화학공학소재연구정보센터
Nature, Vol.588, No.7839, 699-+, 2020
MFSD12 mediates the import of cysteine into melanosomes and lysosomes
A rapid labelling and immunopurification-based method is used to isolate melanosomes and profile their labile metabolites, revealing that MFSD12 has a key role in cysteine import into melanosomes and lysosomes. Dozens of genes contribute to the wide variation in human pigmentation. Many of these genes encode proteins that localize to the melanosome-the organelle, related to the lysosome, that synthesizes pigment-but have unclear functions(1,2). Here we describe MelanoIP, a method for rapidly isolating melanosomes and profiling their labile metabolite contents. We use this method to study MFSD12, a transmembrane protein of unknown molecular function that, when suppressed, causes darker pigmentation in mice and humans(3,4). We find that MFSD12 is required to maintain normal levels of cystine-the oxidized dimer of cysteine-in melanosomes, and to produce cysteinyldopas, the precursors of pheomelanin synthesis made in melanosomes via cysteine oxidation(5,6). Tracing and biochemical analyses show that MFSD12 is necessary for the import of cysteine into melanosomes and, in non-pigmented cells, lysosomes. Indeed, loss of MFSD12 reduced the accumulation of cystine in lysosomes of fibroblasts from patients with cystinosis, a lysosomal-storage disease caused by inactivation of the lysosomal cystine exporter cystinosin(7-9). Thus, MFSD12 is an essential component of the cysteine importer for melanosomes and lysosomes.