Cargo-specific recruitment in clathrin and dynamin-independent endocytosis

Authors: Paulina Moreno-Layseca, Niklas Z. Jäntti, Rashmi Godbole, Christian Sommer, Guillaume Jacquemet, Hussein Al-Akhrass, Pauliina Kronqvist, Roosa E. Kallionpää, Leticia Oliveira-Ferrer, Pasquale Cervero, Stefan Linder, Martin Aepfelbacher, James Rae, Robert G. Parton, Andrea Disanza, Giorgio Scita, Satyajit Mayor, Matthias Selbach, Stefan Veltel, Johanna Ivaska

Year: 2020

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.10.05.323295

Abstract

Spatially controlled, cargo-specific endocytosis is essential for development, tissue homeostasis, and cancer invasion and is often hijacked by viral infections1. Unlike clathrin-mediated endocytosis, which exploits cargo-specific adaptors for selective protein internalization, the clathrin and dynamin-independent endocytic pathway (CLIC-GEEC, CG-pathway) has until now been considered a bulk internalization route for the fluid phase, glycosylated membrane proteins and lipids2,3. Although the core molecular players of CG endocytosis have been recently defined, no cargo-specific adaptors are known and evidence of selective protein uptake into the pathway is lacking3. Here, we identify the first cargo-specific adaptor for CG-endocytosis and demonstrate its clinical relevance in breast cancer progression. By combining unbiased molecular characterization and super-resolution imaging, we identified the actin-binding protein swiprosin-1 (EFHD2) as a cargo-specific adaptor regulating integrin internalization via the CG-pathway. Swiprosin-1 couples active Rab21-associated integrins with key components of the CG-endocytic machinery, IRSp53 and actin. Swiprosin-1 is critical for integrin endocytosis, but not for other CG-cargo and supports integrin-dependent cancer cell migration and invasion, with clinically relevant implications for breast cancer. Our results demonstrate a previously unknown cargo selectivity for the CG-pathway and opens the possibility to discover more adaptors regulating it.