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Consecutive functions of small GTPases guide HOPS-mediated tethering of late endosomes and lysosomes.

Cell reports (2023-01-15)
Ariane Schleinitz, Lara-Alina Pöttgen, Tal Keren-Kaplan, Jing Pu, Paul Saftig, Juan S Bonifacino, Albert Haas, Andreas Jeschke
ABSTRACT

The transfer of endocytosed cargoes to lysosomes (LYSs) requires HOPS, a multiprotein complex that tethers late endosomes (LEs) to LYSs before fusion. Many proteins interact with HOPS on LEs/LYSs. However, it is not clear whether these HOPS interactors localize to LEs or LYSs or how they participate in tethering. Here, we biochemically characterized endosomes purified from untreated or experimentally manipulated cells to put HOPS and interacting proteins in order and to establish their functional interdependence. Our results assign Rab2a and Rab7 to LEs and Arl8 and BORC to LYSs and show that HOPS drives LE-LYS fusion by bridging late endosomal Rab2a with lysosomal BORC-anchored Arl8. We further show that Rab7 is absent from sites of HOPS-dependent tethering but promotes fusion by moving LEs toward LYSs via dynein. Thus, our study identifies the topology of the machinery for LE-LYS tethering and elucidates the role of different small GTPases in the process.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Nocodazolo, ≥99% (TLC), powder
Sigma-Aldrich
Dynarrestin, ≥98% (HPLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Cathepsin D Rabbit pAb, liquid, Calbiochem®