Mice lacking WRB reveal differential biogenesis requirements of tail-anchored proteins in vivo

2016 | journal article; research paper

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Mice lacking WRB reveal differential biogenesis requirements of tail-anchored proteins in vivo​
Rivera-Monroy, J.; Musiol, L.; Unthan-Fechner, K.; Farkas, Á.; Clancy, A. ; Coy-Vergara, J. & Weill, U. et al.​ (2016) 
Scientific Reports6(1) art. 39464​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep39464 

Documents & Media

srep39464-2.pdf2.06 MBAdobe PDF

License

Published Version

Attribution 4.0 CC BY 4.0

Details

Authors
Rivera-Monroy, Jhon; Musiol, Lena; Unthan-Fechner, Kirsten; Farkas, Ákos; Clancy, Anne ; Coy-Vergara, Javier; Weill, Uri; Gockel, Sarah; Lin, Shuh-Yow; Corey, David P.; Kohl, Tobias ; Ströbel, Philipp ; Schuldiner, Maya; Schwappach, Blanche ; Vilardi, Fabio
Abstract
Tail-anchored (TA) proteins are post-translationally inserted into membranes. The TRC40 pathway targets TA proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum via a receptor comprised of WRB and CAML. TRC40 pathway clients have been identified using in vitro assays, however, the relevance of the TRC40 pathway in vivo remains unknown. We followed the fate of TA proteins in two tissue-specific WRB knockout mouse models and found that their dependence on the TRC40 pathway in vitro did not predict their reaction to receptor depletion in vivo. The SNARE syntaxin 5 (Stx5) was extremely sensitive to disruption of the TRC40 pathway. Screening yeast TA proteins with mammalian homologues, we show that the particular sensitivity of Stx5 is conserved, possibly due to aggregation propensity of its cytoplasmic domain. We establish that Stx5 is an autophagy target that is inefficiently membrane-targeted by alternative pathways. Our results highlight an intimate relationship between the TRC40 pathway and cellular proteostasis.
Issue Date
2016
Journal
Scientific Reports 
Project
SFB 1002: Modulatorische Einheiten bei Herzinsuffizienz 
SFB 1002 | A06: Molekulare Grundlagen mitochondrialer Kardiomyopathien 
SFB 1190: Transportmaschinen und Kontaktstellen zellulärer Kompartimente 
SFB 1190 | P04: Der GET-Rezeptor als ein Eingangstor zum ER und sein Zusammenspiel mit GET bodies 
SFB 1190 | P11: Zuordnung zellulärer Kontaktstellen und deren Zusammenspiel 
Working Group
RG Lehnart (Cellular Biophysics and Translational Cardiology Section) 
RG Schwappach (Membrane Protein Biogenesis) 
RG Schuldiner (Functional Genomics of Organelles) 
ISSN
2045-2322
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media