Accession: | |
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Functional site class: | Adaptin binding Endosome-Lysosome-Basolateral sorting signals |
Functional site description: | Endocytosis and/or vesicular sorting signals for membrane proteins. Depending on organism, cell type as well as the nature of the adaptin complex bound, they can target either to cell surface or to specific, internal membrane-bound organelles (endosomes, lysosomes, melanosomes, synaptic vesicles, etc.) All these motifs are believed to bind to the sigma subunit of activated adaptin complexes (AP-1, AP-2 and AP-3). These clathrin-associated complexes are ancient and found in most eukaryotes. Dileucine motifs are variable (especially at their negatively charged positions and at the hydrophobic residues) and the various motif subtypes tend to have slightly different functions (Mattera,2011). One should avoid confusing the adaptin sigma-binding classical dileucine motifs discussed here, and the GGA-binding lysosomal targeting motifs (sometimes also called dileucine motifs). |
ELMs with same func. site: | TRG_DiLeu_BaEn_1 TRG_DiLeu_BaEn_2 TRG_DiLeu_BaEn_3 TRG_DiLeu_BaEn_4 TRG_DiLeu_BaLyEn_6 TRG_DiLeu_LyEn_5 |
ELM Description: | Although relatively widespread and common in multicellular animals, dileucine motifs of this subtype (sometimes called PLL motifs) are quite poorly studied (Kozik,2010). The lack of a glutamate at +1 differentiates these motifs from the typical lysosomal targeting signals, but the presence of a proline is a shared feature. The lack of a glutamate likely weakens these motifs in that context, so they no longer act as an obligatory lysosomal targeting signal. While interactions are based on similar structural principles, PLL motifs are quite heterogenous in terms of their function. They have a range of adaptin complexes they can associate with (AP-1, AP-2 and/or AP-3). This could be the result of variable amino acid composition at the motif N-termini: The strongest motifs approximate their lysosomal targeting counterparts, while suboptimal motifs might just serve as an endocytic or basolateral sorting signal. PLL motifs that have a positively charged amino acid (Arg or Lys) replacing the Glu +1 are considered especially weak but might still be able to bind the AP-2 complex due to structural reasons (Kelly,2008; 2JKR). As with the lysosomally targeting dileucine motifs, the proline preceding the two hydrophobic positions can also be exchanged for an arginine without loss of function. In some cases, PLL motifs are part of phosphorylation-dependent switches, where a serine/threonine phosphorylation event creates the negative charge corresponding to the absent Glu at +1. As the modification is suggested to greatly increase adaptin binding, such conditional switches allow controlled endocytosis of certain proteins (Gibson,2000; Pitcher,1999). This motif variant apparently also exists in diverse eukaryotes, including fungi and plants. The latter dileucine motifs were implicated in membrane protein sorting to vacuoles or tonoplasts. Thus, in these organisms they appear to be functionally equivalent to other dileucine motif subtypes. |
Pattern: | [^E]..[RP]L[LI] |
Pattern Probability: | 0.0010535 |
Present in taxon: | Eukaryota |
Interaction Domain: |
Clat_adaptor_s (PF01217)
Clathrin adaptor complex small chain
(Stochiometry: 1 : 1)
|
Abstract |
Adaptin-binding acidic dileucine motifs and variants thereof occur almost exclusively on the cytosolic side of membrane proteins, mostly integral (transmembrane) proteins. In the latter, they are frequently located near the protein N- or C-termini, with relative proximity (within 10-100aa) to a transmembrane segment. These motifs bind directly to a highly conserved site located on the sigma subunits of adaptin complexes (adaptins AP1-4; Doray,2007; Kelly,2008). They serve to initiate clathrin-mediated endocytosis or protein sorting and can work synergistically with the adaptin mu subunit binding YxxPhi-type motifs (TRG_ENDOCYTIC_2). Sigma subunits of AP complexes differ slightly in their surface charge densities and binding groove geometry, allowing for both generic and selective interactions with protein partners. In multicellular animals, AP1 targets its ligands from the trans-Golgi network to the cell membrane, mainly to the basolateral surface of polarized epithelial cells or somato-dendritic compartment of neurons (Nakatsu,2014). AP2 is chiefly involved in endocytosis of cell surface proteins and their trafficking to early or late endosomes. AP3 targets its ligands to the lysosome, late endosome or melanosome (or less commonly, to the axonal compartment of neurons), while the biological function of AP4 remains mostly unknown. In fungi and plants, dileucine motifs are often responsible for the vacuolar or tonoplast localization of proteins carrying these motifs. Due to the similarity of the adaptin sigma subunits, variant dileucine motifs may have overlapping specificities, being capable of binding multiple adaptins. In many eukaryotes, AP3 appears to be a dominant partner, that drives permanent intracellular localization of ligands it can interact with, regardless of their binding to other adaptins. Unfortunately, the similarity of this motif to the GGA-binding dileucine motifs (that also target certain proteins to the late endosome or lysosome) has been the source of considerable confusion in the past. The name of classical dileucine motifs stems from their preferred hydrophobic amino acids, although it is somewhat of a misnomer. In addition to the idealized ExxPL[LI] sequence, a multitude of relaxed motif variations are reported to exist, many of them still poorly characterized. The degree of relaxation seems to heavily influence the targeting properties of dileucine-like motifs (Sitaram,2012). Motifs that do not satisfy the optimal consensus tend to prefer adaptins other than AP3, hence they are more likely to be trafficked to the cell surface. |
12 GO-Terms:
18 Instances for TRG_DiLeu_BaLyEn_6
(click table headers for sorting; Notes column: =Number of Switches, =Number of Interactions)
(click table headers for sorting; Notes column: =Number of Switches, =Number of Interactions)
Please cite:
ELM-the Eukaryotic Linear Motif resource-2024 update.
(PMID:37962385)
ELM data can be downloaded & distributed for non-commercial use according to the ELM Software License Agreement
ELM data can be downloaded & distributed for non-commercial use according to the ELM Software License Agreement