Artículo de revista
Regulation of protein trafficking: Posttranslational mechanisms and the unexplored transcriptional control
Fecha
2014Registro en:
Plant Science 225 (2014) 24–33
dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2014.05.004
Autor
Pizarro Arcos, Lorena Andrea
Norambuena Morales, Lorena
Institución
Resumen
Endomembrane protein trafficking assures protein location through the endocytic and secretory routes.
Trafficking pathways are diverse, depending on the proteins being trafficked, the final destination as well
as their itinerary. Trafficking pathways are operated by machineries composed of a set of coordinately
acting factors that transport proteins between compartments. Different machineries participate in each
protein trafficking pathway, providing specificity and accuracy. Changes in the activity and abundance of
trafficking proteins regulate protein flux. The preponderance of one pathway over another regulates protein
location and relocation. Cellular requirements change during different processes and in response to
stimuli; modulation of trafficking mechanisms must relocate proteins or alternatively increase/decrease
the targeting rate of certain proteins. Conventionally, protein trafficking modulation has been explained
as posttranslational modification of components of the relevant trafficking machinery. However, trafficking
components are also transcriptionally regulated and several reports support that this regulation can
modulate protein trafficking as well. This transcriptional modulation has an impact on plant physiology,
and is a critical and fundamental mechanism. This scenario suggests a determinant mechanism that must
be considered in the endomembrane protein trafficking research field.