The Golgi Rim is a Precise Tetraplex of Golgin Proteins that Can Self-Assemble into Filamentous Bands

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Abstract

Golgin proteins have long been suspected to be organizers of the Golgi stack. Using three-dimensional super-resolution microscopy, we comprehensively localize the human golgin family at the rim of the Golgi apparatus at 10-20 nm resolutionin situ. Unexpectedly, we find that the golgins are precisely organized into a tetraplex with four discrete layers, each containing a specific set of rim golgins. We observe no golgins inside the stack between its membrane-bound cisternae. Biochemically characterizing most of the golgins as isolated proteins, we find that they form anti-parallel dimers and further self-assemble into bands of multi-micron-long filaments. Based on our findings, we propose an “outside-in” physical model, the Golgin Organizer Hypothesis, in which the Golgi stack of cisternae and its overall ribbon morphology directly result from bending circumferential bands of rim golgin filaments onto a membrane surface, explaining stack formation without the need for special “stacking proteins.”

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