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1.
The human cytomegalovirus US2 gene product targets major histocompatibility class I molecules for degradation in a proteasome-dependent fashion. Degradation requires interaction between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumenal domains of US2 and class I. While ER insertion of US2 is essential for US2 function, US2 lacks a cleavable signal peptide. Radiosequence analysis of glycosylated US2 confirms the presence of the NH(2) terminus predicted on the basis of the amino acid sequence, with no evidence for processing by signal peptidase. Despite the absence of cleavage, the US2 NH(2)-terminal segment constitutes its signal peptide and is sufficient to drive ER translocation of chimeric reporter proteins, again without further cleavage. The putative US2 signal peptide c-region is responsible for the absence of cleavage, despite the presence of a suitable -3,-1 amino acid motif for signal peptidase recognition. In addition, the US2 signal peptide affects the early processing events of the nascent polypeptide, altering the efficiency of ER insertion and subsequent N-linked glycosylation. To our knowledge, US2 is the first example of a membrane protein that does not contain a cleavable signal peptide, yet otherwise behaves like a type I membrane glycoprotein.  相似文献   

2.
cDNA coding for preproglobulin beta, a precursor protein of 11-S globulin beta subunit, was cloned and the nucleotide sequence has been determined. The sequence covers the whole coding region (1440 base pairs) with 5' and 3' noncoding region (30 and 214 base pairs, respectively). The deduced amino acid sequence of preproglobulin beta consists of a 21-amino-acid N-terminal signal peptide, preceding the acidic gamma polypeptide region (275 amino acids) and the subsequent basic delta region (184 amino acids). The site for post-translational cleavage of the precursor polypeptide to make the gamma and delta chains is estimated to be located between the asparagine-glycine residues. The N-terminal amino acid of the gamma chain of mature 11-S globulin beta subunit was reported to be blocked by 5-oxoproline (pyroglutamic acid) [Ohmiya et al. (1980) Plant Cell Physiol. 21, 157-167]. It was shown that the blocked N-terminal amino acid is coded as a glutamine residue. The derived amino acid sequence was also compared with those of precursor proteins of other 11-S globulins such as soybean glycinin, cotton beta globulin, pea legumin and rape 11-S globulin by dot matrix analysis.  相似文献   

3.
M Zerial  D Huylebroeck  H Garoff 《Cell》1987,48(1):147-155
Each subunit of the human transferrin receptor (TR) dimer is inserted into the ER membrane as a transmembrane polypeptide having its N-terminus in the cytoplasm. The transmembrane segment of the molecule serves both as a signal for chain translocation and as a membrane anchor. To study which structural features of this segment are required for its dual function, we have essentially replaced the transmembrane peptide with the C-terminal membrane-spanning segment of two proteins having a separate N-terminal translocation signal and with an artificial uncharged peptide. In each case the mutant TR molecules are efficiently translocated in vitro. In contrast, substitution of the transmembrane peptide of TR with a hydrophilic peptide results in no detectable translocation activity of the mutant TR. This suggests that the hydrophobic character of the transmembrane peptide of TR, rather than its actual amino acid sequence, is important for chain translocation and membrane binding.  相似文献   

4.
The unspecific proteinase K and the specific proteases alpha-chymotrypsin, trypsin and S. aureus V 8 protease were used in order to determine the orientation of the polypeptides B 870-alpha and B 870-beta from the major antenna complex B 870 of Rs. rubrum G-9+ within the chromatophore membrane (inside-out vesicle). Although B 870-alpha exhibits cleavable peptide bonds, treatment with specific proteases yielded splitting only in B 870-beta within the N-terminal region. In the case of proteinase K, which was most effective, mainly 6 (B 870-alpha) and 16 (B 870-beta) amino acid residues were removed from their N-terminal parts as proved by means of Edman degradation of cleavage products. The major peptide bonds cleaved were identified as Gln6-Leu7 in B 870-alpha and as Lys16-Glu17 in B 870-beta. The central hydrophobic stretch regions and the relatively hydrophilic C-terminal parts of both light-harvesting polypeptides were not affected by proteinase K. On the basis of these degradation experiments a transmembrane orientation of B 870-alpha and B 870-beta is postulated, with their N-terminal towards the cytoplasm and their C-termini towards periplasm with regard to the photosynthetic membrane. This hypothesis is supported by the transmembrane model proposed by Brunisholz et al. (Hoppe-Seyler's Z., Physiol. Chem., (1984) 365, 675-688) in which the hydrophobic stretch of B 870-alpha and of B 870-beta forming an alpha-helix would span the membrane once. Organic solvent extraction of chromatophores treated with proteinase K yielded a fairly pure polypeptide fragment with an apparent molecular mass of 14000 Da. Its N-terminal amino-acid sequence is identical with the sequence within the N-terminal region of the reaction centre subunit L of Rs. rubrum G-9+. Thus it is most likely that as in the case of B 870-beta, proteinase K removed 16 amino acid residues from the N-terminal part of subunit L. This subunit therefore also seems to be exposed at the surface of the cytoplasmic side of the chromatophore membrane.  相似文献   

5.
A protein destined for export from the cell cytoplasm is synthesized as a preprotein with an amino-terminal signal peptide. In Escherichia coli, typically signal peptides that guide preproteins into the SecYEG protein conduction channel are subsequently removed by signal peptidase I. To understand the mechanism of this critical step, we have assessed the conformation of the signal peptide when bound to signal peptidase by solution nuclear magnetic resonance. We employed a soluble form of signal peptidase, which laks the two transmembrane domains (SPase I Δ2-75), and the E. coli alkaline phosphatase signal peptide. Using a transferred NOE approach, we found clear evidence of a weak peptide-enzyme complex formation. The peptide adopts a U-turn shape originating from the proline residues within the primary sequence that is stabilized by its interaction with the peptidase and leaves key residues of the cleavage region exposed for proteolysis. In dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) micelles the signal peptide also adopts a U-turn shape comparable with that observed in association with the enzyme. In both environments this conformation is stabilized by the signal peptide phenylalanine side chain-interaction with enzyme or lipid mimetic. Moreover, in the presence of DPC, the N-terminal core region residues of the peptide adopt a helical motif and based on PRE (paramagnetic relaxation enhancement) experiments are shown to be buried within the membrane. Taken together, this is consistent with proteolysis of the preprotein occurring while the signal peptide remains in the bilayer and the enzyme active site functioning at the membrane surface.  相似文献   

6.
To investigate the structural context of the fusion peptide region in human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 gp21, maltose-binding protein (MBP) was used as an N-terminal solubilization partner for the entire gp21 ectodomain (residues 313-445) and C-terminally truncated ectodomain fragments. The bacterial expression of the MBP/gp21 chimeras resulted in soluble trimers containing intramonomer disulfide bonds. Detergents blocked the proteolytic cleavage of fusion peptide residues in the MBP/gp21-(313-425) chimera, indicating that the fusion peptide is available for interaction with detergent despite the presence of an N-terminal MBP domain. Limited proteolysis experiments indicated that the transmembrane domain proximal sequence Thr(425)-Ala(439) protects fusion peptide residues from chymotrypsin. MBP/gp21 chimera stability therefore depends on a functional interaction between N-terminal and transmembrane domain proximal regions in a gp21 helical hairpin structure. In addition, thermal aggregation experiments indicated that the Thr(425)-Ser(436) sequence confers stability to the fusion peptide-containing MBP/gp21 chimeras. The functional role of the transmembrane domain proximal sequence was assessed by alanine-scanning mutagenesis of the full-length envelope glycoprotein, with 11 of 12 single alanine substitutions resulting in 1.5- to 4.5-fold enhancements in cell-cell fusion activity. By contrast, single alanine substitutions in MBP/gp21 did not significantly alter chimera stability, indicating that multiple residues within the transmembrane domain proximal region and the fusion peptide and adjacent glycine-rich segment contribute to stability, thereby mitigating the potential effects of the substitutions. The fusion-enhancing effects of the substitutions are therefore likely to be caused by alteration of the prefusion complex. Our observations suggest that the function of the transmembrane domain proximal sequence in the prefusion envelope glycoprotein is distinct from its role in stabilizing the fusion peptide region in the fusion-activated helical hairpin conformation of gp21.  相似文献   

7.
A cDNA clone, pFL18, carrying a putative full-length fibroin light chain (L-chain) sequence was isolated and its nucleotide sequence was determined. This revealed the presence of an open reading frame corresponding to a polypeptide with 262 amino acid residues. The sequence was concluded to be that of the L-chain with its signal peptide because corresponding amino acid sequences for the seven tryptic and the four chymotryptic peptides from the purified L-chain were all included and an N-terminal region having typical properties of a signal peptide was present. The N terminus of the mature form of L-chain was identified as N-acetyl serine by analyzing the acyl-dansylhydrazide derived from the N-acyl-amino acid which had been released from the N-terminal blocked chymotryptic peptide by the acylamino acid-releasing enzyme. It was suggested that a signal peptide had cleaved between Pro18 and Ser19, yielding a mature L-chain polypeptide consisting of 244 amino acid residues. The molecular weight of the L-chain was calculated to be 25,800 including the N-acetyl group. The L-chain contained three Cys residues, two of which were suggested to form an intramolecular disulfide linkage, leaving the third one at the most C-terminal position and in a relatively hydrophilic region as the most probable site of disulfide linkage with the fibroin heavy chain.  相似文献   

8.
The genomic structure of integrins is important to our understanding of the evolution of this complex family. The alpha subunit of the leukocyte integrin p150,95 (CD11c) is a transmembrane polypeptide of 1144 residues whose long extracellular region contains three putative divalent cation binding repeats and a 200- amino acid inserted or "I" domain. The p150,95 alpha subunit gene extends over 25 kilobases and is comprised of at least 31 exons grouped in five clusters. The I domain, which is only present in some integrins and is homologous to domains in von Willebrand factor, cartilage matrix protein, complement factor B and the alpha 1 and alpha 2 chains of collagen type VI, is distributed in four exons. Each one of the three divalent cation binding repeats is encoded by a separate exon. Surprisingly, a sequence homologous to the first two putative divalent cation binding repeats is present in an inverted orientation in the intron following the last exon of the I domain. Both the signal peptide and the transmembrane domain are split in two exons. Putative proteolytic cleavage sequences in other integrin alpha subunits align as inserts within the p150,95 alpha subunit gene falling at exon boundaries. The organization of the p150,95 alpha subunit gene provides further insights into the structure and evolution of the integrins.  相似文献   

9.
The in vivo membrane assembly of the mannitol permease, the mannitol Enzyme II (IImtl) of the Escherichia coli phosphotransferase system, has been studied employing molecular genetic approaches. Removal of the N-terminal amphiphilic leader of the permease and replacement with a short hydrophobic sequence resulted in an inactive protein unable to transport mannitol into the cell or catalyze either phosphoenol-pyruvate-dependent or mannitol 1-phosphate-dependent mannitol phosphorylation in vitro. The altered protein (68 kDa) was quantitatively cleaved by an endogenous protease to a membrane-associated 39-kDa fragment and a soluble 28-kDa fragment as revealed by Western blot analyses. Overproduction of the wild-type plasmid-encoded protein also led to cleavage, but repression of the synthesis of the plasmid-encoded enzyme by inclusion of glucose in the growth medium prevented cleavage. Several mtlA-phoA gene fusions encoding fused proteins with N-terminal regions derived from the mannitol permease and C-terminal regions derived from the mature portion of alkaline phosphatase were constructed. In the first fusion protein, F13, the N-terminal 13-aminoacyl residue amphiphilic leader sequence of the mannitol permease replaced the hydrophobic leader sequence of alkaline phosphatase. The resultant fusion protein was inefficiently translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane and became peripherally associated with both the inner and outer membranes, presumably via the noncleavable N-terminal amphiphilic sequence. The second fusion protein, F53, in which the N-terminal 53 residues of the mannitol permease were fused to alkaline phosphatase, was efficiently translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane and was largely found anchored to the inner membrane with the catalytic domain of alkaline phosphatase facing the periplasm. This 53-aminoacyl residue sequence included the amphiphilic leader sequence and a single hydrophobic, potentially transmembrane, segment. Analyses of other MtlA-PhoA fusion proteins led to the suggestion that internal amphiphilic segments may function to facilitate initiation of polypeptide trans-membrane translocation. The dependence of IImtl insertion on the N-terminal amphiphilic leader sequence was substantiated employing site-specific mutagenesis. The N-terminal sequence of the native permease is Met-Ser-Ser-Asp-Ile-Lys-Ile-Lys-Val-Gln-Ser-Phe-Gly.... The following point mutants were isolated, sequenced, and examined regarding the effects of the mutations on insertion of IImtl into the membrane: 1) S3P; 2) D4P; 3) D4L; 4) D4R; 5) D4H; 6) I5N; 7) K6P; and 8) K8P.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
11.
Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection of H-2(b) mice generates a strong CD8(+) CTL response mainly directed toward three immunodominant epitopes, one of which, gp33, is presented by both H-2D(b) and H-2K(b) MHC class I molecules. This CTL response acts as a selective agent for the emergence of viral escape variants. These variants generate altered peptide ligands (APLs) that, when presented by class I MHC molecules, antagonize CTL recognition and ultimately allow the virus to evade the cellular immune response. The emergence of APLs of the gp33 epitope is particularly advantageous for LCMV, as it allows viral escape in the context of both H-2D(b) and H-2K(b) MHC class I molecules. We have determined crystal structures of three different APLs of gp33 in complex with both H-2D(b) and H-2K(b). Comparison between these APL/MHC structures and those of the index gp33 peptide/MHC reveals the structural basis for three different strategies used by LCMV viral escape mutations: 1) conformational changes in peptide and MHC residues that are potential TCR contacts, 2) impairment of APL binding to the MHC peptide binding cleft, and 3) introduction of subtle changes at the TCR/pMHC interface, such as the removal of a single hydroxyl group.  相似文献   

12.
In spite of the large number of class I genes in the Qa-Tla region of the H-2 complex, only few membrane-bound Qa and TL Ag have been identified. We show that one of the Qa-Tla region genes, the T11b gene, is transcribed in lymphoid cells, lymphoma cell lines, teratocarcinoma cell lines, and L cells transfected with the cloned T11b gene. The T11b gene potentially encodes a polypeptide with normal class I characteristics. The product as present at the cell surface of L cells transfected with the cloned T11b gene, is a sialylated protein of m.w. 41,000, associated with beta 2-microglobulin. This T11b Ag shares epitopes with H-2K and H-2D molecules of various haplotypes and with Qa-2 molecules, but has distinct biochemical properties. RFLP analysis revealed that the T11b gene is found in mice of the Tlab and Tlaf haplotype. Genes homologous to, but distinct from, T11b (allelic or duplicated) are present in all Tla haplotypes tested.  相似文献   

13.
The gene encoding a major outer membrane protein (MopB) of the methanotroph Methylococcus capsulatus (Bath) was cloned and sequenced. The cloned DNA contained an open reading frame of 1044 bp coding for a 348-amino-acid polypeptide with a 21-amino-acid leader peptide. Comparative sequence analysis of the predicted amino acid sequence revealed that the C-terminal part of MopB possessed sequences that are conserved in the OmpA family of proteins. The N-terminal half of the protein had no significant sequence similarity to other proteins in the databases, but the predicted secondary structure showed stretches of amphipathic beta-strands typical of transmembrane segments of outer membrane proteins. A region with four cysteines similar to the cysteine-encompassing region of the OprF of Pseudomonas aeruginosa was found toward the C-terminal part of MopB. Results from whole-cell labeling with the fluorescent thiol-reacting reagent 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein indicated a surface-exposed location for these cysteines. A probe consisting of the 3'-end of the mopB gene hybridized to the type I methanotroph Methylomonas methanica S in Southern blots containing DNA from nine methanotrophic strains representing six different genera.  相似文献   

14.
The 19-kDa glycoprotein (gp 19K) coded by early region E3 of adenovirus is of interest as a model for glycoprotein processing and sorting, as well as for the interaction between viral antigens and class I transplantation antigens. In this paper, we show that gp 19K is a major protein synthesized during early stages of infection of human KB cells. We report the purification of gp 19K to near homogeneity, the preparation of a gp 19K antiserum, and structural analyses on the protein. We have determined the DNA sequence of the gp 19K gene in adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) for comparison with the published sequence (Hérissé, J., Courtois, G., and Galibert, F. (1980) Nucleic Acids Res. 8, 2173-2192) of adenovirus type 2 (Ad2). Fragments produced by cyanogen bromide cleavage of Ad2 gp 19K are in accord with the DNA sequence, as are synthetic peptide antibodies targeted to the NH2 terminus of Ad2 gp 19K and the COOH terminus of Ad5 gp 19K. The Ad2 and Ad5 proteins are quite homologous. Conserved features include an NH2-terminal signal sequence, two potential Asn-linked glycosylation sites, and a 20-residue putative transmembrane hydrophobic domain followed by a 15-residue polar domain at the COOH terminus. We show that cleavage of the signal peptide occurs between the 17th and 18th amino acids on both the Ad2 and Ad5 versions of gp 19K and that both potential sites are glycosylated with exclusively high-mannose (as opposed to complex) oligosaccharides. Secondary structure predictions suggest six alpha-helix regions including the signal peptide and transmembrane domain, two or three beta-sheet regions, and about eight beta-turns including the two glycosylation sites and the regions flanking the transmembrane domain.  相似文献   

15.
A wealth of data has accumulated on the structure of mouse MHC class I (MHCI) molecules encoded by the H-2(b) and H-2(d) haplotypes. In contrast, there is a dearth of structural data regarding H-2(k)-encoded molecules. Therefore, the structures of H-2K(k) complexed to an octameric peptide from influenza A virus (HA(259-266)) and to a nonameric peptide from SV40 (SV40(560-568)) have been determined by x-ray crystallography at 2.5 and 3.0 A resolutions, respectively. The structure of the H-2K(k)-HA(259-266) complex reveals that residues located on the floor of the peptide-binding groove contact directly the backbone of the octameric peptide and force it to lie deep within the H-2K(k) groove. This unprecedented mode of peptide binding occurs despite the presence of bulky residues in the middle of the floor of the H-2K(k) peptide-binding groove. As a result, the Calpha atoms of peptide residues P5 and P6 are more buried than the corresponding residues of H-2K(b)-bound octapeptides, making them even less accessible to TCR contact. When bound to H-2K(k), the backbone of the SV40(560-568) nonapeptide bulges out of the peptide-binding groove and adopts a conformation reminiscent of that observed for peptides bound to H-2L(d). This structural convergence occurs despite the totally different architectures of the H-2L(d) and H-2K(k) peptide-binding grooves. Therefore, these two H-2K(k)-peptide complexes provide insights into the mechanisms through which MHC polymorphism outside primary peptide pockets influences the conformation of the bound peptides and have implications for TCR recognition and vaccine design.  相似文献   

16.
The murine CD8 glycoprotein interacts with both classical MHC class I molecules and some nonclassical molecules, including the thymic leukemia Ag (TL). TL binds preferentially to CD8alphaalpha homodimers with a 10-fold higher affinity than H-2K(b) class I molecules. To understand the molecular basis for this difference, we created a panel of CD8alpha mutants and tested the ability of the CD8alphaalpha homodimers to bind to H-2K(b) tetramers and TL tetramers. Mutations in three CD8 residues located on the complementarity-determining region-like loops contacting the negatively charged loop in the alpha3 domain of MHC class I greatly reduced binding to both tetramers. Because TL and H-2K(b) class I sequences are highly conserved in the alpha3 domain of MHC class I, this suggests that CD8 contacts the alpha3 domain of TL and H-2K(b) in a similar manner. In contrast, mutations in residues on the A and B beta strands of CD8 that are involved in contact with beta(2)-microglobulin affected interaction with the H-2K(b) tetramer, but not the TL tetramer. Therefore, the orientation of interaction of TL with CD8 appears to be different from that of H-2K(b). The unique high affinity binding of TL with CD8alphaalpha is most likely a result of amino acid differences in the alpha3 domain between TL and H-2K(b), particularly at positions 198 (K to D) and 228 (M to T), which are contact residues in the CD8alphaalpha-H-2K(b) cocrystal.  相似文献   

17.
The complete amino acid sequence of the CNBr fragment comprising residues 229–284 of the murine major histocompatibility complex antigen H-2Db has been determined using radiochemical methodology. The sequence was determined by N-terminal sequence analysis of the intact CNBr fragment and by sequence determinations of peptides derived from this fragment by trypsin and staphylococcal V8 protease cleavage. In addition to the amino acid assignments for H-2Db, it was possible to assign the linkage position of the third N-linked glycosyl unit to the asparagine at residue 256. Additional amino acid sequence assignments have also been made for three other CNBr fragments that span residues 99–138, 139–228, and 308–331 of the H-2Db molecule. The total protein sequence information available (222 of 338 residues) agrees in every comparable position with the protein sequence derived from the cDNA clone (pH203) isolated by Reyes and co-workers (1982b), which strongly suggests that this clone encodes H-2Db. Combination of the protein sequence with that deduced from the cDNA clone provides the complete H-2Db protein sequence. Comparison of this sequence with other available protein sequence information for murine class I molecules has revealed protein sequences that may be unique to either K or D region molecules.Abbreviations used in this paper HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - V8 Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease - MHC major histocompatibility complex  相似文献   

18.
Molecular signals for phosphatidylinositol modification of the Qa-2 antigen   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Most cell surface proteins are anchored to the cell bilayer by hydrophobic membrane-spanning domains. Recently it has been shown that a small class of molecules are attached to cell surfaces via a phosphatidylinositol moiety covalently linked to the C-terminus of the mature processed polypeptide. The molecular signals that identify a polypeptide for phosphatidylinositol (PI) attachment have not been well defined in any system, but are thought to reside in the C-terminus of the primary translation product. We report that all the signals responsible for PI anchoring of Qa-2 Ag are confined to the 36 C-terminal residues of the precursor proteins. To investigate further the features that signal cleavage and PI addition, we have studied mutants of two closely related murine class I MHC molecules: the PI-linked Ag, Q9b, from the Qa-2 Ag family, and the integral membrane transplantation antigen, H-2Ld. The addition of 15 amino acids to the three residue long cytoplasmic domain of Q9b or the mutation of Asp295 found in its C-terminal hydrophobic domain to Val converts this molecule into an integral membrane protein. However, the introduction of a short three residue cytoplasmic tail and Asp295 into the transmembrane domain of H-2Ld does not convert this molecule to a PI-linked one. The results of these analyses suggest that the PI-processing signals may depend on overall conformation, hydrophobicity, and length of the C-terminal domain of the precursor protein. In addition these data indicate that PI anchoring of class I Ag requires more than two mutational steps and may have been selected during the evolution.  相似文献   

19.
Regulated intramembrane proteolysis is a widely accepted concept describing the processing of various transmembrane proteins via ectodomain shedding followed by an intramembrane cleavage. The resulting cleavage products can be involved in reverse signaling. Presenilins, which constitute the active center of the γ-secretase complex, signal peptide peptidase (SPP), and its homologues, the SPP-like (SPPL) proteases are members of the family of intramembrane-cleaving aspartyl proteases of the GXGD-type. We recently demonstrated that Bri2 (itm2b) is a substrate for regulated intramembrane proteolysis by SPPL2a and SPPL2b. Intramembrane cleavage of Bri2 is triggered by an initial shedding event catalyzed by A Disintegrin and Metalloprotease 10 (ADAM10). Additionally primary sequence determinants within the intracellular domain, the transmembrane domain and the luminal juxtamembrane domain are required for efficient cleavage of Bri2 by SPPL2b. Using mutagenesis and circular dichroism spectroscopy we now demonstrate that a high α-helical content of the Bri2 transmembrane domain (TMD) reduces cleavage efficiency of Bri2 by SPPL2b, while the presence of a GXXXG dimerization motif influences the intramembrane cleavage only to a minor extent. Surprisingly, only one of the four conserved intramembrane glycine residues significantly affects the secondary structure of the Bri2 TMD and thereby its intramembrane cleavage. Other glycine residues do not influence the α-helical content of the transmembrane domain nor its intramembrane processing.  相似文献   

20.
The NHE6 protein is a unique Na(+)/H(+) exchanger isoform believed to localize in mitochondria. It possesses a hydrophilic N-terminal portion that is rich in positively charged residues and many hydrophobic segments. In the present study, signal sequences in the NHE6 molecule were examined for organelle localization and membrane topogenesis. When the full-length protein was expressed in COS7 cells, it localized in the endoplasmic reticulum and on the cell surface. Furthermore, the protein was fully N-glycosylated. When green fluorescent protein was fused after the second (H2) or third (H3) hydrophobic segment, the fusion proteins were targeted to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. The localization pattern was the same as that of fusion proteins in which green fluorescent protein was fused after H2 of NHE1. In an in vitro system, H1 behaved as a signal peptide that directs the translocation of the following polypeptide chain and is then processed off. The next hydrophobic segment (H2) halted translocation and eventually became a transmembrane segment. The N-terminal hydrophobic segment (H1) of NHE1 also behaved as a signal peptide. Cell fractionation studies using antibodies against the 15 C-terminal residues indicated that NHE6 protein localized in the microsomal membranes of rat liver cells. All of the NHE6 molecules in liver tissue possess an endoglycosidase H-resistant sugar chain. These findings indicate that NHE6 protein is targeted to the ER membrane via the N-terminal signal peptide and is sorted to organelle membranes derived from the ER membrane.  相似文献   

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