Lecture 11: Co-translational targeting to the ER Flashcards
How does protein synthesis in eukaryotic cells occur, and what is the role of the signal peptide in protein secretion?
- Protein synthesis in eukaryotic cells apart from mitochondria n plastids is a cytosolic affair
- Starts in cytosol on 3 then free cytosolic ribosomes cluster to form polysomes
- First part of the protein that is extruded is the N-terminus
- If the protein is destined for secretion: signal peptide
○ Targeting device that allows engagement w a translecon in the ER membrane
○ Protein extruded thru the membrane n processed - ER targeting requires proteins to be made initially in the cytosol
How does protein secretion occur?
- Proteins leave the ER in secretory vesicles
- Fuse w golgi -> fuse w outside of the cell
- Allows protein to leave the cell
- Alternative destinations for secretory proteins e.g. endesomal system, transgolgi network, lysosome system
Entry point for secretion is ER
“What is the function of the signal peptide in protein synthesis and ER targeting in eukaryotic cells?”
- Signal peptide is part of the primary sequence of the protein
- AUG (start codon) that encodes N terminus of the protein
- Signal peptide that will fuse into the rest of the ORF
- Primary product following translation is a protein w an end terminus signal peptide n the rest of the protein
- When joined the process of ER entry, signal peptide removed by proteolytic cleavage
What do ER signal peptides look like?
- Huge range of variation
- 15-30 AA in size
- No primary sequence conservation
- So, how can they all be recognized if they all look different?
○ Broad similarities
§ Positive charge towards N terminus (Arg, Lys)
§ Downstream there is a hydrophobic stretch that is recognized by signal recognition particle (SRP)
§ Cleavage site usually follows small AA - Broad substrate specificity
How do signal peptides exhibit variability even among highly related proteins? Provide an example
EXAMPLE:
* Erp2p n Erp4p (proteins required for ER to Golgi transport in the yeast) are derived from a gene duplication event n are 93% similar
* BUT signal peptides are v different in length n AA sequence
* SPs are free to evolve rapidly as long as they retain overall features
○ Positive charge towards N terminus n hydrophobic stretch
How does a SP ensure that the translating ribosome binds to the ER membrane?
- SP is recognized by signal recognition particle (SRP) in the cytosol
- This targets SP to the translocon
Describe the SRP cycle
- Ribosome starts to make proteins
- SP extruded first
- SP binds to the SRP
○ Bent back into a hook - SP complex docks SRP receptor, which is dimeric (alpha n beta subunit)
- Beta subunit associated w a closed translocon
○ Translocon (protein conducting channel) - Translation is interrupted
- Translocon opens -> hook shape inserted into open translocon
- SRP complex disengages -> SRP recycled for later use
- Cleavage site presented into ER
- Available for Spase (signal peptidase), which cleaves the SP from the protein n SP is ejected laterally from the translecon
- Rest of the protein can be extruded so translation restarts n protein is passed onto ER lumen
What does the specificity of the ER targeting depend on?
- Broad substrate specificity in the recognition step
- Folding of the SP into a hook shape by SRP
○ Allows SPase to cleave signal within the translocon -> releasing SP into the ER membrane - RESULT: problems downstream bc SPs disrupts the ER membrane, requiring their removal by chopping w SPPase altho Saccharomyces lacks SPP
- Folding of the SP into a hook shape by SRP
What happens in the ER lumen?
- Major site of protein folding
○ This requires ER chaperones- 2 major ER modifications
○ Folding proteins may become N-glycosylated (covalent attachment of 3s of sugars onto asparagine residues or target proteins)
○ Disulfide-bonded depending on whether they hv the right AA sequence motifs for these events
§ Disulfide bonds do not form in cytosolic proteins
§ Disulfide bonds can only form b/w 2 adjacent cystines in oxidizing cellular environments (eg. ER lumen, periplasm in gram negative bacteria) - IF Protein doesn’t fold properly -> will fail quality control check carried out by ER chaperones
- Misfolded proteins are not usually allowed to proceed thru the secretory pathway
- Misfolded proteins are ejected from the ER in a process called retro-translocation (dislocation) then degraded in cytosol
- 2 major ER modifications
What is the N-glycosylation of proteins?
- Covalent addition of an oligosaccharide tree of sugars (core N-glycan) from a lipid carrier to the target protein as the target protein is being extruded into the ER lumen
- Oligosaccharyltransferase (OST): protein that does this
○ Allows contact w the ribosome n translecon - As the protein is being extruded into the ER, there is a glycan tucked away into the OST
○ Transferred as a 3 n covalently attached to specific sites in the native protein - As the protein moves thru the secretory pathway, the core N-glycans are modified to make complex N-glycans
- Oligosaccharyltransferase (OST): protein that does this
What is the core N-glycan made up of?
- 2 N-acetyl glucosamine
- 9 mannose residues
3 glucose residues
- 9 mannose residues
- N: Asp, asparaginyl (residue of asparagine)
- X: any amino acid apart from proline
- Residue followed by hydroxyl group
○ S/T: seryl/thereonyl (residue of either a serine or threonine) - If the NXS/T is seen by OST, It recognizes N as a place to attach its tree of sugars
What are the functions of the N-glycosylation?
- N-glycans act as flags for folding n ER quality control
○ Removal of 2 Glc residues from the core N-oligosaccharide in the ER -> allows interactions w ER chaperones required for efficient folding of N-glycosylated proteins
○ As proteins proceed thru folding steps, final Glc residue n Man residue are removed
○ Removing protein from folding environment n signaling that protein is now ready to be passed to Golgi
○ Further sugar additions to N-glycans occur in Golgi -> complex N-glycans -> allows cell to track progress of protein thru secretory pathway- Increases protein solubility [N-glycan is larger than asparagine residue to which it is attached n made of hydrophilic sugars] -> reduce aggregation problems during folding in the ER
- Influence folding rates n final protein conformation
○ N-glycans are bulky -> constrain α-carbon backbone of the polypeptide - N-glycans may influence the activity of a protein (e.g. enzymes) or its interaction with other molecules (e.g. the interaction of an antibody with effector molecules) [final conformation of the protein may be constrained]
What conditions are required for disulfide bonds to form?
- Oxidizing conditions (e.g. ER in eukaryotes or bacterial periplasm)
- Form where 2 cystine residues are brought cloes together during protein folding
- Biological catalysts: protein disulfide isomerase (PDI)
○ PDIs can make, break n shuffle disulfide bonds - Covalent S-S bonds contribute to the stability of protein tertiary structures of SECRETED proteins
What are the 3 roles of PDI?
- Isomerize disulphide bonds
- Make/break disulfide bonds
- Join / separate 2 proteins
How does PDI isomerize (shuffle disulfide bonds)?
- PDI has 2 self hydrol groups when the PDI is in reduced conditions
- Reduced PDI can bind to client proteins that has inappropriate disulfides -> binds as a chaperone (covalently bound complex -> forms mixed disulfide bonds
- Isomerization of disulfide bonds continues until the client protein reaches stable conformation when it is released from PDI