Cell Reports (Jul 2019)

Global Analysis of Intercellular Homeodomain Protein Transfer

  • Eun Jung Lee,
  • Namsuk Kim,
  • Jun Woo Park,
  • Kyung Hwa Kang,
  • Woo-il Kim,
  • Nam Suk Sim,
  • Chan-Seok Jeong,
  • Seth Blackshaw,
  • Marc Vidal,
  • Sung-Oh Huh,
  • Dongsup Kim,
  • Jeong Ho Lee,
  • Jin Woo Kim

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 3
pp. 712 – 722.e3

Abstract

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Summary: The homeodomain is found in hundreds of transcription factors that play roles in fate determination via cell-autonomous regulation of gene expression. However, some homeodomain-containing proteins (HPs) are thought to be secreted and penetrate neighboring cells to affect the recipient cell fate. To determine whether this is a general characteristic of HPs, we carried out a large-scale validation for intercellular transfer of HPs. Our screening reveals that intercellular transfer is a general feature of HPs, but it occurs in a cell-context-sensitive manner. We also found the secretion is not solely a function of the homeodomain, but it is supported by external motifs containing hydrophobic residues. Thus, mutations of hydrophobic residues of HPs abrogate secretion and consequently interfere with HP function in recipient cells. Collectively, our study proposes that HP transfer is an intercellular communication method that couples the functions of interacting cells. : Lee et al. evaluate capabilities of homeodomain proteins (HPs) for transfer between cells. They find that intercellular transfer is a general but cell-context-sensitive property of HP. Intercellular HP transfer can be an unconventional way for the cells to communicate with neighboring cells that associate structurally and functionally. Keywords: homeodomain, cell-penetrating protein, protein secretion, intercellular protein transfer