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Publication : WASH drives early recycling from macropinosomes and phagosomes to maintain surface phagocytic receptors.

First Author  Buckley CM Year  2016
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  113
Issue  40 Pages  E5906-E5915
PubMed ID  27647881 Mgi Jnum  J:238336
Mgi Id  MGI:5819135 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1524532113
Citation  Buckley CM, et al. (2016) WASH drives early recycling from macropinosomes and phagosomes to maintain surface phagocytic receptors. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 113(40):E5906-E5915
abstractText  Macropinocytosis is an ancient mechanism that allows cells to harvest nutrients from extracellular media, which also allows immune cells to sample antigens from their surroundings. During macropinosome formation, bulk plasma membrane is internalized with all its integral proteins. It is vital for cells to salvage these proteins before degradation, but the mechanisms for sorting them are not known. Here we describe the evolutionarily conserved recruitment of the WASH (WASP and SCAR homolog) complex to both macropinosomes and phagosomes within a minute of internalization. Using Dictyostelium, we demonstrate that WASH drives protein sorting and recycling from macropinosomes and is thus essential to maintain surface receptor levels and sustain phagocytosis. WASH functionally interacts with the retromer complex at both early and late phases of macropinosome maturation, but mediates recycling via retromer-dependent and -independent pathways. WASH mutants consequently have decreased membrane levels of integrins and other surface proteins. This study reveals an important pathway enabling cells to sustain macropinocytosis without bulk degradation of plasma membrane components.
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