated vesicles are potentially involved in anterograde transport of this membrane lipid towards the TGN. Similarly, the ER is the export site of newly synthesized cholesterol (Reinhart et al. 1987; Krisans 1992), implying that both COPII- and COPI-coated vesicles may be involved in its cell surface delivery. Various kinds of transport intermediates have been implicated in TGN to cell surface transport (Keller and Simons 1997), some of which may also be involved in the delivery of SM and cholesterol from the TGN to the cell surface. Interestingly, a difference in interleaflet clear space between COPI vesicles and their donor membranes has been reported that might be caused by a change in lipid composition during budding (Orci et al. 1996), for example, by a reduced amount of SM and cholesterol (van Meer 1998) in COPI vesicles.
We have analyzed the lipid composition of COPI-coated vesicles with respect to phosphatidylcholine (PC), as it is the bulk lipid of eukaryotic membranes, along with SM and cholesterol, which are enriched at the cell surface under steady-state conditions (van Meer 1998). As reported previously, nano-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (nano-ESI-MS/MS) provides a powerful tool to quantitatively assess the lipid composition of biological membranes in a highly sensitive manner (Brügger et al. 1997; Sandhoff et al. 1999). This method has allowed us to study even the minute amounts of highly purified COPI-coated vesicles generated from isolated Golgi membranes in vitro and to quantitatively compare their lipid content with their parental membranes. We have exploited class-specific fragmentation to selectively detect and quantify distinct classes of lipids by precursor ion scanning (PREC).
Here we show that COPI-coated vesicles contain significantly less SM and cholesterol compared with Golgi donor membranes, providing evidence for a segregation from COPI vesicles of these lipids. The purity of the subcellular fractions was analyzed by both biochemical and morphological means to assess the significance of our quantitative analysis. Segregation from COPI-coated vesicles of both SM and cholesterol has implications for the function of these transport carriers, the mode of net transport of these cell surface lipids, and the functional organization of the Golgi apparatus.
| Materials and Methods |
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S and GTP were obtained from Roche Molecular Biochemicals. 3,4-[13C2]cholesterol was purchased from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Inc. Sulfur trioxide pyridine complex and 2-ethoxy-1-ethoxycarbonyl-1,2-dihydroquinoline were obtained from Fluka. Glass capillaries for nano-ESI-MS/MS were purchased from Teer Coatings, Ltd. Silica gel 60 (40–63 µm) and RP-18 silica gel (40–63 µm) were obtained from Merck.
-MEM, penicillin, streptomycin, L-glutamine, trypsin-EDTA, and PBS for cell culture were purchased from Biochrom. FCS was obtained from PAA Laboratories GmbH. Mouse mAb against β-COP (M3A5) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. A rabbit antibody to p23 (no. 1327) was used as described (Sohn et al. 1996).
Cell Culture
CHO cells were grown in
-MEM containing 10% (vol/vol) heat-inactivated FCS, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 2 mM L-glutamine at 37°C and 5% CO2.
Subcellular Fractionation
CHO Golgi membrane fractions were prepared by a modification of the method of Balch et al. 1984. All procedures were carried out at 4°C. In a standard preparation, 8 liters of CHO cells (density of 5 x 105 cells/ml) were harvested by centrifugation (10 min at 500 gav), washed twice with PBS (10 min at 500 gav), twice with homogenization buffer (250 mM sucrose in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 4°C) (10 min at 1,500 gav), and finally resuspended in four volumes of homogenization buffer. Cells were homogenized by passing 15 times through a ball-bearing homogenizer. The homogenate was brought to a sucrose concentration of 37% (wt/wt) by addition of 62% (wt/wt) sucrose in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4. EDTA was added to a final concentration of 1 mM. 12 ml of this solution was placed in one SW 28 tube and overlaid with 15 ml 35% (wt/wt) sucrose in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, and 9 ml 29% (wt/wt) sucrose in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4. Gradients were centrifuged for 2.5 h at 25,000 rpm. Typically,
2 ml of a Golgi-enriched membrane fraction was recovered at the 35%–29% sucrose interphase. For further purification, membranes of five gradients were collected, diluted 1:3 with 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, and pelleted onto a 50% (wt/wt) sucrose cushion in an SW 28 tube (60 min at 25,000 rpm). Membranes were adjusted to 45% (wt/wt) sucrose in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4 (in 1.5 ml), and overlaid with a step gradient of 1.5 ml of 40% (wt/wt), 35% (wt/wt), 30% (wt/wt), 25% (wt/wt), 20% (wt/wt), and 15% (wt/wt) sucrose in 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4. After centrifugation of the gradient (18 h at 36,000 rpm, SW 41 rotor), 30 fractions were collected from bottom to top and analyzed for marker enzyme activities. The fraction with the highest activity of Golgi marker enzyme was frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at –80°C.
Rat liver Golgi membranes were prepared as described by Warren and colleagues (Slusarewicz et al. 1994) and further purified on a continuous sucrose gradient, as described above for CHO Golgi membranes.
Marker Enzyme Analysis
Enzymatic assays for alkaline phosphodiesterase (plasma membrane), NADH cytochrome c reductase (ER), and β-N-acetylglucosaminidase (lysosomes and late endosomes) were carried out as described by Warnock et al. 1993. SM synthase (Golgi apparatus) was assayed according to Jeckel et al. 1992. Early endosome enrichment in the homogenate and the Golgi-enriched fraction was determined by Western blot analysis, which quantified the amount of syntaxin 13 (rat liver) or transferrin receptor (CHO). Quantitative evaluation was performed using NIH Image software.
Bovine Brain Cytosol
Bovine brain cytosol was prepared by a modification of the method described by Malhotra et al. 1989. All procedures were carried out at 4°C. In brief, meninges, blood vessels, and white matter were removed from three fresh bovine brains. 120 ml breaking buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4 at 4°C, 250 mM sucrose, 500 mM KCl, 2 mM EGTA, 1 mM DTT, 1 mM PMSF, 0.5 mM 1,10-phenanthroline, 2 µM pepstatin A, 2 µg/ml aprotinin, and 0.5 µg/ml leupeptin) was added to 100 g of brain. Brains were homogenized in a Waring blender (two times for 30 s at low speed, then 30 s at high speed). After centrifugation of the homogenate (60 min at 12,000 rpm in a GS-3 rotor), the supernatant was centrifuged in TFT 55.38 tubes for 90 min at 44,000 rpm. The supernatant was concentrated by a factor of about eight in a Militan ultra concentration unit (Millipore), dialyzed two times against 30 liters of dialysis buffer (25 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 50 mM KCl, 1 mM DTT), and centrifuged again for 90 min at 44,000 rpm in TFT 55.38 tubes. The supernatant was frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at –80°C.
Purification of COPI-coated Vesicles
COPI-coated vesicles were prepared from CHO Golgi membranes or rat liver Golgi membranes, as described by Serafini and Rothman 1992, with a final concentration of 63 µg/ml Golgi membranes and 2.4 mg/ml (CHO COPI vesicles) or 4.8 mg/ml (rat liver COPI vesicles) bovine brain cytosol. The final continuous sucrose gradient was fractionated from the bottom into 18 fractions of 250 µl each. A 25-µl aliquot of each fraction was precipitated with three volumes of chloroform/methanol (1:2, vol/vol), and pellets were resuspended in SDS-PAGE sample buffer, and subjected to 13% SDS-PAGE. Proteins were transferred to a PVDF membrane and probed with antibodies against p23 and β-COP. The peak vesicle fractions (typically, fractions 6–8) were pooled, frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at –80°C.
For comparison of COPI vesicles generated either in the presence of GTP or GTP
S, COPI vesicle generations were performed, as described, except that the vesicles were directly released from pelleted Golgi membranes and loaded on top of a continuous sucrose gradient. Assay volumes were reduced to 15 ml. A final concentration of either 1 mM GTP or 25 µM GTP
S was used.
EM
Samples were fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde and the membranes were pelleted for 60 min at 45,000 rpm and 4°C in a TLA 45 rotor. The pellets were processed for conventional EM, as described previously (Lannert et al. 1998). COPI-coated vesicle fractions were fixed in the presence of 75 µg BSA in PBS.
Protein Determination
The concentration of protein was determined with a BCA protein assay kit (Pierce Chemical Co.), using BSA as the standard protein.
SM Standard Synthesis
Synthesis of N-myristoyl-SM and N-pentacosanoyl-SM was performed under argon. Glassware was flame-dried before use. N-sphingosyl-phosphorylcholine (21.5 µmol) was dissolved in a solution of either myristic acid or pentacosanoic acid (9.56 mM) in 4.5 ml ethanol. After addition of 2-ethoxy-1-ethoxycarbonyl-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) (50 µmoles), the reaction mixture was stirred for 7 h at 50°C. EEDQ (50 µmol) was added a second time and the solution was stirred for an additional 12 h at room temperature. The reaction mixture was concentrated under reduced pressure and the crude product was subjected to flash chromatography (silica gel, 11.5 x 2-cm column; the eluent was composed of toluene/diethylether/methanol/water, 3:3:3.5:0.7, vol/vol/vol/vol). Product-containing fractions were pooled as monitored by TLC (silica gel; the running solvent was composed of toluene/diethylether/methanol/water, 3:3:4:1, vol/vol/vol/vol), concentrated under reduced pressure, redissolved in 1.7 ml chloroform/methanol (1:2, vol/vol), and subjected to a second flash chromatography (RP-18 silica gel, 10 x 1-cm column). The column was preequilibrated with methanol/water (1:1, vol/vol). After loading of the product, the column was washed six times with 5 ml water, then six times with 5 ml methanol/water (1:1, vol/vol). Elution was performed stepwise with 5 ml methanol, 15 ml chloroform/methanol (1:1, vol/vol), 15 ml chloroform/methanol (2:1, vol/vol), and 10 ml chloroform. Product-containing fractions (monitored by TLC) were dried under a gentle stream of nitrogen, dissolved in 100 ml chloroform/methanol (1:2, vol/vol), and stored under argon at –20°C. Phosphate was determined as described (Rouser et al. 1970). Products were verified by mass spectrometric analysis. Typically, a yield of 50–60% was achieved.
Lipid Analysis
Lipids were extracted from membrane fractions with chloroform/methanol/HCl (50:100:1.5, vol/vol/vol), as described by Bligh and Dyer 1959. Using a gentle stream of nitrogen, the organic phase was evaporated and the dried lipids were redissolved in chloroform/methanol (1:2, vol/vol). Phosphate determination was performed as described (Rouser et al. 1970), except that the assay volume was reduced by a factor of four. Glassware was used throughout the procedures.
MS was done on a QII triple quadrupole instrument (Micromass) equipped with a nano-ESI source. Nitrogen was used as a drying gas. The source temperature was set to 30°C. A capillary voltage of ± 600–800 V was applied, depending on the ion mode. Argon was used as collision gas at a nominal pressure of 3 x 10–3 mbar. Resolution of Q1 and Q3 was set to achieve isotope resolution. A collision energy of 30 eV was used for PC and SM detection in positive PREC mode, selecting a fragment ion of mass/charge (m/z) 184 (phosphocholine ion). Detection of cholesterol as cholesterol sulfate was done in negative PREC mode, selecting for a fragment ion of m/z 97 (sulfate ion) at a collision energy of 62 eV (Sandhoff et al. 1999). The mass range m/z scanned was 600–1,000 for PC and SM detection and 450–480 for cholesterol sulfate detection. For each quantitative measurement, 100 (PC and SM) or 50 (cholesterol) consecutive scans of 4-s duration were averaged.
PC and SM quantification was done as described (Brügger et al. 1997). 1,2-O-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, 1,2-O-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, 1,2-O-diarachidoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, and 1,2-O-dibehenoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine, as well as N-myristoyl-SM, N-oleoyl-SM, and N-pentacosanoyl-SM were used as standards. In brief, PC and SM standards dissolved in chloroform/methanol (1:2, vol/vol) were added to the extraction solvent before lipid extraction of membrane fractions. Dried lipids were redissolved in chloroform/methanol (1:2, vol/vol). Ammonium acetate (100-mM stock solution in methanol) was added to a final concentration of 5 mM to acidify the solution. Before mass spectrometric analysis, samples were spun at 15,000 gav for 5 min at 4°C in a microfuge (Eppendorf). Nano flow borosilicate glass tips of type D (Teer Coatings) were used. Instrument parameters were set as described above. For quantitative analysis, mass correction and isotope correction for [M+1], [M+2], and [M+3] isotopes were performed. Quantification of cholesterol was performed as described previously (Sandhoff et al. 1999).
| Results |
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1.18 g/cm3 (41%, wt/wt, sucrose) (Serafini et al. 1991), corresponding to fraction 7 of the sucrose gradient that represents the final purification step. As shown in Fig. 2 (top left, CHO vesicle gradients; top right, rat liver vesicle gradients), both proteins comigrate in this part of the gradient in a single peak. EM of COPI vesicle preparations (fractions 6–8 of the continuous sucrose gradient) derived from both CHO (bottom left) and rat liver Golgi membranes (bottom right) revealed a high degree of homogeneity.
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As shown in Table , quantitative analysis of CHO Golgi membranes revealed
37 mol% PC and
14 mol% SM of total phospholipid, and a molar ratio of cholesterol to phospholipid of
0.72. In rat liver Golgi membranes, PC constituted
57 mol% and SM
5 mol% of total phospholipid. A molar ratio of cholesterol to phospholipid of
0.15 was determined. While the lipid composition of rat liver Golgi membranes is well reported in the literature, no corresponding data exist for CHO Golgi membranes. The lipid compositions for rat liver Golgi fractions were found to be 55 mol% PC, 8 mol% SM, and a cholesterol to phospholipid ratio of 0.2 (van Meer 1998), in good agreement with the above data obtained by nano-ESI-MS/MS analysis.
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45 mol% PC and
3 mol% SM to total phospholipid (Table ). The cholesterol to phospholipid ratio was found to be
0.26. Analysis of COPI vesicles derived from rat liver Golgi donor membranes revealed a contribution of
55 mol% PC and
1.5 mol% SM to total phospholipid, and a cholesterol to phospholipid ratio of
0.09. The relative changes between donor Golgi membranes and COPI vesicles in the contribution of PC, SM, and cholesterol to total phospholipid are given in Fig. 3 B. For better comparison, the value of each lipid in donor Golgi membranes was set to 100%. Absolute values are given in Table . In CHO COPI vesicles, a slight increase was determined in PC by a factor of 1.2 compared with CHO Golgi membranes, whereas the amount of PC in rat liver Golgi membranes and rat liver COPI vesicles was not significantly changed. In contrast, for both CHO and rat liver COPI vesicles, a decrease in the amount of SM was observed. SM is segregated from the vesicles by a factor of 4.8 (CHO) and by a factor of 3.3 (rat liver). A similar observation was made for cholesterol. The amounts of cholesterol in Golgi-derived COPI-coated vesicles are 2.7 times lower than in CHO Golgi membranes. Similarly, the amounts of cholesterol in rat liver COPI vesicles are 1.7 times lower than in rat liver Golgi membranes. Thus, about four cholesterol molecules are segregated together with each SM molecule from CHO COPI vesicles, and two cholesterol molecules are segregated with each SM molecule from rat liver COPI vesicles.
GTP Hydrolysis Does Not Artificially Cause Lipid Segregation during COPI Budding
Previously, it was shown that cargo uptake into COPI vesicles requires ADP ribosylation factor (ARF)-mediated hydrolysis of GTP (Nickel et al. 1998; Malsam et al. 1999; Pepperkok et al. 2000). To address the question of whether lipid sorting is also affected by GTP hydrolysis, we compared the lipid patterns of COPI vesicles generated in the presence of either GTP or GTP
S. As the amounts of vesicles obtained in the presence of GTP are extremely low, a phosphate determination of GTP vesicles is virtually not feasible. Therefore, we used the PC to SM ratio in donor Golgi and vesicle fractions as a measure for lipid sorting. Preparations of COPI vesicles in the presence of either GTP
S or GTP were performed as described in Materials and Methods. Lipid extraction of vesicle preparations was performed in the presence of internal standards for SM and PC. Both lipids were detected via PREC 184 scanning. The resulting spectra are shown in Fig. 4. Compared with parental Golgi membranes, we determined a PC to SM ratio that was 2.13 ± 0.02–fold higher in GTP
S-derived vesicles and 2.12 ± 0.01–fold higher in GTP-derived vesicles. Compared with vesicle preparations performed according to the standard protocol (Serafini and Rothman 1992), the apparent segregation factors are smaller due to a lower purity of the vesicle preparation.
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S-COPI vesicles and, therefore, appears to be physiologically relevant.
Relative Distribution of PC and SM Species in Golgi Donor Membranes and COPI Vesicles
Besides changes in the absolute amounts of PC and SM in Golgi membranes and COPI-coated vesicles, respectively, we were interested in changes in the relative distribution of the various PC and SM species. As illustrated in Fig. 5, in CHO Golgi membranes and in CHO COPI vesicles, the overall pattern of PC molecular species is very similar. In rat liver Golgi membranes and rat liver COPI vesicles, a significant change in the amount of PC 34:1 was observed. This lipid was increased from 3.9% in the Golgi membrane to 12.2% in COPI vesicles. Regarding the relative amounts of the various SM species in donor membranes and vesicles, drastic changes were observed in both CHO and rat liver COPI vesicles. SM 18:0 was enriched by a factor of 12 in CHO COPI vesicles, and by a factor of 13 in rat liver COPI vesicles. Whereas this increase of SM 18:0 was accompanied by a decrease in SM species with shorter fatty acid chains (i.e., SM 16:0) in CHO COPI vesicles, SM species with longer fatty acid chains (i.e., SM 24:0 and SM 24:1) were found to be reduced in rat liver COPI vesicles.
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| Discussion |
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Determination of the Extent of Lipid Segregation
While COPI-coated vesicles can be purified to near homogeneity, the corresponding Golgi donor membranes contain contaminations of other organelle membranes such as ER, plasma membranes, and endosomes/lysosomes. Therefore, differences in the apparent lipid compositions of Golgi preparations and COPI vesicle preparations could be due, in part, to the greater purity of the latter. To assess the significance of the observed lipid segregation, the purity of Golgi donor membranes was characterized at both the biochemical and the ultrastructural level. In addition, Golgi-enriched fractions were obtained from two different sources, which are characterized by different degrees of individual organelle contaminations. This also allowed us to judge on the generality of the phenomenon described. Based on data providing the relative contributions of individual organelles to total cellular membranes (Griffiths et al. 1989; McDowall et al. 1989; Alberts et al. 1994) and on the factors of enrichment of the various contaminating membranes in CHO and rat liver Golgi preparations, we determined the absolute contamination of the Golgi fraction with other organelles (Table ). Whereas plasma membranes and endosomal/lysosomal membranes are the main contaminations in our CHO Golgi preparations (representing a total of 9.7%), rat liver Golgi membranes are mainly contaminated by ER membranes (8.1%). As demonstrated by the following calculation for CHO membranes, contaminating membranes with a lower content of SM (ER) and those with a higher content of SM (plasma membrane and endosomes/lysosomes) roughly compensate for each other. To assess the influence on the measured value for SM in donor fractions of contaminating membranes, we used the data given in Table , in conjunction with the SM contents reported for plasma membranes and endosomes/lysosomes (14–18 mol%) (Cezanne et al. 1992; Warnock et al. 1993), as well as ER membranes (10 mol%) (Blough et al. 1977; Brotherus and Renkonen 1977; Urade et al. 1988). The calculations were made based on an SM content of 18 mol% for plasma membranes, the highest value reported. The actual SM content of CHO Golgi membranes present in our preparations would then be 14.1 mol%, a rather minor difference compared with the overall SM content (14.3 mol%, see Table ) measured in this membrane preparation. (Since no data were available for the SM content of CHO-derived ER membranes, data obtained from lipid analysis of Chinese hamster V79-UF and BHK cells were averaged. It is of note that this high SM value chosen might be an overestimation. With respect to the calculations, a lower SM value would have increased the determined SM value of the Golgi donor fraction. In general, SM and cholesterol seem to be present in cell culture cells in higher amounts (relative to total lipid) than in tissue-derived membranes.)
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5–10 mol% in IC/CGN membranes, of
18.7% in the TGN, and of
12.8% in the total Golgi membrane preparation were determined (Cluett et al. 1997). Thus, the amount of SM, even in IC/CGN membranes (on average 7.6%, see above), is higher than that determined for COPI vesicles (3% in CHO and 1.5% in rat liver COPI vesicles).
GTP Hydrolysis Does Not Affect Lipid Segregation
As demonstrated previously, ARF-mediated GTP hydrolysis is a prerequisite for uptake of cargo into COPI vesicles (Nickel et al. 1998; Malsam et al. 1999; Pepperkok et al. 2000). Therefore, we compared the PC to SM ratio (a measure for lipid sorting) of COPI vesicles, generated in the presence of either GTP or GTP
S, with that of CHO Golgi membranes. In both cases, a very similar value was obtained, indicative of a physiological relevance of the observed lipid segregation.
Segregation of Molecular Species
The profile of the individual molecular species of PC revealed no significant differences when CHO Golgi donor membranes and CHO COPI vesicles were compared. In both membrane fractions, PC 34:1 (mainly 16:0/18:1) was the major PC species, accounting for 32% of the total PC. In rat liver Golgi membranes, PC 34:1 (mainly 16:0/18:1) contributed only 3.9% of the total PC, but was enriched by a factor of three in COPI-coated vesicles (12.2% of the total PC). This increase was not accompanied by the decrease of any particular PC species. A change of the overall ratio of saturated to unsaturated PC species was not observed. Since saturated PC species are reported to be enriched in the plasma membrane (as opposed to the ER) (Keenan and Morre 1970), COPI-coated vesicle–mediated lipid sorting does not appear to contribute to this steady-state distribution. Most likely, remodeling of lipid species accounts for the higher degree of lipid saturation at the plasma membrane (MacDonald and Sprecher 1991; Schmid et al. 1991; Schneiter et al. 1999). The relative distribution of the various SM species in donor membranes and COPI vesicles was found to be significantly changed in both the CHO and the rat liver system. N-stearoyl-SM was enriched in COPI vesicles by a factor of 12 (CHO) and 13 (rat liver). In CHO Golgi-derived COPI-coated vesicles, this increase was accompanied by a decrease of SM species with shorter fatty acyl chains (e.g., SM 16:0), whereas SM species with longer fatty acyl chains (e.g., SM 24:0) were reduced in rat liver COPI vesicles. Further work is needed to elucidate the function of lipid species sorting during COPI-coated vesicle biogenesis.
Possible Mechanisms of Lipid Segregation
How are SM and cholesterol segregated from COPI-coated vesicles? Two possibilities for the observed lipid segregation can be envisaged: (a) a dynamic segregation of lipids concomitant with COPI-coated vesicle formation that is based on the molecular mechanism of vesicle budding, or (b) segregation before the budding process, resulting in the formation of COPI-coated vesicles from membrane subdomains poor in SM and cholesterol. A dynamic segregation during the budding process might be caused by preferential interactions of certain membrane phospholipids with parts of the protein machinery that mediates COPI vesicle budding. Both coat proteins (i.e., ARF and/or coatomer), COPI coat receptors (Stamnes et al. 1995; Sohn et al. 1996; Bremser et al. 1999), and other factors might potentially be involved in these kinds of interactions. Alternatively, SM and cholesterol may be mainly organized in SM- and cholesterol-enriched microdomains (Simons and Ikonen 1997; Brown and London 1998) representing Golgi substructures that do not function as donor sites for COPI vesicle biogenesis. There is evidence that such a microdomain exists in the early Golgi (Gkantiragas, I., B. Brügger, E. Stüven, K. Löhr, F. Lottspeich, F.T. Wieland, and J.B. Helms, manuscript submitted for publication).
Transport of SM and Cholesterol
SM and cholesterol are known to form concentration gradients along the organelles of the secretory pathway, with the highest enrichment in the plasma membrane. Since ER membranes are poor in SM and cholesterol, their segregation from COPI vesicles might be interpreted in a way that favors an exclusive role of these vesicles in retrograde transport. While some data support this view (Bannykh and Balch 1997; Mironov et al. 1997; Gaynor et al. 1998), there is strong evidence for a direct role of COPI in anterograde transport (Orci et al. 1986, Orci et al. 1989, Orci et al. 1997; Ostermann et al. 1993; Nickel et al. 1998; Volchuk et al. 2000; for a review see Warren and Malhotra 1998). In addition, the small amounts of SM and cholesterol remaining in COPI vesicles may well be sufficient for an anterograde net transport of these lipids, depending on the rate of transport and turnover at the plasma membrane. Alternatively, these lipids might be transported by other carriers towards the plasma membrane. Indeed, a direct transport route between ER and plasma membrane, bypassing the Golgi, was suggested for cholesterol (Kaplan and Simoni 1985; Urbani and Simoni 1990; Liscum and Dahl 1992; Smart et al. 1996; Uittenbogaard et al. 1998; Heino et al. 2000; for reviews see Anderson 1998; Liscum and Munn 1999).
In conclusion, application of nano-ESI-MS/MS has, for the first time, allowed us to quantitate the lipid content of highly purified COPI vesicles. This analysis provides evidence for a lipid segregation in Golgi membranes, as indicated by a significant reduction of SM and cholesterol content in COPI-coated vesicles compared with their parental membranes.These data are consistent with a reduced interleaflet clear space in the membrane of COPI-coated vesicles compared with Golgi membranes (Orci et al. 1996). Elucidation of the underlying mechanism as well as the determination of the lipid compositions of other vesicular carriers will be major challenges for future studies and will result in a deeper understanding of lipid sorting.
| Acknowledgments |
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-syntaxin 13 antibody. We also thank the members of the Wieland lab for helpful discussions throughout the work, Gabriele Weiss for excellent technical assistance, and Thomas Weber (Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY), James A. McNew and Christine A. Hughes (Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY) for critical comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by a grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 352) and the Human Frontier Science Program Organization (HFSPO).
Submitted: 18 July 2000
Revised: 12 September 2000
Accepted: 12 September 2000
J. Malsam's present address is Department of Cell Biology, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St., New Haven, CT 06520-8002.
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