Chapter 13 Summary
Chapter 13 Summary
target compartment.
arrows are endocytic, the red are secretory, and blue are retrieval
pathways.
Each transport vesicle that buds from a compartment must be
selective, taking up only the appropriate molecules and fusing only
with the target membrane.
The character of a compartment is defined by the composition of
the enclosing membrane: molecular markers displayed on the
(C) shows the heavy chains, and (D) shows the light chains. The
light chains link to the actin cytoskeleton, which helps generate
force for membrane budding and vesicle movement, and their
phosphorylation regulates clathrin coat assembly. The interwoven
legs of the clathrin triskelions form an outer shell from which the Nterminal domains of the triskelions protrude inward. These domains
bind to the adaptor proteins.
Adaptor proteins form a discrete inner layer of the coat,
positioned between the clathrin cage and the membrane. They bind
the clathrin coat to the membrane and trap various transmembrane
proteins, including receptors that capture soluble cargo molecules
inside the vesicle cargo receptors. In this way, the adaptor
proteins select a specific set of transmembrane proteins, together
with the soluble proteins that interact with them, and package them