Regulated Endoplasmic Reticulum-associated Degradation of a Polytopic Protein: p97 RECRUITS PROTEASOMES TO Insig-1 BEFORE EXTRACTION FROM MEMBRANES* |
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Authors: | Yukio Ikeda George N. DeMartino Michael S. Brown Joon No Lee Joseph L. Goldstein Jin Ye |
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Affiliation: | From the Departments of ‡Molecular Genetics and ;§Physiology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75390-9046 |
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Abstract: | Polytopic membrane proteins subjected to endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated degradation are extracted from membranes and targeted to proteasomes for destruction. The extraction mechanism is poorly understood. One polytopic ER protein subjected to ER-associated degradation is Insig-1, a negative regulator of cholesterol synthesis. Insig-1 is rapidly degraded by proteasomes when cells are depleted of cholesterol, and its degradation is inhibited when sterols accumulate in cells. Insig-2, a functional homologue of Insig-1, is degraded slowly, and its degradation is not regulated by sterols. Here, we report that a single amino acid substitution in Insig-2, Insig-2(L210A), causes Insig-2 to be degraded in an accelerated and sterol-regulated manner similar to Insig-1. In seeking an explanation for the accelerated degradation, we found that proteasomes bind to wild type Insig-1 and mutant Insig-2(L210A) but not to wild type Insig-2, whereas the proteins are still embedded in cell membranes. This binding depends on at least two factors, ubiquitination of Insig and association with the ATPase p97/VCP complex. These data suggest that p97 recruits proteasomes to polytopic ER proteins even before they are extracted from membranes. |
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