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Abstract

The secretory pathway in mammalian cells has evolved to facilitate the transfer of cargo molecules to internal and cell surface membranes. Use of automated microscopy-based genome-wide RNA interference screens in cultured human cells allowed us to identify 554 proteins influencing secretion. Cloning, fluorescent-tagging and subcellular localization analysis of 179 of these proteins revealed that more than two-thirds localize to either the cytoplasm or membranes of the secretory and endocytic pathways. The depletion of 143 of them resulted in perturbations in the organization of the COPII and/or COPI vesicular coat complexes of the early secretory pathway, or the morphology of the Golgi complex. Network analyses revealed a so far unappreciated link between early secretory pathway function, small GTP-binding protein regulation, actin cytoskeleton organization and EGF-receptor-mediated signalling. This work provides an important resource for an integrative understanding of global cellular organization and regulation of the secretory pathway in mammalian cells.

Details

Title
Genome-wide RNAi screening identifies human proteins with a regulatory function in the early secretory pathway
Author
Simpson, Jeremy C; Joggerst, Brigitte; Laketa, Vibor; Verissimo, Fatima; Cetin, Cihan; Erfle, Holger; Bexiga, Mariana G; Singan, Vasanth R; Hériché, Jean-karim; Neumann, Beate; Mateos, Alvaro; Blake, Jonathon; Bechtel, Stephanie; Benes, Vladimir; Wiemann, Stefan; Ellenberg, Jan; Pepperkok, Rainer
Pages
764-74
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Jul 2012
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
14657392
e-ISSN
14764679
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1029874626
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jul 2012