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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Transport of meprin subunits through the secretory pathway: role of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains and oligomerization.

The meprin alpha subunit, a multidomain metalloproteinase, is synthesized as a type I membrane protein and proteolytically cleaved during biosynthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), consequently losing its membrane attachment and COOH-terminal domains. The meprin alpha subunit is secreted as a disulfide-linked dimer that forms higher oligomers. By contrast, the evolutionarily related meprin beta subunit retains the COOH-terminal domains during biosynthesis and travels to the plasma membrane as a disulfide-linked integral membrane dimer. Deletion of a unique 56-amino acid inserted domain (the I domain) of meprin alpha prevents COOH-terminal proteolytic processing and results in the retention of this subunit within the ER. To determine elements responsible for this retention versus transport to the cell surface, mutagenesis experiments were performed. Replacement of the meprin alpha transmembrane (alphaT) and cytoplasmic (alphaC) domains with their beta counterparts allowed rapid movement of the alpha subunit to the cell surface. The meprin alphaT and alphaC domains substituted into meprin beta delayed movement of this chimera through the secretory pathway. Replacement of glycines in the meprin alphaT domain GXXXG motif with leucine residues, alanine insertions in the meprin alphaT domain, and mutagenesis of basic residues within the meprin alphaC domain did not enhance the movement of the alpha subunit through the secretory pathway. By contrast, a mutant of meprin alpha (C320AalphaDeltaI) that did not form disulfide-linked dimers or higher order oligomers was transported through the secretory pathway, although more slowly than meprin beta. Taken together, the data indicate that the meprin alphaT and alphaC domains together contain a weak signal for retention within the ER/cis-Golgi compartments that is strengthened by oligomerization.[1]

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