An alternative mechanism of clathrin-coated pit closure revealed by ion conductance microscopy
Publication Type
Original research
Authors
  • Andrew I. Shevchuk
  • Pavel Novak
  • Marcus Taylor
  • Ivan A. Diakonov
  • Azza Ziyadeh-Isleem
  • Marc Bitoun
  • Pascale Guicheney
  • Max J. Lab
  • Julia Gorelik
  • Christien J. Merrifield
  • David Klenerman
  • Yuri E. Korchev

Current knowledge of the structural changes taking place during clathrin-mediated endocytosis is largely based on electron microscopy images of fixed preparations and x-ray crystallography data of purified proteins. In this paper, we describe a study of clathrin-coated pit dynamics in living cells using ion conductance microscopy to directly image the changes in pit shape, combined with simultaneous confocal microscopy to follow molecule-specific fluorescence. We find that 70% of pits closed with the formation of a protrusion that grew on one side of the pit, covered the entire pit, and then disappeared together with pit-associated clathrin-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) and actin-binding protein-EGFP (Abp1-EGFP) fluorescence. This was in contrast to conventionally closing pits that closed and cleaved from flat membrane sheets and lacked accompanying Abp1-EGFP fluorescence. Scission of both types of pits was found to be dynamin-2 dependent. This technique now enables direct spatial and temporal correlation between functional molecule-specific fluorescence and structural information to follow key biological processes at cell surfaces.

Journal
Title
Journal of cell biology
Publisher
The Rockefeller University Press
Publisher Country
United States of America
Indexing
Scopus
Impact Factor
None
Publication Type
Both (Printed and Online)
Volume
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Year
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Pages
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