Ubiquitination-dependent quality control of hERG K+ channel with acquired and inherited conformational defect at the plasma membrane |
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Authors: | Pirjo M. Apaja Brian Foo Tsukasa Okiyoneda William C. Valinsky Herve Barriere Roxana Atanasiu Eckhard Ficker Gergely L. Lukacs Alvin Shrier |
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Affiliation: | Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine;Department of Physiology and Groupe de Recherche Axé sur la Structure des Protéines, McGill University, Montréal, QC H3E 1Y6, Canada |
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Abstract: | Membrane trafficking in concert with the peripheral quality control machinery plays a critical role in preserving plasma membrane (PM) protein homeostasis. Unfortunately, the peripheral quality control may also dispose of partially or transiently unfolded polypeptides and thereby contribute to the loss-of-expression phenotype of conformational diseases. Defective functional PM expression of the human ether-a-go-go–related gene (hERG) K+ channel leads to the prolongation of the ventricular action potential that causes long QT syndrome 2 (LQT2), with increased propensity for arrhythmia and sudden cardiac arrest. LQT2 syndrome is attributed to channel biosynthetic processing defects due to mutation, drug-induced misfolding, or direct channel blockade. Here we provide evidence that a peripheral quality control mechanism can contribute to development of the LQT2 syndrome. We show that PM hERG structural and metabolic stability is compromised by the reduction of extracellular or intracellular K+ concentration. Cardiac glycoside–induced intracellular K+ depletion conformationally impairs the complex-glycosylated channel, which provokes chaperone- and C-terminal Hsp70-interacting protein–dependent polyubiquitination, accelerated internalization, and endosomal sorting complex required for transport–dependent lysosomal degradation. A similar mechanism contributes to the down-regulation of PM hERG harboring LQT2 missense mutations, with incomplete secretion defect. These results suggest that PM quality control plays a determining role in the loss-of-expression phenotype of hERG in certain hereditary and acquired LTQ2 syndromes. |
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