Lipid droplets are ubiquitous organelles
that are among the basic building blocks of eukaryotic
cells. Despite central roles for cholesterol homeostasis
and lipid metabolism, their function and protein composition
are poorly understood.
Results: We purified lipid droplets from Drosophila embryos
and analyzed the associated proteins by capillary
LC-MS-MS. Important functional groups include enzymes
involved in lipid metabolism, signaling molecules,
and proteins related to membrane trafficking. Unexpectedly,
histones H2A, H2Av, and H2B were present.
Using biochemistry, genetics, real-time imaging, and
cell biology, we confirm that roughly 50% of certain embryonic
histones are physically attached to lipid droplets,
a localization conserved in other fly species. Histone
association with droplets starts during oogenesis
and is prominent in early embryos, but it is undetectable
in later stages or in cultured cells. Histones on droplets
are not irreversibly trapped; quantitation of droplet histone
levels and transplantation experiments suggest
that histones are transferred from droplets to nuclei as
development proceeds. When this maternal store of histones
is unavailable because lipid droplets are mislocalized,
zygotic histone production starts prematurely.
Conclusions: Because we uncover a striking proteomic
similarity of Drosophila droplets to mammalian lipid
droplets, Drosophila likely provides a good model for
understanding droplet function in general. Our analysis
also reveals a new function for these organelles; the
massive nature of histone association with droplets
and its developmental time-course suggest that droplets
sequester maternally provided proteins until they
are needed. We propose that lipid droplets can serve
as transient storage depots for proteins that lack appropriate
binding partners in the cell. Such sequestrationmay provide a general cellular strategy for handling excess
proteins.
Revised: February 13, 2007 |
Published: September 19, 2006
Citation
Cermelli S., Y. Guo, S.P. Gross, and M. Welte. 2006.The Lipid-Droplet Proteome Reveals that Droplets Are a Protein-Storage Depot.Current Biology 16, no. 18:1783-1795. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2006.07.062