News Release

Lighting the LAMP to reveal mystery of lysosomes

Researchers from Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) use expanded genetic code technologies to uncover the structural aspect of how one protein functions in lysosomes for intracellular clearance

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

Figure.1 The two-domain architecture of LAMP1 and LAMP2

image: Domain architecture and orientation of LAMP1 and LAMP2 in the lysosome lumenal membrane(left). Schematic β-prism shapes and the structures of the C-domain of LAMP1(5GV0) are shown in two perpendicular views(right).We defined the surface of the N-terminal(N) side as SideA, and that on the C-terminal(C)side as Side B. view more 

Credit: Department of Biochemistry,TMDU

Tokyo, Japan - A cell is composed of numerous organelles, each with a unique role that helps contribute to its overall functionality. The lysosome is an organelle that contains digestive enzymes and functions as a molecular garbage disposal and recycling center. Since the role of lysosome is crucial to maintain the cellular homeostasis, the lysosomal dysfunction causes neurodegenerative and metabolic diseases, cancer, as well as lysosomal storage disorders.

In a new article published in Autophagy, researchers at Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) performed a novel type of structural analysis to demonstrate how a certain molecular interaction is crucial for one lysosomal membrane protein to perform effectively.

LAMP1 (lysosomal-associated membrane protein 1) and LAMP2 the most abundant protein components of lysosome membranes. Both LAMP1 and LAMP2 are composed of a large lumenal domain, a transmembrane domain, and a short C-terminal cytoplasmic tail (Fig. 1). The lumenal domains of LAMPs are composed of two domains (N-domain and C-domain, which are membrane-distal and -proximal, respectively). Each domain has the unique ?-prims fold structure (a triangular prism). On the other hand, genetic experiments have shown that mice embryos without both LAMP-1 and 2 die a little more than two weeks after fertilization. Mice without LAMP-1 are born and can thrive, while those without LAMP-2 often die a few weeks after birth, suggesting that LAMP-2 is more important for lysosome activity. The research of the TMDU group further investigates this protein's biological role.

"Mice lacking LAMP-2 also display issues with autophagy progression," says one of the lead authors of the study Kazue Terasawa. "Expanding our knowledge of how LAMP-2 interacts and operates at the molecular level will ultimately help us understand autophagy better."

The researchers demonstrated LAMP2 molecules assemble by facing each other with one side the ?-prism (defined as side A, as shown in Fig. 1) of the C-domain (Fig. 2). The N-domain truncation permitted the nonspecific involvement of both sides of the ?-prims (side A and side B). In combination with some biochemical studies, "we believe that the homophilic interaction we demonstrated is crucial for function of LAMP-2, via ensuring a proper arrangement of the cytoplasmic tails, which is crucial for the function of LAMP2, on the lysosome membrane," says Miki Hara-Yokoyama, senior author.

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The article, "Direct homophilic interaction of LAMP-2A with the two-domain architecture revealed by site-directed photo-crosslinks and steric hindrances in mammalian cells," was published in Autophagy at DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2021.1911017


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