| 1996 |
CLTCL1 (CLH-22/CHC22) encodes a second human clathrin heavy chain of 1640 amino acids, localized to chromosome 22q11, with 84.7% amino acid identity to CHC17; alternative splicing of a 171 bp exon near the C-terminus was observed, overlapping the putative light-chain binding domain and adjacent to the trimerization region, suggesting alternative splicing may regulate light-chain binding or trimerization. |
cDNA cloning, sequencing, Northern blot analysis, sequence comparison |
Human molecular genetics |
Medium |
8733129
|
| 1996 |
CLTCL1 (CLTCL) is selectively expressed in adult skeletal muscle and shows alternative splicing near the carboxyl terminus in a region overlapping the putative light-chain binding domain adjacent to the heavy chain trimerization region. |
Northern blot analysis, cDNA cloning and sequencing |
Genomics |
Medium |
8844170
|
| 1997 |
A balanced (21;22)(p12;q11) translocation interrupts the 3' coding region of CLTCL1, producing a truncated transcript and resulting in a patient with some features of DiGeorge syndrome/velocardiofacial syndrome, establishing that CLTCL1 haploinsufficiency contributes to this phenotype. |
Breakpoint cloning, Northern blot of truncated transcript |
Human molecular genetics |
Medium |
9147638
|
| 2000 |
CLTCL1 fuses to ALK kinase in a variant chromosomal translocation in anaplastic lymphoma, generating a CLTCL-ALK fusion protein (~250 kDa) that localizes to clathrin-coated vesicles and is constitutively autophosphorylated, demonstrating that the CLTCL portion mediates membrane targeting and contributes an active promoter. |
cDNA cloning of fusion gene, immunostaining for ALK localization, in vitro kinase assay for autophosphorylation |
Blood |
Medium |
10807789
|
| 2004 |
CHC22 binds sorting nexin 5 (SNX5) through a coiled-coil domain present in both CHC22 and SNX5 but absent in CHC17; this domain coincides with the region on CHC17 that binds the regulatory light-chain subunit, providing a mechanism for the distinct functions of CHC22 relative to CHC17 in membrane traffic. CHC22 is concentrated at neuromuscular and myotendinous junctions in mature muscle, and its expression is increased during myoblast differentiation and muscle regeneration with a similar time course as embryonic myosin. |
Co-immunoprecipitation, subcellular fractionation, immunofluorescence/localization, domain mapping |
Molecular biology of the cell |
Medium |
15133132
|
| 2009 |
CHC22 is required for formation of insulin-responsive GLUT4 storage compartments in human skeletal muscle and adipocytes; tissue-specific transgenic expression of CHC22 in mice (which normally lack it) caused aberrant localization of GLUT4 transport pathway components and diabetic features, establishing a species-restricted role for CHC22 in insulin-regulated GLUT4 trafficking. |
CHC22 knockdown in human cells, CHC22 transgenic mouse model, GLUT4 localization assays, glucose tolerance testing |
Science (New York, N.Y.) |
High |
19478182
|
| 2010 |
CHC22 is required for retrograde trafficking of certain cargo molecules from endosomes to the trans-Golgi network (TGN) via a pathway distinct from CHC17 and retromer; in muscle cells, depletion of either CHC22 or syntaxin 10 (a species-restricted SNARE not expressed in mice) impairs GLUT4 targeting, placing retrograde endosome-TGN transport as a critical step in GLUT4 trafficking. CHC22 is ~8-fold less abundant than CHC17 in muscle, and CHC22 and CHC17 function independently in both nonmuscle and muscle cells. |
siRNA knockdown, cargo trafficking assays, subcellular fractionation, immunofluorescence |
The Journal of cell biology |
High |
20065094
|
| 2013 |
CHC22 participates in muscle regeneration: GLUT4 and VAMP2 are elevated in regenerating human myofibers in parallel with CHC22; CHC22 transgenic mice show delayed muscle regeneration after cardiotoxin injury and myoblasts from these mice fail to proliferate in response to glucose, and CHC22 expression causes a fiber-type switch from oxidative to glycolytic metabolism. |
Human biopsy immunostaining, CHC22 transgenic mouse cardiotoxin injury model, myoblast proliferation assay, fiber-type analysis |
PloS one |
Medium |
24204966
|
| 2017 |
CHC22 forms a triskelion and assembles into latticed vesicle coats morphologically similar to CHC17 coats, but CHC22-coated vesicles are distinct: the CHC22 coat is more stable to pH change, is not disassembled by the Hsc70/auxilin uncoating machinery that disassembles CHC17 coats, CHC22 and CHC17 are differentially recruited to membranes by adaptors, and CHC22 does not support vesicle formation or transferrin endocytosis at the plasma membrane. |
In vitro coat assembly/disassembly assays, electron microscopy of vesicles, endocytosis assays, adaptor recruitment assays |
The Journal of biological chemistry |
High |
29097553
|
| 2019 |
A common human CLTCL1 allelic variant encoding valine at position 1316 (CHC22-V1316), more frequent in farming populations, shows different cellular dynamics than M1316-CHC22 and is less effective at controlling GLUT4 membrane traffic, altering the insulin-regulated GLUT4 response; population genetic analysis reveals strong purifying selection on CLTCL1 in vertebrates retaining the gene. |
Population genetics/phylogenetics, functional cellular assays of GLUT4 trafficking comparing allotypes, live-cell imaging of CHC22 dynamics |
eLife |
Medium |
31159924
|
| 2020 |
CHC22 localizes to the ERGIC (ER-to-Golgi intermediate compartment) and functions in transport from the ERGIC to form the GLUT4 storage compartment (GSC), acting upstream of the previously described retrograde endosomal sorting step. CHC22 forms a complex with ERGIC tether p115, GLUT4, and sortilin; downregulation of p115 or CHC22 (but not GM130 or sortilin) abrogates insulin-responsive GLUT4 release. CHC22's ERGIC role is further demonstrated by its essential function in forming the Legionella pneumophila replication vacuole, which requires ERGIC-derived membrane. |
siRNA knockdown, co-immunoprecipitation, RUSH (retention using selective hooks) secretory pathway tracing, Legionella infection assay, immunofluorescence localization |
The Journal of cell biology |
High |
31863584
|
| 2024 |
CHC22 is recruited to ERGIC membranes via a bipartite two-site interaction: (1) the C-terminal trimerization domain of CHC22 interacts with SNX5 (and functionally redundant SNX6), which also binds the ERGIC tether p115; (2) an isoform-specific patch in the CHC22 N-terminal domain separately mediates direct binding to p115. Both interactions are independently required for CHC22 targeting to ERGIC membranes and for directing GLUT4 to the GSC; interference with either interaction inhibits GLUT4 targeting. |
Co-immunoprecipitation, domain mutagenesis/deletion mapping, siRNA knockdown of SNX5/SNX6, GLUT4 trafficking assays, immunofluorescence localization |
The EMBO journal |
High |
39160272
|