There are two main classes of traffic intermediates that operate in intracellular trafficking pathways: small round vesicles, and large pleiomorphic carriers (LPCs). While both are essential, the LPCs appear to be responsible for moving the bulk of the secretory traffic between distant compartments. LPCs are much larger and more variable in shape than vesicles, and they have evident interconnected tubular and saccular/cisternal components. They appear to form by en bloc extrusion and cleavage of large membrane areas of the donor organelle. Although many proteins and lipids that are involved in LPC formation have been identified, the intrinsic complexity of these carriers and current technical limitations mean that a coherent picture of the process of of LPC formation is only just beginning to emerge.

Large pleiomorphic traffic intermediates in the secretory pathway / Luini, Alberto; Ragnini Wilson, Antonella; Polishchuck, Roman S.; DE MATTEIS, Maria Antonietta. - In: CURRENT OPINION IN CELL BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0955-0674. - 17:4(2005), pp. 353-361. [10.1016/j.ceb.2005.06.012]

Large pleiomorphic traffic intermediates in the secretory pathway

DE MATTEIS, Maria Antonietta
2005

Abstract

There are two main classes of traffic intermediates that operate in intracellular trafficking pathways: small round vesicles, and large pleiomorphic carriers (LPCs). While both are essential, the LPCs appear to be responsible for moving the bulk of the secretory traffic between distant compartments. LPCs are much larger and more variable in shape than vesicles, and they have evident interconnected tubular and saccular/cisternal components. They appear to form by en bloc extrusion and cleavage of large membrane areas of the donor organelle. Although many proteins and lipids that are involved in LPC formation have been identified, the intrinsic complexity of these carriers and current technical limitations mean that a coherent picture of the process of of LPC formation is only just beginning to emerge.
2005
Large pleiomorphic traffic intermediates in the secretory pathway / Luini, Alberto; Ragnini Wilson, Antonella; Polishchuck, Roman S.; DE MATTEIS, Maria Antonietta. - In: CURRENT OPINION IN CELL BIOLOGY. - ISSN 0955-0674. - 17:4(2005), pp. 353-361. [10.1016/j.ceb.2005.06.012]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/662667
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