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Inositol hexakisphosphate primes syndapin I/PACSIN 1 activation in endocytosis.

Yue ShiKaixuan ZhaoGuang YangJia YuYuxin LiMichael M KesselsLina YuBritta QualmannPer-Olof BerggrenShao-Nian Yang
Published in: Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS (2022)
Endocytosis is controlled by a well-orchestrated molecular machinery, where the individual players as well as their precise interactions are not fully understood. We now show that syndapin I/PACSIN 1 is expressed in pancreatic β cells and that its knockdown abrogates β cell endocytosis leading to disturbed plasma membrane protein homeostasis, as exemplified by an elevated density of L-type Ca 2+ channels. Intriguingly, inositol hexakisphosphate (InsP 6 ) activates casein kinase 2 (CK2) that phosphorylates syndapin I/PACSIN 1, thereby promoting interactions between syndapin I/PACSIN 1 and neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP) and driving β cell endocytosis. Dominant-negative interference with endogenous syndapin I/PACSIN 1 protein complexes, by overexpression of the syndapin I/PACSIN 1 SH3 domain, decreases InsP 6 -stimulated endocytosis. InsP 6 thus promotes syndapin I/PACSIN 1 priming by CK2-dependent phosphorylation, which endows the syndapin I/PACSIN 1 SH3 domain with the capability to interact with the endocytic machinery and thereby initiate endocytosis, as exemplified in β cells.
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