| Literature DB >> 26085089 |
Stefan Schorr1, Marie-Christine Klein1, Igor Gamayun2, Armin Melnyk1, Martin Jung1, Nico Schäuble1, Qian Wang3, Birgit Hemmis4, Florian Bochen1, Markus Greiner1, Pavel Lampel1, Sabine Katharina Urban1, Sarah Hassdenteufel1, Johanna Dudek1, Xing-Zhen Chen3, Richard Wagner4, Adolfo Cavalié2, Richard Zimmermann5.
Abstract
In mammalian cells, signal peptide-dependent protein transport into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is mediated by a dynamic polypeptide-conducting channel, the heterotrimeric Sec61 complex. Previous work has characterized the Sec61 complex as a potential ER Ca(2+) leak channel in HeLa cells and identified ER lumenal molecular chaperone immunoglobulin heavy-chain-binding protein (BiP) as limiting Ca(2+) leakage via the open Sec61 channel by facilitating channel closing. This BiP activity involves binding of BiP to the ER lumenal loop 7 of Sec61α in the vicinity of tyrosine 344. Of note, the Y344H mutation destroys the BiP binding site and causes pancreatic β-cell apoptosis and diabetes in mice. Here, we systematically depleted HeLa cells of the BiP co-chaperones by siRNA-mediated gene silencing and used live cell Ca(2+) imaging to monitor the effects on ER Ca(2+) leakage. Depletion of either one of the ER lumenal BiP co-chaperones, ERj3 and ERj6, but not the ER membrane-resident co-chaperones (such as Sec63 protein, which assists BiP in Sec61 channel opening) led to increased Ca(2+) leakage via Sec6 complex, thereby phenocopying the effect of BiP depletion. Thus, BiP facilitates Sec61 channel closure (i.e. limits ER Ca(2+) leakage) via the Sec61 channel with the help of ERj3 and ERj6. Interestingly, deletion of ERj6 causes pancreatic β-cell failure and diabetes in mice and humans. We suggest that co-chaperone-controlled gating of the Sec61 channel by BiP is particularly important for cells, which are highly active in protein secretion, and that breakdown of this regulatory mechanism can cause apoptosis and disease.Entities:
Keywords: BiP; ER calcium leakage; Sec61 complex gating; calcium imaging; cellular calcium homeostasis; chaperone; diabetes; endoplasmic reticulum (ER); protein translocation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26085089 PMCID: PMC4513120 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M115.636639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157