Cytoplasm: The Endocytic System

and Jürgen Roth2



(1)
Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

(2)
University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland

 




Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis via Clathrin-Coated Vesicles and Virus Endocytosis


Adsorptive and receptor-mediated endocytosis via clathrin-coated vesicles provides the major and best-characterized portal for uptake of multiple molecules and particles into cells. Via clathrin-dependent endocytosis, cells receive nutrients, regulate receptors and other plasma membrane constituents, take up antigens, and remove senescent, excess, and potentially harmful substances from the extracellular fluid.

Because of their typical bristle-like coats, the pits, buds, and vesicles formed during clathrin-dependent endocytosis can easily be differentiated under the electron microscope (panels A and C). The coat consists mainly of clathrin and adaptor proteins. The individual cytosolic clathrin molecules are triskelions, which assemble and recruit to the cytoplasmic face of the plasma membrane in concerted interactions with adaptor proteins and the lipid bilayer, which results in the formation of a mainly hexagonal lattice. Through rapid disassembly and reassembly of the clathrin triskelions, the membrane deforms into pits and deeply invaginated buds coated by a clathrin basketwork of polygons in which pentagons and heptagons are juxtaposed to hexagons. The basket seems to function as a stabilizing coat for the molecular machineries necessary to concentrate plasma membrane proteins into the endocytic pits and vesicles. Adaptors, such as the AP-2 adaptor protein complex, facilitate selection of the cargo for uptake into the vesicles and connect the clathrin coat with the transmembrane receptors. Detachment of the buds from the plasma membrane involves the action of dynamins, a class of scission-molecules essential for the pinching-off of the buds to create vesicles. Shortly after a vesicle is formed, the clathrin coat disassembles and detaches from the membrane, and the coat-free endocytic vesicle is capable of fusing with other endosomes. By correlating fluorescence microscopy of key proteins and electron tomography, protein-mediated consecutive events during endocytosis, such as membrane bending, membrane constriction, scission, and vesicle formation, could be studied in detail in budding yeast.

Panels A and C show coated pits during internalization of Ricinus communis I lectin-ferritin in cultured pancreatic beta cells. They are covered at the cytoplasmic face with the characteristic bristle-like clathrin coat. The ferritin particles concentrated in the coated pits and along the outer surface of the plasma membrane reflect the lectin binding to the galactose-bearing oligosaccharides in the plasma membrane. In panel C, endocytic vesicles containing internalized lectin-ferritin are already devoid of a clathrin coat. In the freeze fracture replica in panel B, filipin-sterol complexes are visible as small protuberances. They are absent from the pits, indicating that they have a lower cholesterol content than the surrounding plasma membrane.

In panels D and E, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) particles (arrowheads) bound to the surface of a macrophage are shown. They are seen attached to the plasma membrane (PM), contained in large endocytic vacuoles or surface invaginations (arrows in panel E). Viruses use different endocytic pathways; in addition to internalization by clathrin-coated vesicles, viruses can be taken up into cells via caveolae (cf. Fig. 63), lipid-raft-mediated endocytosis routes, macropinocytosis, and presumably other mechanisms as well. HIV1 enters cells by direct fusion with the plasma membrane and by fusion with the membrane of macropinosomes. The large vacuoles in panel E containing HIV particles possibly correspond to macropinosomes formed by deep plasma membrane invaginations and closure of membrane ruffles.

SG: secretory granule


References


Grant BD, Donaldson JG (2009) Pathways and mechanisms of endocytic recycling. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 10:597

Heuser J (1980) Three-dimensional visualization of coated vesicle formation in fibroblasts. J Cell Biol 84:560

Kelly BT, Owen DJ (2011) Endocytic sorting of transmembrane protein cargo. Curr Opin Cell Biol 23:404

Kukulski W, Schorb M, Kaksonen M, Briggs JAG (2012) Plasma membrane reshaping during endocytosis is revealed by time-resolved electron tomography. Cell 150:508

Lafer EM (2002) Clathrin-protein interactions. Traffic 3:513

Montesano R, Perrelet A, Vassalli P, Orci L (1979) Absence of filipin-sterol complexes from large coated pits on the surface of culture cells. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 76:6391

Mousavi SA, Malerod L, Berg T, Kjeken R (2004) Clathrin-dependent endocytosis. Biochem J 377:1

Mukherjee S, Gosh RN, Maxfield FR (1997) Endocytosis. Physiol Rev 77:759

Pelkmans L, Helenius A (2003) Insider information: what viruses tell us about endocytosis. Curr Opin Cell Biol 15:414

Praefcke GJK, McMahon HT (2004) The dynamin super-family: universal membrane tubulation and fission molecules? Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 5:133

Robinson MS (2004) Adaptable adaptors for coated vesicles. Trends Cell Biol 14:167

A65917_3_En_4_Fig1_HTML.gif


Fig. 58
Magnification: ×35,000 (A, B); ×102,000 (C); ×26,500 (D); ×71,000 (E)


Endosomes and Endocytic Pathways


Different endocytic portals and pathways are known in mammalian cells (see diagram), roughly classified as clathrin-dependent (1, cf. Fig. 58) and clathrin-independent ones. The latter include endocytosis by budding of “smooth” vesicles lacking a distinct morphologically visible coat (2, cf. Fig. 64A), uptake via pits containing lipid rafts (3), traffic via caveolae (4, cf. Fig. 63) and caveolar carriers (C), phagocytosis (5, cf. Fig. 64B) and uptake via macropinocytosis (6) leading to the formation of large endocytic vacuoles, termed macropinosomes (MP, cf. Fig. 58). The routes traveled by endocytosed molecules involve complex endosomal compartments with mosaics of specialized structural and functional domains. Endosomes belong to the most dynamic cellular compartments and transform in response to endocytosis-connected signals. Early endosomes, classified in early sorting endosomes (SE) and recycling endosomes (RE), represent first stations from where proteins and lipids are sorted to different routes. These can be either routes to late endosomes (LE) and lysosomes (LY) for degradation, or recycling pathways to the plasma membrane (PM), or routes to other destinations involving trans Golgi networks (TGN), and the Golgi apparatus (GA). The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is reached by retrograde pathways across the Golgi apparatus and pre-Golgi intermediates (pGI), or via more direct routes, as is known for caveolae-derived endosomes.

Different endocytic portals and pathways are known in mammalian cells (see diagram), roughly classified as clathrin-dependent (1, cf. Fig. 58) and clathrin-independent. The latter include endocytosis by budding of “smooth” vesicles lacking a distinct morphologically visible coat (2, cf. Fig. 64), uptake via pits containing lipid rafts (3), traffic via caveolae (4, cf. Fig. 63) and caveosomes (C), phagocytosis (5, cf. Fig. 63), and uptake via macropinocytosis (6) leading to the formation of large endocytic vacuoles, termed macropinosomes (MP, cf. Fig. 58). The routes traveled by endocytosed molecules involve complex endosomal compartments with mosaics of specialized structural and functional domains. Endosomes belong to the most dynamic cellular compartments and transform in response to endocytosis-connected signals. Early endosomes, classified as early sorting endosomes (SE) and recycling endosomes (RE), represent first stations from where proteins and lipids are sorted to different routes. These can be either routes to late endosomes (LE) and lysosomes (LY) for degradation, or recycling pathways to the plasma membrane (PM), or routes to other destinations involving trans Golgi networks (TGN) and the Golgi apparatus (GA). The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is reached by retrograde pathways across the Golgi apparatus and pre-Golgi intermediates (pGI), or via more direct routes, as is known for caveolae-derived endosomes.

A65917_3_En_4_Figa_HTML.jpg

Panels A–E show early endosomal compartments after internalization of peroxidase-labeled wheat germ agglutinin (WGA, panels A, B, and E) and a multivesicular body containing internalized Ricinus communis I lectin-ferritin (panel C). Different domains on early endosomes, such as large vacuolar parts (asterisks in panels A and E), small vesicles budding outward from the limiting membranes, and long tubular appendices, reflect the sorting to different destinations. Inward budding of vesicles leads to the formation of “vesiculated” endosomes and multivesicular bodies (MVB, panels B and C). The early endosome in panel B contains some interior vesicles and a long outward tubule, and its limiting membrane exhibits a conspicuous coated area (arrows). A similar region is visible at one of the multivesicular bodies in panel C (arrow). Specialized bilayered clathrin coats on vacuolar endosomes have been suggested to have a role in the targeting of proteins to lysosomes.

In HepG2 hepatoma cells, internalized WGA is taken up into the Golgi apparatus by a complex multistep process (cf. also Fig. 60), which starts with an accumulation of early vesicular endosomes at the trans Golgi side (panel D). The Golgi apparatus is small and inconspicuous in the control cells. It expands during endocytosis, and an endocytic TGN starts to form. Initial endocytic networks labeled with internalized WGA (TGN) are visible in panel D (cf. also Fig. 60).


References


Barysch SV, Aggarwal S, Jahn R, Rizzoli SO (2009) Sorting in early endosomes reveales connections to docking- and fusion-associated factors. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 106:9697

Doherty GJ, McMahon HT (2009) Mechanisms of endocytosis. Annu Rev Biochem 78:857

Gonnord P, Blouin CM, Lamaze C (2012) Membrane trafficking and signaling: two sides of the same coin. Sem Cell Develop Biol 23:154

Granger E, McNee G, Allan V, Woodman P (2014) The role of the cytoskeleton and molecular motors in endosomal dynamics. Semin Cell Develop Biol 31:20

Hsu VW, Prekeris R (2010) Transport in the recycling endosome. Curr Opin Cell Biol 22:528

Kerr MC, Teasdale RD (2009) Defining macropinocytosis. Traffic 10:364

Maxfield FR, McGraw TE (2004) Endocytic recycling. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 5:121

Miaczynska M, Bar-Sagi D (2010) Signaling endosomes: seeing is believing. Curr Opin Cell Biol 22:535

Nichols B (2003) Caveosomes and endocytosis of lipid rafts. J Cell Sci 116:4707

Pelkmans L, Helenius A (2002) Endocytosis via caveolae. Traffic 3:311

Sachse M, Ramm G, Strous G, Klumperman J (2002) Endosomes: multipurpose designs for integrating housekeeping and specialized tasks. Histochem Cell Biol 117:91

Sandvig K, Pust S, Skotland T, van Deurs (2011) Clathrin-independent endocytosis: mechanisms and function. Curr Opn Cell Biol 23:413

Scott CC, Vacca F, Gruenberg J (2014) Endosome maturation, transport and functions. Semin Cell Develop Biol 31:2

Van Weering JRT, Cullen PJ (2014) Membrane-associated cargo recycling by tubule-based endosome sorting. Semin Cell Develop Biol 31:40
Jul 9, 2017 | Posted by in MICROBIOLOGY | Comments Off on Cytoplasm: The Endocytic System

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access