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First published online December 3, 2008
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.040667
Cell Science at a Glance |
1 Molecular Medicine, National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College London, London SW7 2AZ, UK
2 Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência, 2780-156 Oeiras, Portugal
3 Faculdade de Ciências Médicas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, 1169-056 Lisboa, Portugal
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: m.seabra{at}imperial.ac.uk)
| Introduction |
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500 nm in diameter) and, because of their dark pigment, are easily visible by bright-field microscopy. They have therefore been an excellent model organelle, particularly for studies on organelle biogenesis and motility. Genetic studies of naturally occurring colour phenotypes in humans, mice and fish have identified many genes that regulate pigmentation, and the study of melanocytes from these sources has been invaluable in allowing cell biologists to identify the cellular basis of albinism at the level of melanosome synthesis and transport. These studies have also revealed melanosomes to be lysosome-related organelles, which constitute a diverse group of highly specialised subcellular compartments that includes the secretory lysosomes of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes, platelet dense granules and lung-epithelial lamellar bodies (Box 1). Thus, the study of melanosome biology has provided valuable insights into biogenesis and transport of lysosome-related organelles, and into intercellular interactions in other complex tissues. | Box 1. The relationship between melanosomes and endosomes
Melanosomes are lysosome-related organelles, which comprise a diverse group of specialised compartments, most of which contain secretory cargoes. Unlike classical secretory granules, lysosome-related organelles share some proteins (e.g. LAMP1) with lysosomes and appear to be derived from endosomes. The endosomal system is highly dynamic and consists of multiple functionally distinct compartments and subdomains. In melanocytes, some of these have been adapted to serve specialised roles in the biogenesis of melanosomes (Raposo and Marks, 2007
Nonpigmented stage I melanosomes are vacuolar early endosomes. They contain the melanosomal protein Pmel17, which is sorted into intralumenal vesicles (ILVs) within the organelle. A partial clathrin coat is seen on stage I melanosomes, and this might be involved in sorting proteins into ILVs of vacuolar endosomes (Clague, 2002), but it is not clear whether clathrin has a role in the trafficking of Pmel17 as this protein enters ILVs by a novel mechanism (Theos et al., 2006
The melanogenic enzymes tyrosinase and TYRP1 are delivered to stage II melanosomes. Thus, these proteins follow pathways that are distinct from those used by Pmel17. Again, the endosomal system is important here – tyrosinase and TYRP1 are now thought to traffic preferentially to melanosomes from early endosomes. They are present in tubular endosomal domains that are distinct from the regions occupied by Pmel17. Tyrosinase- and TYRP1-positive endosomal membranes have buds that are coated with the adaptor proteins AP1 or AP3, which is consistent with a role for these adaptors in sorting tyrosinase and TYRP1 to melanosomes (Theos et al., 2005
Recent studies have also implicated BLOC1 and BLOC2 in the regulation of endosome-to-melanosome transport (Di Pietro and Dell'Angelica, 2005
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The major focus of this article is on mammalian skin pigmentation, including the regulation of pigment production, and the biogenesis of melanosomes and their intracellular and intercellular transport. Melanosomes in other well-studied systems, such as the mammalian retinal-pigment epithelium (RPE) and lower-vertebrate melanophores, are also briefly reviewed.
| Regulation of melanogenesis in skin melanocytes |
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-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (also known as proopiomelanocortin, gene symbol POMC and hereafter referred to as
MSH) – is secreted by keratinocytes.
MSH activates the melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) in the plasma membrane of skin melanocytes, which results in cAMP-dependent signalling and the stimulation of the expression of microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF), a `master regulator' of melanocyte function and melanogenesis (Garcia-Borron et al., 2005| Melanosome biogenesis |
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Mouse coat-colour mutants have proved invaluable for the identification of proteins that regulate melanosome biogenesis and maturation (Bennett and Lamoreux, 2003
) (see also www.espcr.org/micemut for a recent summary). Most coat-colour-pigmentation mutants in this category represent models for Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome (HPS), a phenotype that can be caused by mutations in a number of genes that are implicated in the biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles in several tissues (Di Pietro and Dell'Angelica, 2005
; Gautam et al., 2006
; Wei, 2006
). Two such mouse models (pearl and mocha) exhibit mutations in the gene encoding the adaptor complex protein AP3. Analysis of AP3-mutant cells revealed its involvement in the transport of tyrosinase from early endosomes to melanosomes (Huizing et al., 2001
; Theos et al., 2005
). Interestingly, an AP1-dependent alternative route also exists, and this partially compensates for a loss of AP3, which illustrates the flexibility and functional redundancy of protein trafficking in melanocytes (Huizing et al., 2001
; Theos et al., 2005
).
Other models for HPS carry mutations in the genes encoding biogenesis of lysosome-related organelles complexes (BLOCs) 1, 2 and 3 (Dell'Angelica, 2004
), or in the homotypic fusion and vacuole protein sorting (HOPS) complex (also known as the class C Vps complex), which is involved in fusion of endosomal organelles in mammalian cells (Richardson et al., 2004
). BLOC1 and BLOC2 are two distinct protein complexes that are required for the sorting of melanogenic enzymes from endosomes to melanosomes. In the absence of BLOC1 or BLOC2, TYRP1 is mislocalised and accumulates in early endosomes (Di Pietro et al., 2006
; Setty et al., 2007
). The roles of BLOC3 and the HOPS complex in melanosomal protein trafficking are poorly understood. The closely related tissue-specific small GTPases Rab38 and Rab32 also have crucial roles in pigmentation; they localise to cytoplasmic vesicles and mature melanosomes, and regulate the post-Golgi transport of tyrosinase and TYRP1 to melanosomes (Loftus et al., 2002
; Wasmeier et al., 2006
). Additional proteins that are implicated in melanosome biogenesis include MART1 (De Mazière et al., 2002
; Hoashi et al., 2005
), ocular albinism type 1 protein (OA1; also known as G-protein-coupled receptor 143) (Palmisano et al., 2008
; Samaraweera et al., 2001
; Schiaffino and Tacchetti, 2005
), oculocutaneous albinism II (OCA2; also known as P protein) (Brilliant, 2001
) and AIM1 (Costin et al., 2003
); these might localise to endosomes and/or early melanosomes, but their precise roles remain to be established.
| Melanosome transport in skin melanocytes |
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| Intercellular melanosome transfer in the skin |
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| Melanosomes in the RPE |
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| Melanosome transport in melanophores |
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MSH that are produced by the pituitary gland mediate changes in cytosolic cyclic adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) levels within melanophores that result in rapid (within 15-60 minutes) perinuclear aggregation or peripheral dispersion of melanosomes, respectively (Nascimento et al., 2003| Conclusions |
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| References |
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