1. Academic Validation
  2. The giant spectrin βV couples the molecular motors to phototransduction and Usher syndrome type I proteins along their trafficking route

The giant spectrin βV couples the molecular motors to phototransduction and Usher syndrome type I proteins along their trafficking route

  • Hum Mol Genet. 2013 Sep 15;22(18):3773-88. doi: 10.1093/hmg/ddt228.
Samantha Papal 1 Matteo Cortese Kirian Legendre Nasrin Sorusch Joseph Dragavon Iman Sahly Spencer Shorte Uwe Wolfrum Christine Petit Aziz El-Amraoui
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Institut Pasteur, Unité de génétique et physiologie de l'audition, Paris, France.
Abstract

Mutations in the Myosin VIIa gene cause Usher syndrome type IB (USH1B), characterized by deaf-blindness. A delay of opsin trafficking has been observed in the retinal photoreceptor cells of Myosin VIIa-deficient mice. We identified spectrin βV, the mammalian β-heavy spectrin, as a Myosin VIIa- and rhodopsin-interacting partner in photoreceptor cells. Spectrin βV displays a polarized distribution from the Golgi apparatus to the base of the outer segment, which, unlike that of other β spectrins, matches the trafficking route of opsin and other phototransduction proteins. Formation of spectrin βV-rhodopsin complex could be detected in the differentiating photoreceptors as soon as their outer segment emerges. A failure of the spectrin βV-mediated coupling between Myosin VIIa and opsin molecules thus probably accounts for the opsin transport delay in Myosin VIIa-deficient mice. We showed that spectrin βV also associates with two USH1 proteins, sans (USH1G) and harmonin (USH1C). Spectrins are supposed to function as heteromers of α and β subunits, but fluorescence resonance energy transfer and in vitro binding experiments indicated that spectrin βV can also form homodimers, which likely supports its αII-independent βV functions. Finally, consistent with its distribution along the connecting cilia axonemes, spectrin βV binds to several subunits of the microtubule-based motor proteins, Kinesin II and the dynein complex. We therefore suggest that spectrin βV homomers couple some USH1 proteins, opsin and other phototransduction proteins to both actin- and microtubule-based motors, thereby contributing to their transport towards the photoreceptor outer disks.

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