Cotranslational integration and initial sorting at the endoplasmic reticulum translocon of proteins destined for the inner nuclear membrane
- Suraj Saksena*,
- Yuanlong Shao†,
- Sharon C. Braunagel‡,
- Max D. Summers*,‡,§, and
- Arthur E. Johnson*,†,¶,∥
- Departments of *Biochemistry and Biophysics, §Entomology, and ¶Chemistry, and ‡Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843; and †Department of Medical Biochemistry and Genetics, Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, College Station, TX 77843-1114
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Contributed by Max D. Summers, July 9, 2004
Abstract
The current diffusion-retention model for protein trafficking to the inner nuclear membrane (INM) proposes that INM proteins diffuse laterally from the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum into the INM and are then retained in the INM by binding to nuclear proteins or DNA. Because some data indicate that the sorting of baculovirus envelope proteins to the INM is protein-mediated, we have examined the early stages of INM protein integration and sorting by using photocrosslinking. Both viral and host INM-directed proteins were integrated cotranslationally through the endoplasmic reticulum translocon, and their nonrandom photocrosslinking to two translocon proteins, Sec61α and translocating chain-associated membrane protein (TRAM), revealed that the first transmembrane sequence (TMS) of each viral and host INM-directed protein occupied a very similar location within the translocon. Because few TMSs of non-INM-directed membrane proteins photocrosslink to TRAM, it seems that the INM-directed TMSs occupy different sites within the translocon than do non-INM-directed TMSs. The distinct proximities of translocon components to INM-directed TMSs strongly suggest that such TMSs are recognized and initially sorted within the translocon. Taken together, these data indicate that membrane protein sorting to the INM is an active process involving specific nonnuclear proteins.
Footnotes
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↵ ∥ To whom correspondence should be addressed at: Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, 116 Reynolds Medical Building, 1114 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-1114. E-mail: aejohnson{at}tamu.edu.
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Abbreviations: ER, endoplasmic reticulum; INM, inner nuclear membrane; ODV, occlusion-derived virus; SM, sorting motif; TMS, transmembrane sequence; E66, ODV-E66; E26, ODV-E26; εANB-Lys-tRNAamb,Nε-(5-azido-2-nitrobenzoyl)-Lys-tRNAamb; SRP, signal recognition particle; TRAM, translocating chain-associated membrane protein; LBR, lamin B receptor.
- Copyright © 2004, The National Academy of Sciences





