Multicolour imaging of post-Golgi sorting and trafficking in live cells

Author:  ["Patrick Keller","Derek Toomre","Elena Díaz","Jamie White","Kai Simons"]

Publication:  Nature Cell Biology

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:  general   CellBiology   CancerResearch   DevelopmentalBiology   StemCells   Biological

Abstract

The biogenesis and maintenance of asymmetry is crucial to many cellular functions including absorption and secretion, signalling, development and morphogenesis. Here we have directly visualized the segregation and trafficking of apical (glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol-anchored) and basolateral (vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein) cargo in living cells using multicolour imaging of green fluorescent protein variants. Apical and basolateral cargo segregate progressively into large domains in Golgi/trans-Golgi network structures, exclude resident proteins, and exit in separate transport containers. These remain distinct and do not merge with endocytic structures suggesting that lateral segregation in the trans-Golgi network is the primary sorting event. Fusion with the plasma membrane was detected by total internal reflection microscopy and reveals differences between apical and basolateral carriers as well as new 'hot spots' for exocytosis.

Cite this article

Keller, P., Toomre, D., Díaz, E. et al. Multicolour imaging of post-Golgi sorting and trafficking in live cells . Nat Cell Biol 3, 140–149 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1038/35055042

View full text

>> Full Text:   Multicolour imaging of post-Golgi sorting and trafficking in live cells

Translational control by the ER transmembrane kinase/ribonuclease IRE1 under ER stress

RANTES promotes growth and survival of human first-trimester forebrain astrocytes