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MEETING REVIEW |
Journeys through the Golgi—taking stock in a new era
Correspondence to Vivek Malhotra: vivek.malhotra{at}crg.es
The Golgi apparatus is essential for protein sorting and transport. Many researchers have long been fascinated with the form and function of this organelle. Yet, despite decades of scrutiny, the mechanisms by which proteins are transported across the Golgi remain controversial. At a recent meeting, many prominent Golgi researchers assembled to critically evaluate the core issues in the field. This report presents the outcome of their discussions and highlights the key open questions that will help guide the field into a new era.
© 2009 Emr et al.
This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.jcb.org/misc/terms.shtml). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 3.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).
| Introduction |
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Some features of the Golgi are already well understood. Newly synthesized proteins move from the ER to the Golgi, where they are processed before being sorted to their ultimate destinations (Mellman and Warren, 2000). This processing includes carbohydrate modifications and proteolytic cleavage events. The Golgi is often composed of disk-like membranes called cisternae, and early- and late-acting processing enzymes are concentrated in distinct cisternae (Dunphy and Rothman, 1985). Golgi cisternae in higher eukaryotes are arranged in ordered stacks of 4–8 cisternae. Newly synthesized proteins arrive at the cis side of a Golgi stack and then travel across the stack to the opposite, trans side before being exported from the trans-Golgi network (TGN) (Griffiths and Simons, 1986). This arrangement allows for iterative sorting of both secretory cargo proteins and resident Golgi and ER proteins (Rothman, 1981). COPII-coated vesicles carry newly synthesized proteins from the ER to the Golgi (Lee et al., 2004). It is agreed that COPI-coated vesicles retrieve components from the Golgi to the ER, and also transport material between Golgi cisternae, but their involvement in forward movement of cargo across the Golgi is unclear (Orci et al., 2000; Cosson et al., 2002; Rabouille and Klumperman, 2005).
To look beyond these generally accepted findings, a group of Golgi researchers gathered in June, 2009, at the Center for Genomic Regulation (CRG) in Barcelona, with funding support from the Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies (ICREA). Our goal was to discuss current ideas about the Golgi, critically evaluate the strengths and limitations of published data, and try to convey the excitement of this field in a manner that will attract new participants. As summarized below, the discussion focused on four key questions.
| 1. How are proteins transported through the Golgi? |
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Evidence in support for cisternal progression came from studies of mammalian procollagen I, which folds in the ER into rod-like trimers that further assemble in the Golgi into large (
300 x 150 nm), stable, cylindrical aggregates (Leblond, 1989; Beck et al., 1996). Procollagen can be accumulated in the ER and then released in a synchronized "wave" for transport through the Golgi. This approach was combined with 3D electron microscopy to demonstrate that procollagen aggregates traverse the Golgi without ever leaving the lumen of the cisternae (Bonfanti, et al., 1998). Thus, procollagen apparently moves through the Golgi by the progression of cisternae from the cis to the trans side of the stack. Similar conclusions have been reached for large secretory cargoes in other cell types, e.g., scales in algae (Becker et al., 1995). It is still uncertain whether smaller secretory cargoes follow the same pathway. Nevertheless, these findings support one of the key assumptions of cisternal maturation, namely that Golgi cisternae can act as forward carriers for secretory cargo transport.
Cisternal maturation was directly visualized using the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, in which individual Golgi cisternae are dispersed throughout the cytoplasm and are therefore optically resolvable by fluorescence microscopy (Wooding and Pelham, 1998). Fluorescent protein tags were used to label early and late Golgi cisternae green and red, respectively. The cisternal maturation model predicted that a green fluorescent spot should become visible as a cisterna formed, then turn red as the cisterna matured, then lose all fluorescence. This prediction was confirmed by confocal microscopy (Losev et al., 2006; Matsuura-Tokita et al., 2006).
Because membrane traffic mechanisms are generally conserved, cisternal maturation may emerge as a general principle of Golgi function. However, the evidence is still incomplete. Most notably, the two key assumptions of the cisternal maturation model have been verified in different cell types: mammalian cells revealed that Golgi cisternae act as forward carriers for secretory cargoes, and yeast cells revealed that Golgi cisternae mature. A future goal will be to test both assumptions in each of these cell types. Super-resolution microscopy may permit the tracking of individual cisternae in the stacked mammalian Golgi, while three-color video microscopy of yeast should permit secretory cargoes to be visualized within the maturing cisternae.
The mechanism of Golgi maturation is still uncertain. Transmembrane Golgi resident proteins move between cisternae (Losev et al., 2006; Matsuura-Tokita et al., 2006), implying the existence of either dissociative carriers or membrane continuities. The best candidates for dissociative carriers are COPI vesicles. However, the contents and directionality of COPI vesicles are not yet clear. Different researchers have reached divergent conclusions about whether mammalian COPI vesicles contain resident Golgi proteins and/or secretory cargo proteins (Orci et al., 2000; Cosson et al., 2002; Rabouille and Klumperman, 2005; Gilchrist et al., 2006). Data from S. cerevisiae mutants are also ambiguous because in yeast strains carrying temperature-sensitive mutations in COPI subunits, Golgi maturation is slowed but not arrested (Matsuura-Tokita et al., 2006), and certain secretory cargoes can still be secreted (Gaynor and Emr, 1997). A possible way to reconcile some of these observations is to postulate, as mentioned above, that COPI vesicles travel in both anterograde and retrograde directions. Mechanistic analysis of COPI-mediated transport will be a goal for the coming years
Another uncertainty is the status of the TGN. One interpretation views the TGN as a transient Golgi compartment that ultimately matures into secretory vesicles (Glick and Malhotra, 1998). However, the TGN is distinct from earlier Golgi cisternae with regard to morphology, domain organization, protein composition, localization signals for resident proteins, and transport carrier production (Bard and Malhotra, 2006). In some respects, the TGN is more similar to endosomes than to earlier Golgi cisternae (Glick and Nakano, 2009). These observations suggest that the TGN might display unique dynamics. For example, terminally mature trans-Golgi cisternae might fuse with a long-lived TGN, which would accumulate and concentrate secretory cargoes. More generally, one can speculate that the secretory pathway includes a mixture of long-lived and transient compartments (Appenzeller-Herzog and Hauri, 2006).
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| 2. What is the significance of connections between Golgi cisternae? |
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In mechanistic terms, the challenge is to evaluate the importance of heterologous tubular connections between cisternae. Such tubules have the potential to mediate rapid passage of small soluble proteins across the Golgi stack. Candidate proteins for this putative "fast track" pathway include albumin and proinsulin. Both proteins are nonglycosylated, and therefore do not require prolonged exposure to processing enzymes. Perhaps heterologous tubular connections allow cells to secrete such proteins in large amounts without moving large amounts of membrane through the Golgi. Models of this type raise the question as to how the Golgi stack maintains its biochemical polarity when different compartments are interconnected. A more general question is whether heterologous tubular connections are an essential, conserved aspect of Golgi function, or whether they are a specialization of mammalian cells.
| 3. What is the role of membrane domains within the Golgi? |
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As an alternative to rapid partitioning, can the cisternal maturation model be revised to accommodate exponential kinetics of cargo exit from the Golgi? One possibility, as described above, is that the TGN is a relatively stable compartment. Secretory cargo proteins might be delivered from transient Golgi cisternae to a long-lived TGN, from which they would depart with first-order kinetics. This possibility was considered by Patterson et al. (2008) but was not convincingly excluded. The stable TGN model predicts that secretory cargo proteins should be concentrated in the TGN relative to Golgi cisternae. Experimental tests of this idea will refine our understanding of traffic through the secretory pathway.
| 4. Is the Golgi an independent organelle? |
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| Conclusions |
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| Acknowledgments |
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