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Dive into the research topics where Camilla Raiborg is active.

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Featured researches published by Camilla Raiborg.


Nature | 2009

The ESCRT machinery in endosomal sorting of ubiquitylated membrane proteins

Camilla Raiborg; Harald Stenmark

Selective trafficking of membrane proteins to lysosomes for destruction is required for proper cell signalling and metabolism. Ubiquitylation aids this process by specifying which proteins should be transported to the lysosome lumen by the multivesicular endosome pathway. The endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) machinery sorts cargo labelled with ubiquitin into invaginations of endosome membranes. Then, through a highly conserved mechanism also used in cytokinesis and viral budding, it mediates the breaking off of the cargo-containing intraluminal vesicles from the perimeter membrane. The involvement of the ESCRT machinery in suppressing diseases such as cancer, neurodegeneration and infections underscores its importance to the cell.


Nature Cell Biology | 2002

Hrs sorts ubiquitinated proteins into clathrin-coated microdomains of early endosomes.

Camilla Raiborg; Kristi G. Bache; David J. Gillooly; Inger Helene Madshus; Espen Stang; Harald Stenmark

After endocytosis, some membrane proteins recycle from early endosomes to the plasma membrane whereas others are transported to late endosomes and lysosomes for degradation. Conjugation with the small polypeptide ubiquitin is a signal for lysosomal sorting. Here we show that the hepatocyte growth factor-regulated tyrosine kinase substrate, Hrs, is involved in the endosomal sorting of ubiquitinated membrane proteins. Hrs contains a clathrin-binding domain, and by electron microscopy we show that Hrs localizes to flat clathrin lattices on early endosomes. We demonstrate that Hrs binds directly to ubiquitin by way of a ubiquitin-interacting motif (UIM), and that ubiquitinated proteins localize specifically to Hrs- and clathrin-containing microdomains. Whereas endocytosed transferrin receptors fail to colocalize with Hrs and rapidly recycle to the cell surface, transferrin receptors that are fused to ubiquitin interact with Hrs, localize to Hrs- and clathrin-containing microdomains and are sorted to the degradative pathway. Overexpression of Hrs strongly and specifically inhibits recycling of ubiquitinated transferrin receptors by a mechanism that requires a functional UIM. We conclude that Hrs sorts ubiquitinated membrane proteins into clathrin-coated microdomains of early endosomes, thereby preventing their recycling to the cell surface.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Functional multivesicular bodies are required for autophagic clearance of protein aggregates associated with neurodegenerative disease

Maria Filimonenko; Susanne Stuffers; Camilla Raiborg; Ai Yamamoto; Lene Malerød; Elizabeth M. C. Fisher; Adrian M. Isaacs; Andreas Brech; Harald Stenmark; Anne Simonsen

The endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRTs) are required to sort integral membrane proteins into intralumenal vesicles of the multivesicular body (MVB). Mutations in the ESCRT-III subunit CHMP2B were recently associated with frontotemporal dementia and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), neurodegenerative diseases characterized by abnormal ubiquitin-positive protein deposits in affected neurons. We show here that autophagic degradation is inhibited in cells depleted of ESCRT subunits and in cells expressing CHMP2B mutants, leading to accumulation of protein aggregates containing ubiquitinated proteins, p62 and Alfy. Moreover, we find that functional MVBs are required for clearance of TDP-43 (identified as the major ubiquitinated protein in ALS and frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitin deposits), and of expanded polyglutamine aggregates associated with Huntingtons disease. Together, our data indicate that efficient autophagic degradation requires functional MVBs and provide a possible explanation to the observed neurodegenerative phenotype seen in patients with CHMP2B mutations.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2003

Protein sorting into multivesicular endosomes

Camilla Raiborg; Tor Erik Rusten; Harald Stenmark

Multivesicular endosomes are important as compartments for receptor downregulation and as intermediates in the formation of secretory lysosomes. Work during the past year has shed light on the molecular mechanisms of protein sorting into multivesicular endosomes and yielded information about the machinery involved in multivesicular endosome formation. Monoubiquitination functions as a signal for sorting transmembrane proteins into intraluminal vesicles of multivesicular endosomes and subsequent delivery to lysosomes. A molecular machinery that contains the ubiquitin-binding protein Hrs/Vps27 appears to be central in this sorting process. Three conserved multisubunit complexes, ESCRT-I, -II and -III, are essential for both sorting and multivesicular endosomes formation. Enveloped RNA viruses such as HIV can redirect these complexes from multivesicular endosomes to the plasma membrane to facilitate viral budding.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Hrs recruits clathrin to early endosomes

Camilla Raiborg; Kristi G. Bache; Anja Mehlum; Espen Stang; Harald Stenmark

The hepatocyte growth factor‐regulated tyrosine kinase substrate, Hrs, has been implicated in intracellular trafficking and signal transduction. Hrs contains a phosphatidylinositol 3‐phosphate‐binding FYVE domain that contributes to its endosomal targeting. Here we show that Hrs and EEA1, a FYVE domain protein involved in endocytic membrane fusion, are localized to different regions of early endosomes. We demonstrate that Hrs co‐localizes with clathrin, and that the C‐terminus of Hrs contains a functional clathrin box motif that interacts directly with the terminal β‐propeller domain of clathrin heavy chain. A massive recruitment of clathrin to early endosomes was observed in cells transfected with Hrs, but not with Hrs lacking the C‐terminus. Furthermore, the phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase inhibitor wortmannin caused the dissociation of both Hrs and clathrin from endosomes. While overexpression of Hrs did not affect endocytosis and recycling of transferrin, endocytosed epidermal growth factor and dextran were retained in early endosomes. These results provide a molecular mechanism for the recruitment of clathrin onto early endosomes and suggest a function for Hrs in trafficking from early to late endosomes.


Developmental Cell | 2003

The E3 Ubiquitin Ligase AIP4 Mediates Ubiquitination and Sorting of the G Protein-Coupled Receptor CXCR4

Adriano Marchese; Camilla Raiborg; Francesca Santini; James H. Keen; Harald Stenmark; Jeffrey L. Benovic

Ubiquitination of the chemokine receptor CXCR4 serves as a targeting signal for lysosomal degradation, but the mechanisms mediating ubiquitination and lysosomal sorting remain poorly understood. Here we report that the Nedd4-like E3 ubiquitin ligase AIP4 mediates ubiquitination of CXCR4 at the plasma membrane, and of the ubiquitin binding protein Hrs on endosomes. CXCR4 activation promotes CXCR4 colocalization with AIP4 and Hrs within the same region of endosomes. Endosomal sorting of CXCR4 is dependent on Hrs as well as the AAA ATPase Vps4, the latter involved in regulating the ubiquitination status of both CXCR4 and Hrs. We propose a model whereby AIP4, Hrs, and Vps4 coordinate a cascade of ubiquitination and deubiquitination events that sort CXCR4 to the degradative pathway.


Nature Cell Biology | 2006

Regulation of ubiquitin-binding proteins by monoubiquitination

Daniela Hoeller; Nicola Crosetto; Blagoy Blagoev; Camilla Raiborg; Ritva Tikkanen; Sebastian A. Wagner; Katarzyna Kowanetz; Rainer Breitling; Matthias Mann; Harald Stenmark; Ivan Dikic

Proteins containing ubiquitin-binding domains (UBDs) interact with ubiquitinated targets and regulate diverse biological processes, including endocytosis, signal transduction, transcription and DNA repair. Many of the UBD-containing proteins are also themselves monoubiquitinated, but the functional role and the mechanisms that underlie this modification are less well understood. Here, we demonstrate that monoubiquitination of the endocytic proteins Sts1, Sts2, Eps15 and Hrs results in intramolecular interactions between ubiquitin and their UBDs, thereby preventing them from binding in trans to ubiquitinated targets. Permanent monoubiquitination of these proteins, mimicked by the fusion of ubiquitin to their carboxyl termini, impairs their ability to regulate trafficking of ubiquitinated receptors. Moreover, we mapped the in vivo monoubiquitination site in Sts2 and demonstrated that its mutation enhances the Sts2-mediated effects of epidermal-growth-factor-receptor downregulation. We propose that monoubiquitination of ubiquitin-binding proteins inhibits their capacity to bind to and control the functions of ubiquitinated targets in vivo.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

STAM and Hrs are subunits of a multivalent ubiquitin-binding complex on early endosomes

Kristi G. Bache; Camilla Raiborg; Anja Mehlum; Harald Stenmark

STAM1 and STAM2, which have been identified as regulators of receptor signaling and trafficking, interact directly with Hrs, which mediates the endocytic sorting of ubiquitinated membrane proteins. The STAM proteins interact with the same coiled-coil domain that is involved in the targeting of Hrs to endosomes. In this work, we show that STAM1 and STAM2, as well as an endocytic regulator protein, Eps15, can be co-immunoprecipitated with Hrs both from membrane and cytosolic fractions and that recombinant Hrs, STAM1/STAM2, and Eps15 form a ternary complex. We find that overexpression of Hrs causes a strong recruitment of STAM2 to endosome membranes. Moreover, STAM2, like Hrs and Eps15, binds ubiquitin, and Hrs, STAM2, and Eps15 colocalize with ubiquitinated proteins in clathrin-containing endosomal microdomains. The localization of Hrs, STAM2, Eps15, and clathrin to endosome membranes is controlled by the AAA ATPase mVps4, which has been implicated in multivesicular body formation. Depletion of cellular Hrs by small interfering RNA results in a strongly reduced recruitment of STAM2 to endosome membranes and an impaired degradation of endocytosed epidermal growth factor receptors. We propose that Hrs, Eps15, and STAM proteins function in a multivalent complex that sorts ubiquitinated proteins into the multivesicular body pathway.


Nature Cell Biology | 2010

PtdIns(3)P controls cytokinesis through KIF13A-mediated recruitment of FYVE-CENT to the midbody

Antonia P. Sagona; Ioannis P. Nezis; Nina Marie Pedersen; Knut Liestøl; John S. Poulton; Tor Erik Rusten; Rolf I. Skotheim; Camilla Raiborg; Harald Stenmark

Several subunits of the class III phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K-III) complex are known as tumour suppressors. Here we uncover a function for this complex and its catalytic product phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate (PtdIns(3)P) in cytokinesis. We show that PtdIns(3)P localizes to the midbody during cytokinesis and recruits a centrosomal protein, FYVE-CENT (ZFYVE26), and its binding partner TTC19, which in turn interacts with CHMP4B, an endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT)-III subunit implicated in the abscission step of cytokinesis. Translocation of FYVE-CENT and TTC19 from the centrosome to the midbody requires another FYVE-CENT-interacting protein, the microtubule motor KIF13A. Depletion of the VPS34 or Beclin 1 subunits of PI(3)K-III causes cytokinesis arrest and an increased number of binucleate and multinucleate cells, in a similar manner to the depletion of FYVE-CENT, KIF13A or TTC19. These results provide a mechanism for the translocation and docking of a cytokinesis regulatory machinery at the midbody.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006

Double-sided ubiquitin binding of Hrs-UIM in endosomal protein sorting

Satoshi Hirano; Masato Kawasaki; Hideaki Ura; Ryuichi Kato; Camilla Raiborg; Harald Stenmark; Soichi Wakatsuki

Hrs has an essential role in sorting of monoubiquitinated receptors to multivesicular bodies for lysosomal degradation, through recognition of ubiquitinated receptors by its ubiquitin-interacting motif (UIM). Here, we present the structure of a complex of Hrs-UIM and ubiquitin at 1.7-Å resolution. Hrs-UIM forms a single α-helix, which binds two ubiquitin molecules, one on either side. These two ubiquitin molecules are related by pseudo two-fold screw symmetry along the helical axis of the UIM, corresponding to a shift by two residues on the UIM helix. Both ubiquitin molecules interact with the UIM in the same manner, using the Ile44 surface, with equal binding affinities. Mutational experiments show that both binding sites of Hrs-UIM are required for efficient degradative protein sorting. Hrs-UIM belongs to a new subclass of double-sided UIMs, in contrast to its yeast homolog Vps27p, which has two tandem single-sided UIMs.

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Andreas Brech

Oslo University Hospital

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Espen Stang

Oslo University Hospital

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