TY - JOUR
T1 - Quality control of ER synthesized proteins
T2 - An exposed thiol group as a three-way switch mediating assembly, retention and degradation
AU - Fra, Anna M.
AU - Fagioli, Claudio
AU - Finazzi, Dario
AU - Sitia, Roberto
AU - Alberini, Cristina M.
PY - 1993
Y1 - 1993
N2 - Plasma cells secrete IgM only in the polymeric form: the C-terminal cysteine of the μ heavy chain (Cys575) is responsible for both intracellular retention and assembly of IgM subunits. Polymerization is not quantitative, and part of IgM is degraded intracellularly. Neither chloroquine nor brefeldin A (BFA) inhibits degradation, suggesting that this process occurs in a pre-Golgi compartment. Degradation of IgM assembly intermediates requires Cys575: the monomeric IgMala575 mutant is stable also when endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to Golgi transport is blocked by BFA. Addition of the 20 C-terminal residues of μ to the lysosomal protease cathepsin D is sufficient to induce pre-Golgi retention and degradation of the chimeric protein: the small amounts of molecules which exit from the ER are mostly covalent dimers. By contrast, when retained by the KDEL sequence, cathepsin D is stable in the ER, indicating that retention is not sufficient to cause degradation. Replacing the C-terminal cysteine with serine restores transport through the Golgi. As all chimeric cathepsin D constructs display comparable protease activity in vitro, their different fates are not determined by gross alterations in folding. Thus, also out of its normal context, the μ chain Cys575 plays a crucial role in quality control, mediating assembly, retention and degradation.
AB - Plasma cells secrete IgM only in the polymeric form: the C-terminal cysteine of the μ heavy chain (Cys575) is responsible for both intracellular retention and assembly of IgM subunits. Polymerization is not quantitative, and part of IgM is degraded intracellularly. Neither chloroquine nor brefeldin A (BFA) inhibits degradation, suggesting that this process occurs in a pre-Golgi compartment. Degradation of IgM assembly intermediates requires Cys575: the monomeric IgMala575 mutant is stable also when endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to Golgi transport is blocked by BFA. Addition of the 20 C-terminal residues of μ to the lysosomal protease cathepsin D is sufficient to induce pre-Golgi retention and degradation of the chimeric protein: the small amounts of molecules which exit from the ER are mostly covalent dimers. By contrast, when retained by the KDEL sequence, cathepsin D is stable in the ER, indicating that retention is not sufficient to cause degradation. Replacing the C-terminal cysteine with serine restores transport through the Golgi. As all chimeric cathepsin D constructs display comparable protease activity in vitro, their different fates are not determined by gross alterations in folding. Thus, also out of its normal context, the μ chain Cys575 plays a crucial role in quality control, mediating assembly, retention and degradation.
KW - Cathepsin D
KW - Degradation
KW - Endoplasmic reticulum
KW - Immunoglobulin
KW - Secretion
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M3 - Article
C2 - 8223484
AN - SCOPUS:0027440769
SN - 0261-4189
VL - 12
SP - 4755
EP - 4761
JO - EMBO Journal
JF - EMBO Journal
IS - 12
ER -