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        <copyright>Newgen KnowledgeWorks</copyright>
        <item>
            <title><![CDATA[Giantin is required for intracellular N-terminal processing of type I procollagen]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766071703012-5b3fa009-00c3-41b5-8f07-60788d73133b/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202005166</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">The Golgi matrix protein giantin is essential for normal skeletal formation. Here, Stevenson et al. show that it also has a role in fracture repair and is required for intracellular processing of the N-terminal propeptide of type I procollagen.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Knockout of the golgin giantin leads to skeletal and craniofacial defects driven by poorly studied changes in glycosylation and extracellular matrix deposition. Here, we sought to determine how giantin impacts the production of healthy bone tissue by focusing on the main protein component of the osteoid, type I collagen. Giantin mutant zebrafish accumulate multiple spontaneous fractures in their caudal fin, suggesting their bones may be more brittle. Inducing new experimental fractures revealed defects in the mineralization of newly deposited collagen as well as diminished procollagen reporter expression in mutant fish. Analysis of a human giantin knockout cell line expressing a GFP-tagged procollagen showed that procollagen trafficking is independent of giantin. However, our data show that intracellular N-propeptide processing of pro-α1(I) is defective in the absence of giantin. These data demonstrate a conserved role for giantin in collagen biosynthesis and extracellular matrix assembly. Our work also provides evidence of a giantin-dependent pathway for intracellular procollagen processing.</p><p class="para" id="N65542"><div class="section" id="GA"><div class="img"><div class="imgeVideo"><div class="img-fullscreenIcon" onClick="javascript:showImageContent('GA');"><img src="/public/images/journalImg/fullscreen.png"/></div><div class="imageVideo"><img src="/dataresources/secured/content-1766071703012-5b3fa009-00c3-41b5-8f07-60788d73133b/assets/JCB_202005166_GA.jpg" alt=""/></div></div></div></div></p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-05-04T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Rab2 regulates presynaptic precursor vesicle biogenesis at the trans-Golgi]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766066382466-14665542-dfba-4e0d-b55f-150d3d6d1cbe/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202006040</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Presynaptic precursors deliver synaptic proteins to nascent and growing synapses. The authors provide evidence that during an early precursor formation step, the small GTPase Rab2 regulates immature precursors formation at the trans-Golgi prior to subsequent Arl8-dependent maturation steps.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Reliable delivery of presynaptic material, including active zone and synaptic vesicle proteins from neuronal somata to synaptic terminals, is prerequisite for successful synaptogenesis and neurotransmission. However, molecular mechanisms controlling the somatic assembly of presynaptic precursors remain insufficiently understood. We show here that in mutants of the small GTPase Rab2, both active zone and synaptic vesicle proteins accumulated in the neuronal cell body at the trans-Golgi and were, consequently, depleted at synaptic terminals, provoking neurotransmission deficits. Ectopic presynaptic material accumulations consisted of heterogeneous vesicles and short tubules of 40 × 60 nm, segregating in subfractions either positive for active zone or synaptic vesicle proteins and LAMP1, a lysosomal membrane protein. Genetically, Rab2 acts upstream of Arl8, a lysosomal adaptor controlling axonal export of precursors. Collectively, we identified a Golgi-associated assembly sequence of presynaptic precursor biogenesis dependent on a Rab2-regulated protein export and sorting step at the trans-Golgi.</p><p class="para" id="N65542"><div class="section" id="GA"><div class="img"><div class="imgeVideo"><div class="img-fullscreenIcon" onClick="javascript:showImageContent('GA');"><img src="/public/images/journalImg/fullscreen.png"/></div><div class="imageVideo"><img src="/dataresources/secured/content-1766066382466-14665542-dfba-4e0d-b55f-150d3d6d1cbe/assets/JCB_202006040_GA.jpg" alt=""/></div></div></div></div></p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-04-02T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[RTKN-1/Rhotekin shields endosome-associated F-actin from disassembly to ensure endocytic recycling]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766066055651-687d8bf9-2fcd-4ab1-82a4-08aaa19d6901/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202007149</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Yan et al. identify <i>C. elegans</i> RTKN-1 as a novel endocytic recycling regulator that impedes UNC-60A/cofilin-mediated endosomal actin disassembly. Further evidence indicates that the self-binding capacity of RTKN-1 is indispensable for this functionality and SDPN-1/Syndapin acts to direct the proper residency of RTKN-1 in recycling endosomes.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Cargo sorting and the subsequent membrane carrier formation require a properly organized endosomal actin network. To better understand the actin dynamics during endocytic recycling, we performed a genetic screen in <i>C. elegans</i> and identified RTKN-1/Rhotekin as a requisite to sustain endosome-associated actin integrity. Loss of RTKN-1 led to a prominent decrease in actin structures and basolateral recycling defects. Furthermore, we showed that the presence of RTKN-1 thwarts the actin disassembly competence of UNC-60A/cofilin. Consistently, in RTKN-1–deficient cells, UNC-60A knockdown replenished actin structures and alleviated the recycling defects. Notably, an intramolecular interaction within RTKN-1 could mediate the formation of oligomers. Overexpression of an RTKN-1 mutant form that lacks self-binding capacity failed to restore actin structures and recycling flow in <i>rtkn-1</i> mutants. Finally, we demonstrated that SDPN-1/Syndapin acts to direct the recycling endosomal dwelling of RTKN-1 and promotes actin integrity there. Taken together, these findings consolidated the role of SDPN-1 in organizing the endosomal actin network architecture and introduced RTKN-1 as a novel regulatory protein involved in this process.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-04-12T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Terminal web and vesicle trafficking proteins mediate nematode single-cell tubulogenesis]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766056377019-52587a0b-697b-4c9e-9d74-246a5f0dc593/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202003152</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Yang et al. find that in a single-celled tube, intermediate filaments act as a scaffold at the central lumen, which recruits proteins to regulate the addition of other structural elements to maintain cell integrity. These findings present a general mechanism for regulation of lumen diameter in biological tubes.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Single-celled tubules represent a complicated structure that forms during development, requiring extension of a narrow cytoplasm surrounding a lumen exerting osmotic pressure that can burst the luminal membrane. Genetic studies on the excretory canal cell of <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i> have revealed many proteins that regulate the cytoskeleton, vesicular transport, and physiology of the narrow canals. Here, we show that β<sub>H</sub>-spectrin regulates the placement of intermediate filament proteins forming a terminal web around the lumen, and that the terminal web in turn retains a highly conserved protein (EXC-9/CRIP1) that regulates apical endosomal trafficking. EXC-1/IRG, the binding partner of EXC-9, is also localized to the apical membrane and affects apical actin placement and RAB-8–mediated vesicular transport. The results suggest that an intermediate filament protein acts in a novel pathway to direct the traffic of vesicles to locations of lengthening apical surface during single-celled tubule development.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-08-28T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[ECM deposition is driven by caveolin-1–dependent regulation of exosomal biogenesis and cargo sorting]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766056292533-a46ea0f2-e5c8-44ee-89bd-221d27e437e5/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202006178</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Secretion and deposition of non-collagen ECM components is an elusive topic. Albacete-Albacete et al. identify exosome biogenesis and exosomal cargo sorting as novel mechanisms by which the stromal remodeling regulator caveolin-1 modulates ECM deposition, through the control of multivesicular body cholesterol content and plasticity.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">The composition and physical properties of the extracellular matrix (ECM) critically influence tumor progression, but the molecular mechanisms underlying ECM layering are poorly understood. Tumor–stroma interaction critically depends on cell communication mediated by exosomes, small vesicles generated within multivesicular bodies (MVBs). We show that caveolin-1 (Cav1) centrally regulates exosome biogenesis and exosomal protein cargo sorting through the control of cholesterol content at the endosomal compartment/MVBs. Quantitative proteomics profiling revealed that Cav1 is required for exosomal sorting of ECM protein cargo subsets, including Tenascin-C (TnC), and for fibroblast-derived exosomes to efficiently deposit ECM and promote tumor invasion. Cav1-driven exosomal ECM deposition not only promotes local stromal remodeling but also the generation of distant ECM-enriched stromal niches in vivo. Cav1 acts as a cholesterol rheostat in MVBs, determining sorting of ECM components into specific exosome pools and thus ECM deposition. This supports a model by which Cav1 is a central regulatory hub for tumor–stroma interactions through a novel exosome-dependent ECM deposition mechanism.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-10-09T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Spatial regulation of clathrin-mediated endocytosis through position-dependent site maturation]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1766056256372-115caf22-bdab-4b92-ac68-5723881ecd14/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202002160</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Pedersen et al. investigate steps of the clathrin-mediated endocytosis pathway that are subject to regulation. They report position-dependent differences in endocytic site maturation rates in polarized cells and suggest that cargo controls endocytic internalization through tuning site maturation rather than site initiation.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">During clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME), over 50 different proteins assemble on the plasma membrane to reshape it into a cargo-laden vesicle. It has long been assumed that cargo triggers local CME site assembly in <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i> based on the discovery that cortical actin patches, which cluster near exocytic sites, are CME sites. Quantitative imaging data reported here lead to a radically different view of which CME steps are regulated and which steps are deterministic. We quantitatively and spatially describe progression through the CME pathway and pinpoint a cargo-sensitive regulatory transition point that governs progression from the initiation phase of CME to the internalization phase. Thus, site maturation, rather than site initiation, accounts for the previously observed polarized distribution of actin patches in this organism. While previous studies suggested that cargo ensures its own internalization by regulating either CME initiation rates or frequency of abortive events, our data instead identify maturation through a checkpoint in the pathway as the cargo-sensitive step.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-10-07T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Pathogenic mutations in the kinesin-3 motor KIF1A diminish force generation and movement through allosteric mechanisms]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765978712883-f54306c7-6047-42c8-a026-88e89954ac1e/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202004227</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Kinesin-3 motors are fast and superprocessive, but their force generation properties remain unclear. The authors show that KIF1A detaches under low opposing forces but rapidly reattaches to continue motility. Rapid reattachment depends on the class-specific K-loop, whereas mutations linked to neurodevelopmental disorders impair force generation and motility.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">The kinesin-3 motor KIF1A functions in neurons, where its fast and superprocessive motility facilitates long-distance transport, but little is known about its force-generating properties. Using optical tweezers, we demonstrate that KIF1A stalls at an opposing load of ~3 pN but more frequently detaches at lower forces. KIF1A rapidly reattaches to the microtubule to resume motion due to its class-specific K-loop, resulting in a unique clustering of force generation events. To test the importance of neck linker docking in KIF1A force generation, we introduced mutations linked to human neurodevelopmental disorders. Molecular dynamics simulations predict that V8M and Y89D mutations impair neck linker docking. Indeed, both mutations dramatically reduce the force generation of KIF1A but not the motor’s ability to rapidly reattach to the microtubule. Although both mutations relieve autoinhibition of the full-length motor, the mutant motors display decreased velocities, run lengths, and landing rates and delayed cargo transport in cells. These results advance our understanding of how mutations in KIF1A can manifest in disease.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-01-26T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[EGF receptor–mediated FUS phosphorylation promotes its nuclear translocation and fibrotic signaling]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765973921329-6d50d241-4740-4c7a-8c04-cebd0c004ab8/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202001120</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Chiusa et al. show that the RNA-DNA binding protein FUS plays a profibrotic role by binding to the collagen IV gene promoter and commencing its transcription. Reducing nuclear FUS inhibits collagen IV transcription, suggesting that targeting FUS offers a new antifibrotic therapy.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Excessive accumulation of collagen leads to fibrosis. Integrin α1β1 (Itgα1β1) prevents kidney fibrosis by reducing collagen production through inhibition of the EGF receptor (EGFR) that phosphorylates cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins. To elucidate how the Itgα1β1/EGFR axis controls collagen synthesis, we analyzed the levels of nuclear tyrosine phosphorylated proteins in WT and Itgα1-null kidney cells. We show that the phosphorylation of the RNA-DNA binding protein fused in sarcoma (FUS) is higher in Itgα1-null cells. FUS contains EGFR-targeted phosphorylation sites and, in Itgα1-null cells, activated EGFR promotes FUS phosphorylation and nuclear translocation. Nuclear FUS binds to the collagen IV promoter, commencing gene transcription that is reduced by inhibiting EGFR, down-regulating FUS, or expressing FUS mutated in the EGFR-targeted phosphorylation sites. Finally, a cell-penetrating peptide that inhibits FUS nuclear translocation reduces FUS nuclear content and collagen IV transcription. Thus, EGFR-mediated FUS phosphorylation regulates FUS nuclear translocation and transcription of a major profibrotic collagen gene. Targeting FUS nuclear translocation offers a new antifibrotic therapy.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-07-17T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Deorphanizing FAM19A proteins as pan-neurexin ligands with an unusual biosynthetic binding mechanism]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765973823088-ca8f854a-6d10-4138-a5d2-55b9e1c631c0/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202004164</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Synaptic properties are controlled by trans-synaptic adhesion complexes. Neurexins are central components of these complexes, but how neurexins are regulated remains largely unknown. Khalaj et al. identify FAM19A1-A4 as neuronal activity–regulated proteins that form covalent complexes with neurexins and regulate their post-translational modifications, thus shaping neurexin–ligand interactions and synapse properties.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Neurexins are presynaptic adhesion molecules that organize synapses by binding to diverse trans-synaptic ligands, but how neurexins are regulated is incompletely understood. Here we identify FAM19A/TAFA proteins, “orphan" cytokines, as neurexin regulators that interact with all neurexins, except for neurexin-1γ, via an unusual mechanism. Specifically, we show that FAM19A1-A4 bind to the cysteine-loop domain of neurexins by forming intermolecular disulfide bonds during transport through the secretory pathway. FAM19A-binding required both the cysteines of the cysteine-loop domain and an adjacent sequence of neurexins. Genetic deletion of neurexins suppressed FAM19A1 expression, demonstrating that FAM19As physiologically interact with neurexins. In hippocampal cultures, expression of exogenous FAM19A1 decreased neurexin <i>O</i>-glycosylation and suppressed its heparan sulfate modification, suggesting that FAM19As regulate the post-translational modification of neurexins. Given the selective expression of FAM19As in specific subtypes of neurons and their activity-dependent regulation, these results suggest that FAM19As serve as cell type–specific regulators of neurexin modifications.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-07-24T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[The function of GORASPs in Golgi apparatus organization in vivo]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765973714761-5301b87c-e24e-46b1-bb96-56ec9be76dd8/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202004191</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Grond et al. show that GRASPs or GORASPs do not have a role in stacking of Golgi cisternae in vivo but instead are required for linking cisternal rims to likely control flux of transport through the Golgi apparatus.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">In vitro experiments have shown that GRASP65 (GORASP1) and GRASP55 (GORASP2) proteins function in stacking Golgi cisternae. However, in vivo depletion of GORASPs in metazoans has given equivocal results. We have generated a mouse lacking both GORASPs and find that Golgi cisternae remained stacked. However, the stacks are disconnected laterally from each other, and the cisternal cross-sectional diameters are significantly reduced compared with their normal counterparts. These data support earlier findings on the role of GORASPs in linking stacks, and we suggest that unlinking of stacks likely affects dynamic control of COPI budding and vesicle fusion at the rims. The net result is that cisternal cores remain stacked, but cisternal diameter is reduced by rim consumption.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-06-23T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Alternative splicing of clathrin heavy chain contributes to the switch from coated pits to plaques]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765973677104-4d13d0be-1105-4ff0-95fa-d36a17e25ba2/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201912061</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">A single alternatively spliced exon in the <i>CLTC</i> gene contributes to clathrin coat organization. This event participates in the plasticity from clathrin-coated pits to plaques, structures that are essential for muscle fiber function and maintenance.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Clathrin function directly derives from its coat structure, and while endocytosis is mediated by clathrin-coated pits, large plaques contribute to cell adhesion. Here, we show that the alternative splicing of a single exon of the clathrin heavy chain gene (<i>CLTC</i> exon 31) helps determine the clathrin coat organization. Direct genetic control was demonstrated by forced <i>CLTC</i> exon 31 skipping in muscle cells that reverses the plasma membrane content from clathrin plaques to pits and by promoting exon inclusion that stimulated flat plaque assembly. Interestingly, mis-splicing of <i>CLTC</i> exon 31 found in the severe congenital form of myotonic dystrophy was associated with reduced plaques in patient myotubes. Moreover, forced exclusion of this exon in WT mice muscle induced structural disorganization and reduced force, highlighting the contribution of this splicing event for the maintenance of tissue homeostasis. This genetic control on clathrin assembly should influence the way we consider how plasticity in clathrin-coated structures is involved in muscle development and maintenance.</p><p class="para" id="N65542"><div class="section" id="GA"><div class="img"><div class="imgeVideo"><div class="img-fullscreenIcon" onClick="javascript:showImageContent('GA');"><img src="/public/images/journalImg/fullscreen.png"/></div><div class="imageVideo"><img src="/dataresources/secured/content-1765973677104-4d13d0be-1105-4ff0-95fa-d36a17e25ba2/assets/JCB_201912061_GA.jpg" alt=""/></div></div></div></div></p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-07-08T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Evolving models for assembling and shaping clathrin-coated pits]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765973596200-660e27f6-f248-45e6-85fb-48f31a674b95/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202005126</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Integrating recent findings, Chen and Schmid present a more dynamic, flexible, and nonlinear model for clathrin-coated vesicle formation.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Clathrin-mediated endocytosis occurs via the assembly of clathrin-coated pits (CCPs) that invaginate and pinch off to form clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs). It is well known that adaptor protein 2 (AP2) complexes trigger clathrin assembly on the plasma membrane, and biochemical and structural studies have revealed the nature of these interactions. Numerous endocytic accessory proteins collaborate with clathrin and AP2 to drive CCV formation. However, many questions remain as to the molecular events involved in CCP initiation, stabilization, and curvature generation. Indeed, a plethora of recent evidence derived from cell perturbation, correlative light and EM tomography, live-cell imaging, modeling, and high-resolution structural analyses has revealed more complexity and promiscuity in the protein interactions driving CCP maturation than anticipated. After briefly reviewing the evidence supporting prevailing models, we integrate these new lines of evidence to develop a more dynamic and flexible model for how redundant, dynamic, and competing protein interactions can drive endocytic CCV formation and suggest new approaches to test emerging models.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-08-07T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Calcineurin-dependent regulation of endocytosis by a plasma membrane ubiquitin ligase adaptor, Rcr1]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765851612021-4bb9175d-a3da-4942-8af9-49ed230c53fc/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201909158</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Rsp5 is an E3 ubiquitin ligase of the Nedd4 family that regulates many cellular processes in yeast. Zhu et al. show that two paralogous Rsp5 adaptors, Rcr1 and Rcr2, are sorted to distinct locations. Exomer sorts Rcr1 to the plasma membrane via a new sorting motif, and the upregulation of Rcr1 via the calcineurin/Crz1 signaling pathway maintains cell integrity.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Rsp5, the Nedd4 family member in yeast, is an E3 ubiquitin ligase involved in numerous cellular processes, many of which require Rsp5 to interact with PY-motif containing adaptor proteins. Here, we show that two paralogous transmembrane Rsp5 adaptors, Rcr1 and Rcr2, are sorted to distinct cellular locations: Rcr1 is a plasma membrane (PM) protein, whereas Rcr2 is sorted to the vacuole. Rcr2 is delivered to the vacuole using ubiquitin as a sorting signal. Rcr1 is delivered to the PM by the exomer complex using a newly uncovered PM sorting motif. Further, we show that Rcr1, but not Rcr2, is up-regulated via the calcineurin/Crz1 signaling pathway. Upon exogenous calcium treatment, Rcr1 ubiquitinates and down-regulates the chitin synthase Chs3. We propose that the PM-anchored Rsp5/Rcr1 ubiquitin ligase-adaptor complex can provide an acute response to degrade unwanted proteins under stress conditions, thereby maintaining cell integrity.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-05-18T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Protrudin-mediated ER–endosome contact sites promote MT1-MMP exocytosis and cell invasion]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765838240173-3c756911-006b-4408-afc9-48f7d83a11d6/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202003063</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Cancer cell dissemination is facilitated by small actin-rich plasma membrane protrusions called invadopodia. Pedersen et al. now show that invadopodia maturation and function depend on contact site formation between the endoplasmic reticulum and late endosomes, which promotes translocation of the latter to growing invadopodia.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Cancer cells break tissue barriers by use of small actin-rich membrane protrusions called invadopodia. Complete invadopodia maturation depends on protrusion outgrowth and the targeted delivery of the matrix metalloproteinase MT1-MMP via endosomal transport by mechanisms that are not known. Here, we show that the ER protein Protrudin orchestrates invadopodia maturation and function. Protrudin formed contact sites with MT1-MMP–positive endosomes that contained the RAB7-binding Kinesin-1 adaptor FYCO1, and depletion of RAB7, FYCO1, or Protrudin inhibited MT1-MMP–dependent extracellular matrix degradation and cancer cell invasion by preventing anterograde translocation and exocytosis of MT1-MMP. Moreover, when endosome translocation or exocytosis was inhibited by depletion of Protrudin or Synaptotagmin VII, respectively, invadopodia were unable to expand and elongate. Conversely, when Protrudin was overexpressed, noncancerous cells developed prominent invadopodia-like protrusions and showed increased matrix degradation and invasion. Thus, Protrudin-mediated ER–endosome contact sites promote cell invasion by facilitating translocation of MT1-MMP–laden endosomes to the plasma membrane, enabling both invadopodia outgrowth and MT1-MMP exocytosis.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-06-01T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Rag GTPases and phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate mediate recruitment of the AP-5/SPG11/SPG15 complex]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765836738613-c2e5ca39-9f9a-4a1c-bc35-b4ae9afb6c9b/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202002075</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">The AP-5/SPG11/SPG15 complex is recruited onto late endosomes/lysosomes and contributes to lysosomal homeostasis and autophagic lysosome reformation. Hirst et al. show that recruitment is by coincidence detection, requiring both phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate and Rag GTPases, thus uncovering a link between AP-5/SPG11/SPG15 and the mTORC1 pathway.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Adaptor protein complex 5 (AP-5) and its partners, SPG11 and SPG15, are recruited onto late endosomes and lysosomes. Here we show that recruitment of AP-5/SPG11/SPG15 is enhanced in starved cells and occurs by coincidence detection, requiring both phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PI3P) and Rag GTPases. PI3P binding is via the SPG15 FYVE domain, which, on its own, localizes to early endosomes. GDP-locked RagC promotes recruitment of AP-5/SPG11/SPG15, while GTP-locked RagA prevents its recruitment. Our results uncover an interplay between AP-5/SPG11/SPG15 and the mTORC1 pathway and help to explain the phenotype of AP-5/SPG11/SPG15 deficiency in patients, including the defect in autophagic lysosome reformation.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-01-19T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Liquid–liquid phase separation in autophagy]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765833672689-96c39090-ae35-450f-afbb-5136412ed93b/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.202004062</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Zhang and colleagues summarize phase separation and transition in the assembly of autophagosome formation sites and triage of protein condensates for degradation.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) compartmentalizes and concentrates biomacromolecules into distinct condensates. Liquid-like condensates can transition into gel and solid states, which are essential for fulfilling their different functions. LLPS plays important roles in multiple steps of autophagy, mediating the assembly of autophagosome formation sites, acting as an unconventional modulator of TORC1-mediated autophagy regulation, and triaging protein cargos for degradation. Gel-like, but not solid, protein condensates can trigger formation of surrounding autophagosomal membranes. Stress and pathological conditions cause aberrant phase separation and transition of condensates, which can evade surveillance by the autophagy machinery. Understanding the mechanisms underlying phase separation and transition will provide potential therapeutic targets for protein aggregation diseases.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-06-30T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Nucleobindin-1 regulates ECM degradation by promoting intra-Golgi trafficking of MMPs]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765825101177-a44a0520-d6aa-405a-bb8b-ff9b9a561ff6/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201907058</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Trafficking of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) through the Golgi remains enigmatic in the field. Pacheco-Fernandez et al. find that nucleobindin-1 (NUCB1), a cis-Golgi localized Ca<sup>2+</sup>-binding protein, plays a major role in this process by binding to MMPs, regulating their intra-Golgi trafficking, and thereby modulating cell invasion and matrix degradation.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) degrade several ECM components and are crucial modulators of cell invasion and tissue organization. Although much has been reported about their function in remodeling ECM in health and disease, their trafficking across the Golgi apparatus remains poorly understood. Here we report that the cis-Golgi protein nucleobindin-1 (NUCB1) is critical for MMP2 and MT1-MMP trafficking along the Golgi apparatus. This process is Ca<sup>2+-</sup>dependent and is required for invasive MDA-MB-231 cell migration as well as for gelatin degradation in primary human macrophages. Our findings emphasize the importance of NUCB1 as an essential component of MMP transport and its overall impact on ECM remodeling.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-06-01T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Phosphorylation of PKCδ by FER tips the balance from EGFR degradation to recycling]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765759897819-688a7d66-b868-4fc5-96d2-399a660f1a7e/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201902073</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Lonic et al. show that phosphorylation of Y374-PKCδ by FER arrests the maturation of early to late endosomes by inhibiting the release of RAB5 from nascent late endosomes. This promotes EGFR recycling and sustained signaling in triple-negative breast cancer.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">Receptor degradation terminates signaling by activated receptor tyrosine kinases. Degradation of EGFR occurs in lysosomes and requires the switching of RAB5 for RAB7 on late endosomes to enable their fusion with the lysosome, but what controls this critical switching is poorly understood. We show that the tyrosine kinase FER alters PKCδ function by phosphorylating it on Y374, and that phospho-Y374-PKCδ prevents RAB5 release from nascent late endosomes, thereby inhibiting EGFR degradation and promoting the recycling of endosomal EGFR to the cell surface. The rapid association of phospho-Y374-PKCδ with EGFR-containing endosomes is diminished by PTPN14, which dephosphorylates phospho-Y374-PKCδ. In triple-negative breast cancer cells, the FER-dependent phosphorylation of PKCδ enhances EGFR signaling and promotes anchorage-independent cell growth. Importantly, increased Y374-PKCδ phosphorylation correlating with arrested late endosome maturation was identified in ∼25% of triple-negative breast cancer patients, suggesting that dysregulation of this pathway may contribute to their pathology.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2021-01-07T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Ubiquitin links smoothened to intraflagellar transport to regulate Hedgehog signaling]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765609059672-cb41ab04-68f1-4cac-a1ec-1c0afe135257/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201912104</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Hedgehog signaling involves the dynamic movement of receptors and effectors in and out of cilia. Desai et al. found that the dynamics of Smo are regulated by ubiquitination, which modulates its interaction with the intraflagellar transport system to control ciliary levels of this receptor.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">In the absence of Hedgehog ligand, patched-1 (Ptch1) localizes to cilia and prevents ciliary accumulation and activation of smoothened (Smo). Upon ligand binding, Ptch1 is removed from cilia, and Smo is derepressed and accumulates in cilia where it activates signaling. The mechanisms regulating these dynamic movements are not well understood, but defects in intraflagellar transport components, including Ift27 and the BBSome, cause Smo to accumulate in cilia without pathway activation. We find that in the absence of ligand-induced pathway activation, Smo is ubiquitinated and removed from cilia, and this process is dependent on Ift27 and BBSome components. Activation of Hedgehog signaling decreases Smo ubiquitination and ciliary removal, resulting in its accumulation. Blocking ubiquitination of Smo by an E1 ligase inhibitor or by mutating two lysine residues in intracellular loop three causes Smo to aberrantly accumulate in cilia without pathway activation. These data provide a mechanism to control Smo’s ciliary level during Hedgehog signaling by regulating the ubiquitination state of the receptor.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-05-20T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item><item>
            <title><![CDATA[Rab18 regulates focal adhesion dynamics by interacting with kinectin-1 at the endoplasmic reticulum]]></title>
            <media:thumbnail url="https://storage.googleapis.com/nova-demo-unsecured-files/unsecured/content-1765608982386-b72e27fe-fccf-4746-8901-82e691aa35a2/cover.png"></media:thumbnail>
            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1083/jcb.201809020</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65540">Guadagno et al. reveal that the small GTPase Rab18, by interacting directly with the ER-resident protein kinectin, regulates the ER transport toward the cell surface to support focal adhesion growth and sustain protrusion orientation during chemotaxis.</p><p class="para" id="N65539">The members of the Rab family of small GTPases are molecular switches that regulate distinct steps in different membrane traffic pathways. In addition to this canonical function, Rabs can play a role in other processes, such as cell adhesion and motility. Here, we reveal the role of the small GTPase Rab18 as a positive regulator of directional migration in chemotaxis, and the underlying mechanism. We show that knockdown of Rab18 reduces the size of focal adhesions (FAs) and influences their dynamics. Furthermore, we found that Rab18, by directly interacting with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident protein kinectin-1, controls the anterograde kinesin-1–dependent transport of the ER required for the maturation of nascent FAs and protrusion orientation toward a chemoattractant. Altogether, our data support a model in which Rab18 regulates kinectin-1 transport toward the cell surface to form ER–FA contacts, thus promoting FA growth and cell migration during chemotaxis.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-06-11T00:00]]></pubDate>
        </item>
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