Endocytosis: what goes in and how?

C Watts, M Marsh - Journal of cell science, 1992 - journals.biologists.com
C Watts, M Marsh
Journal of cell science, 1992journals.biologists.com
During the last decade the term 'endocytosis' has become virtually synonymous with the
activity of clathrin-coated vesicles. These vesicles, which are derived from cell surface
clathrin-coated pits, are transport vehicles responsible for the transfer of plasma membrane
receptors and their ligands, between the first two stations of the endocytic pathway: namely,
the plasma membrane and early endosomes (;;). Despite the irrefutable evidence that
clathrin-coated vesicles mediate endocytosis, their contribution to the total endocytic activity …
Abstract
During the last decade the term ‘endocytosis’ has become virtually synonymous with the activity of clathrin-coated vesicles. These vesicles, which are derived from cell surface clathrin-coated pits, are transport vehicles responsible for the transfer of plasma membrane receptors and their ligands, between the first two stations of the endocytic pathway: namely, the plasma membrane and early endosomes (; ; ). Despite the irrefutable evidence that clathrin-coated vesicles mediate endocytosis, their contribution to the total endocytic activity of the cell and the composition of the membrane they internalise remains controversial. Here we discuss: (1) the evidence that non-clathrin-mediated endocytic mechanisms operate alongside the clathrin-mediated pathway; (2) the evidence that endocytosis occurs for surface molecules that are not enriched in clathrin-coated pits and; (3) the sorting activities of cell surface clathrincoated pits and the notion that plasma membrane proteins that show particularly slow rates of uptake are actively excluded from the endocytic pathway.
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