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Dive into the research topics where Diego Gravotta is active.

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Featured researches published by Diego Gravotta.


Nature | 2008

Clathrin is a key regulator of basolateral polarity

Sylvie Deborde; Emilie Perret; Diego Gravotta; Ami Deora; Susana Salvarezza; Ryan Schreiner; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

Clathrin-coated vesicles are vehicles for intracellular trafficking in all nucleated cells, from yeasts to humans. Many studies have demonstrated their essential roles in endocytosis and cellular signalling processes at the plasma membrane. By contrast, very few of their non-endocytic trafficking roles are known, the best characterized being the transport of hydrolases from the Golgi complex to the lysosome. Here we show that clathrin is required for polarity of the basolateral plasma membrane proteins in the epithelial cell line MDCK. Clathrin knockdown depolarized most basolateral proteins, by interfering with their biosynthetic delivery and recycling, but did not affect the polarity of apical proteins. Quantitative live imaging showed that chronic and acute clathrin knockdown selectively slowed down the exit of basolateral proteins from the Golgi complex, and promoted their mis-sorting into apical carrier vesicles. Our results demonstrate a broad requirement for clathrin in basolateral protein trafficking in epithelial cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

AP1B sorts basolateral proteins in recycling and biosynthetic routes of MDCK cells

Diego Gravotta; Ami Deora; Emilie Perret; Claudia Oyanadel; Andrea Soza; Ryan Schreiner; Alfonso González; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

The epithelial-specific adaptor AP1B sorts basolateral proteins, but the trafficking routes where it performs its sorting role remain controversial. Here, we used an RNAi approach to knock down the medium subunit of AP1B (μ1B) in the prototype epithelial cell line Madin–Darby canine kidney (MDCK). μ1B-knocked down MDCK cells displayed loss of polarity of several endogenous and exogenous basolateral markers transduced via adenovirus vectors, but exhibited normal polarity of apical markers. We chose two well characterized basolateral protein markers, the transferrin receptor (TfR) and the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein, to study the sorting role of AP1B. A surface-capture assay introduced here showed that μ1B-knocked down MDCK cells plated on filters at confluency and cultured for 4.5 d, sorted TfR correctly in the biosynthetic route but incorrectly in the recycling route. In contrast, these same cells missorted vesicular stomatitis virus G apically in the biosynthetic route. Strikingly, recently confluent MDCK cells (1–3 d) displayed AP1B-dependence in the biosynthetic route of TfR, which decreased with additional days in culture. Sucrose density gradient analysis detected AP1B predominantly in TfR-rich endosomal fractions in MDCK cells confluent for 1 and 4 d. Our results are consistent with the following model: AP1B sorts basolateral proteins in both biosynthetic and recycling routes of MDCK cells, as a result of its predominant functional localization in recycling endosomes, which constitute a post-Golgi station in the biosynthetic route of some plasma membrane proteins. TfR utilizes a direct route from Golgi to basolateral membrane that is established as the epithelial monolayer matures.


Developmental Cell | 2012

The Clathrin Adaptor AP-1A Mediates Basolateral Polarity

Diego Gravotta; Jose Maria Carvajal-Gonzalez; Rafael Mattera; Sylvie Deborde; Jason R. Banfelder; Juan S. Bonifacino; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

Clathrin and the epithelial-specific clathrin adaptor AP-1B mediate basolateral trafficking in epithelia. However, several epithelia lack AP-1B, and mice knocked out for AP-1B are viable, suggesting the existence of additional mechanisms that control basolateral polarity. Here, we demonstrate a distinct role of the ubiquitous clathrin adaptor AP-1A in basolateral protein sorting. Knockdown of AP-1A causes missorting of basolateral proteins in MDCK cells, but only after knockdown of AP-1B, suggesting that AP-1B can compensate for lack of AP-1A. AP-1A localizes predominantly to the TGN, and its knockdown promotes spillover of basolateral proteins into common recycling endosomes, the site of function of AP-1B, suggesting complementary roles of both adaptors in basolateral sorting. Yeast two-hybrid assays detect interactions between the basolateral signal of transferrin receptor and the medium subunits of both AP-1A and AP-1B. The basolateral sorting function of AP-1A reported here establishes AP-1 as a major regulator of epithelial polarity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Clathrin adaptor AP1B controls adenovirus infectivity of epithelial cells

Fernando Diaz; Diego Gravotta; Ami Deora; Ryan Schreiner; John W. Schoggins; Erik Falck-Pedersen; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

Adenoviruses invading the organism via normal digestive or respiratory routes require the Coxsackie-adenovirus receptor (CAR) to infect the epithelial barrier cells. Because CAR is a component of tight junctions and the basolateral membrane and is normally excluded from the apical membrane, most epithelia are resistant to adenoviruses. However, we discovered that a specialized epithelium, the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), anomalously expressed CAR at the apical surface and was highly susceptible to adenovirus infection. These properties of RPE cells correlated with the absence of the epithelial-specific clathrin adaptor AP1B. Furthermore, knockdown of this basolateral sorting adaptor in adenovirus-resistant MDCK cells promoted apical localization of CAR and increased dramatically Adenovirus infectivity. Targeting assays showed that AP1B is required for accurate basolateral recycling of CAR after internalization. AP1B knock down MDCK cells missorted CAR from recycling endosomes to the apical surface. In summary, we have characterized the cellular machinery responsible for normal sorting of an adenovirus receptor and illustrated how tissue-specific variations in such machinery result in drastic changes in tissue-susceptibility to adenoviruses.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Basolateral sorting of the coxsackie and adenovirus receptor through interaction of a canonical YXXΦ motif with the clathrin adaptors AP-1A and AP-1B

Jose Maria Carvajal-Gonzalez; Diego Gravotta; Rafael Mattera; Fernando Diaz; Andres E. Perez Bay; Angel Carlos Roman; Ryan Schreiner; Roland Thuenauer; Juan S. Bonifacino; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

The coxsackie and adenovirus receptor (CAR) plays key roles in epithelial barrier function at the tight junction, a localization guided in part by a tyrosine-based basolateral sorting signal, 318YNQV321. Sorting motifs of this type are known to route surface receptors into clathrin-mediated endocytosis through interaction with the medium subunit (μ2) of the clathrin adaptor AP-2, but how they guide new and recycling membrane proteins basolaterally is unknown. Here, we show that YNQV functions as a canonical YxxΦ motif, with both Y318 and V321 required for the correct basolateral localization and biosynthetic sorting of CAR, and for interaction with a highly conserved pocket in the medium subunits (μ1A and μ1B) of the clathrin adaptors AP-1A and AP-1B. Knock-down experiments demonstrate that AP-1A plays a role in the biosynthetic sorting of CAR, complementary to the role of AP-1B in basolateral recycling of this receptor. Our study illustrates how two clathrin adaptors direct basolateral trafficking of a plasma membrane protein through interaction with a canonical YxxΦ motif.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

The kinesin KIF16B mediates apical transcytosis of transferrin receptor in AP‐1B‐deficient epithelia

Andres E. Perez Bay; Ryan Schreiner; Francesca Mazzoni; Jose Maria Carvajal-Gonzalez; Diego Gravotta; Emilie Perret; Gullermo Lehmann Mantaras; Yuan-Shan Zhu; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

Polarized epithelial cells take up nutrients from the blood through receptors that are endocytosed and recycle back to the basolateral plasma membrane (PM) utilizing the epithelial‐specific clathrin adaptor AP‐1B. Some native epithelia lack AP‐1B and therefore recycle cognate basolateral receptors to the apical PM, where they carry out important functions for the host organ. Here, we report a novel transcytotic pathway employed by AP‐1B‐deficient epithelia to relocate AP‐1B cargo, such as transferrin receptor (TfR), to the apical PM. Lack of AP‐1B inhibited basolateral recycling of TfR from common recycling endosomes (CRE), the site of function of AP‐1B, and promoted its transfer to apical recycling endosomes (ARE) mediated by the plus‐end kinesin KIF16B and non‐centrosomal microtubules, and its delivery to the apical membrane mediated by the small GTPase rab11a. Hence, our experiments suggest that the apical recycling pathway of epithelial cells is functionally equivalent to the rab11a‐dependent TfR recycling pathway of non‐polarized cells. They define a transcytotic pathway important for the physiology of native AP‐1B‐deficient epithelia and report the first microtubule motor involved in transcytosis.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2016

Regulation of ENaC trafficking in rat kidney

Gustavo Frindt; Diego Gravotta; Lawrence G. Palmer

In response to salt depletion, aldosterone drives the movement of Na channel protein from ER through the Golgi to the apical membrane in kidney epithelial cells.


Developmental Cell | 2013

Response: The “Tail” of the Twin Adaptors

Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan; Andres Perez-Bay; Ryan Schreiner; Diego Gravotta

In this issue, Guo et al. find that the diversification of AP-1 clathrin adaptor functions by paralogous μ1 subunits is not based on differential localization but on differential cargo recognition. Here, Rodriguez-Boulan et al. suggest that the available evidence remains consistent with subcellular compartment-specific distinctions in μ1 paralog functions.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

Basolateral sorting of chloride channel 2 is mediated by interactions between a dileucine motif and the clathrin adaptor AP-1

Erwin de la Fuente-Ortega; Diego Gravotta; Andres E. Perez Bay; Ignacio Benedicto; Jose Maria Carvajal-Gonzalez; Guillermo L. Lehmann; Carlos F. Lagos; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

ClC-2 is a ubiquitous chloride channel that regulates cell volume, ion transport, and acid-base balance. Mice knocked out for ClC-2 are blind and sterile. Basolateral localization of ClC-2 in epithelia is mediated by the interaction of a dileucine motif with a highly conserved pocket in the γ1-σ1A hemicomplex of AP-1.


Archive | 2008

Golgi apparatus and epithelial cell polarity

Sylvie Deborde; Diego Gravotta; Aparna Lakkaraju; Enrique Rodriguez-Boulan

The MDCK model, introduced three decades ago (Cereijido et al. 1978; Rodriguez-Boulan et al. 1978; Rodriguez-Boulan and Pendergast 1980), allowed the elucidation of biosynthetic and recycling routes of epithelial cells and the compartments that sort apical and basolateral proteins as the trans Golgi network (TGN) and recycling endosomes (RE). These compartments were originally believed to operate in separate biosynthetic and recycling routes but discoveries over the past decade have revealed that TGN and RE cooperate in biosynthetic protein sorting. TGN and RE display clathrin-dependent and clathrin-independent exocytic routes to the plasma membrane (PM), equivalent to the clathrin-dependent and clathrin-independent endocytic routes at the PM. In epithelial cells, clathrin-mediated exocytosis (CME) from TGN and RE is utilized only by basolateral PM proteins. With the exception of AP1B, which sorts a subgroup of basolateral proteins in RE, the clathrin adaptors and regulatory proteins involved in CME remain largely unknown. The clathrin-independent routes from TGN and RE to the apical membrane remain enigmatic; their generation involves a clustering event mediated by proteinaceous motifs or by N-or O-linked carbohydrates, which may or may not promote lipid raft association, as well as the key participation of the MT and actin cytoskeletons.

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