Tetraspanins are a unique family of four-pass transmembrane proteins that play important roles in a variety of cell biological processes. One of their roles is to regulate the trafficking of their associated proteins. We have previously shown that two paralogous tetraspanins in C. elegans, TSP-12 and TSP-14, function redundantly to promote bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling [1]. To dissect the functions of TSP-12 and TSP-14 in BMP signaling, we examined the expression and subcellular localization patterns of endogenously tagged TSP-12 and TSP-14 proteins. We found that TSP-12 and TSP-14 share overlapping expression patterns in multiple tissues, including the hypodermis, where the BMP receptors function to regulate body size, one of the phenotypic outputs of the BMP pathway. TSP-12 and TSP-14 also share overlapping localization patterns on the cell surface and partial co-localization in intracellular vesicles. Using markers for various intracellular vesicles in hypodermal cells, we found that TSP-12 and TSP-14 are primarily localized to the early endosomes, late endosomes and recycling endosomes. In
tsp-12(0);
tsp-14(0)double mutants, the morphology of the endosomes is impaired and an intestinally expressed DAF-4::GFP is mis-localized to lysosomes or lysosome-related organelles, indicating that TSP-12 and TSP-14 are required for the intracellular trafficking of the type II BMP receptor DAF-4. Together with previous findings by Gleason et al. showing that the type I receptor SMA-6 is recycled via the retromer complex [2], our work demonstrates the involvement of distinct recycling pathways for the type I and type II BMP receptors, and highlights the importance of intracellular trafficking in the regulation of BMP signaling in vivo. 1. Wang, L. et al. (2017) Two paralogous tetraspanins TSP-12 and TSP-14 function with the ADAM10 metalloprotease SUP-17 to promote BMP signaling in C. elegans.PLoS GeneticsDOI:10.1371/journal.pgen.1006568. 2. Gleason, R. J. et al. (2014) BMP signaling requires retromer-dependent recycling of the type I receptor. PNASDOI:10.1073/pnas.1319947111