Uses
Golgicide A, a potent, highly specific, reversible inhibitor of the cis-Golgi ArfGEF GBF1.
Definition
ChEBI: Golgicide A is a diastereoisomeric mixture comprising racemic cis- and racemic trans-goglioside A in a 10:1 ratio. It is a potent and rapidly reversible GBF1 (Golgi-specific brefeldin A-resistance guanine nucleotide exchange factor 1) inhibitor. The (3aS,4R,9bR) isomer is the most active (see Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 2012, 22, 5177-5181). It has a role as a cis-Golgi ArfGEF GBF inhibitor. It contains a cis-golgicide A and a trans-golgicide A.
General Description
A cell-permeable quinoline compound that selectively targets ArfGEF GBF1, but not BIG1/2, and attenuates GBF1-mediated cellular vesicle traffickings in a reversible manner. Phenotypic comparisons in Vero (African Green Monkey Kidney epithelial) cultures reveal that selective blockage of GBF1 function by GCA (10 μM) or by FGB1-E794K dominant-inactive expression affects
medial- and
cis-Golgi similarly to that seen with BFA (Cat. No.
203729), however, the non-GBF1-specific BFA (10 μg/ml or 35.6 μM) causes additional GBF1-independent morphologic effects on TGN, notably the rapid dispersal of Golgi-associated coat proteins AP-1 and GGA3, which are not seen with GCA treatment. Endocytic/retrograde transport studies using GCA establishes that GBF1 function is not required for the transport of bacterial toxins to the endosomes, however the retrograde transport of StxB (shiga toxin B subunit) from endosomes to TGN and Golgi is GBF1-dependent (100% inhibition of StxB sulfation at 10 μM), accounting for GCA′s (10 μM) ability to completely prevent Vera cells from Stx-induced (up to 100 ng/ml) inhibition of cellular protein synthesis.