Arf6 Guanine Nucleotide Exchange Factor Cytohesin-2 Binds to CCDC120 and Is Transported Along Neurites to Mediate Neurite Growth

作者:Torii Tomohiro*; Miyamoto Yuki; Tago Kenji; Sango Kazunori; Nakamura Kazuaki; Sanbe Atsushi; Tanoue Akito; Yamauchi Junji
来源:JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2014, 289(49): 33887-33903.
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M114.575787

摘要

Background: The Arf6 activator, cytohesin-2, is involved in neurite growth. Results: Cytohesin-2 binds to CCDC120 and is transported along growing neurites. Conclusion: This interaction is required for Arf6 activation and neurite growth. Significance: The previously unknown functional CCDC120 is a new cytohesin adaptor protein, which regulates neurite growth. %26lt;br%26gt;The mechanism of neurite growth is complicated, involving continuous cytoskeletal rearrangement and vesicular trafficking. Cytohesin-2 is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Arf6, an Arf family molecular switch protein, controlling cell morphological changes such as neuritogenesis. Here, we show that cytohesin-2 binds to a protein with a previously unknown function, CCDC120, which contains three coiled-coil domains, and is transported along neurites in differentiating N1E-115 cells. Transfection of the small interfering RNA (siRNA) specific for CCDC120 into cells inhibits neurite growth and Arf6 activation. When neurites start to extend, vesicles containing CCDC120 and cytohesin-2 are transported in an anterograde manner rather than a retrograde one. As neurites continue extension, anterograde vesicle transport decreases. CCDC120 knockdown inhibits cytohesin-2 localization into vesicles containing CCDC120 and diffuses cytohesin-2 in cytoplasmic regions, illustrating that CCDC120 determines cytohesin-2 localization in growing neurites. Reintroduction of the wild type CCDC120 construct into cells transfected with CCDC120 siRNA reverses blunted neurite growth and Arf6 activity, whereas the cytohesin-2-binding CC1 region-deficient CCDC120 construct does not. Thus, cytohesin-2 is transported along neurites by vesicles containing CCDC120, and it mediates neurite growth. These results suggest a mechanism by which guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Arf6 is transported to mediate neurite growth.