Endosomal Localization of the Autoantigen EEA1 Is Mediated by a Zinc-binding FYVE Finger

Harald Stenmark(Norwegian Cancer Society), Rein Aasland(University of Bergen), Ban‐Hock Toh(Monash Medical Centre), Antonello D’Arrigo(Norwegian Cancer Society)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
September 1, 1996
Cited by 486Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

EEA1, a 162-kDa autoantigen associated with subacute cutaneous systemic lupus erythematosus, is a coiled-coil protein localized to early endosomes and cytosol. At its C terminus, the protein contains a cysteine-rich motif, which is shared with Vps27, Fab1, and Vac1, yeast proteins implicated in membrane traffic (Mu, F. T., Callaghan, J. M., Steele-Mortimer, O., Stenmark, H., Parton, R. G., Campbell, P. L., McCluskey, J., Yeo, J. P., Tock, E. P., and Toh, B. H. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 13503-13511). Here we show that this motif constitutes a genuine zinc binding domain, which we term the FYVE finger (based on the first letters of four proteins containing this motif). Profile-based data base searches identified the FYVE finger in 11 distinct proteins. The FYVE finger-containing C terminus of EEA1 was found to bind 2 mol equivalents of Zn2+. Mutations of conserved histidine and cysteine residues in the FYVE motif independently reduced zinc binding to 1 mol equivalent. Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy of transfected HEp2 cells revealed that the C-terminal part (residues 1277-1411) of EEA1 colocalizes extensively with a GTPase-deficient mutant of the early endosomal GTPase Rab5, while deletion of the FYVE finger or mutations that interfere with zinc binding cause a cytosolic localization. These results implicate the FYVE finger in the specific localization of EEA1 to endosomes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis