(579f) Golgi-IP, a Novel Tool for Multimodal Analysis of Golgi Molecular Content | AIChE

(579f) Golgi-IP, a Novel Tool for Multimodal Analysis of Golgi Molecular Content

Authors 

Dong, W. - Presenter, Stanford University
Fasimoye, R., University of Dundee
Nirujogi, R., University of Dundee
Rawat, E., Stanford University
Iguchi, M., Stanford University
Nyame, K., Stanford University
Phung, T., University of Dundee
Bagnoli, E., University of Dundee
Prescott, A., University of Dundee
Alessi, D., University of Dundee
Abu-Remaileh, M., Stanford University
The Golgi is a membrane-bound organelle that is essential for protein and lipid biosynthesis. It represents a central trafficking hub that sorts proteins and lipids to various destinations or for secretion from the cell. The Golgi has emerged as a docking platform for cellular signaling pathways including LRRK2 kinase whose deregulation leads to Parkinson disease. Golgi dysfunction is associated with a broad spectrum of diseases including cancer, neurodegeneration, and cardiovascular diseases. To allow the study of the Golgi at high resolution, we report a rapid immunoprecipitation technique (Golgi-IP) to isolate intact Golgi mini-stacks for subsequent analysis of their content. By fusing the Golgi resident protein TMEM115 to three tandem HA epitopes (GolgiTAG), we purified the Golgi using Golgi-IP with minimal contamination from other compartments. We then established an analysis pipeline using liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry to characterize the human Golgi proteome, metabolome and lipidome. Subcellular proteomics confirmed known Golgi proteins and identified novel ones. Metabolite profiling established the first human Golgi metabolome and revealed the enrichment of uridine-diphosphate (UDP) sugars and their derivatives, which is consistent with their roles in protein and lipid glycosylation. Furthermore, targeted metabolomics validated SLC35A2 as the subcellular transporter for UDP-hexose. Finally, lipidomics analysis showed that phospholipids including phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine are the most abundant Golgi lipids and that glycosphingolipids are enriched in this compartment. Altogether, our work establishes a comprehensive molecular map of the human Golgi and provides a powerful method to study the Golgi with high precision in health and disease.

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