| Literature DB >> 32453970 |
Abstract
In eukaryotic cells, about one-third of the synthesized proteins are translocated into the endoplasmic reticulum; they are membrane or lumen resident proteins and proteins direct to the Golgi apparatus. The co-translational translocation takes place through the heterotrimeric protein-conducting channel <span class="Gene">Sec61 which is associated with the ribosome and many accessory components, such as the heterote<span class="Gene">trameric translocon-associated protein (TRAP) complex. Recently, microscopic techniques, such as cryo-electron microscopy and cryo-electron tomography, have enabled the determination of the translocation machinery structure. However, at present, there is a lack of understanding regarding the roles of some of its components; indeed, the TRAP complex function during co-translational translocation needs to be established. In addition, TRAP may play a role during unfolded protein response, endoplasmic-reticulum-associated protein degradation and congenital disorder of glycosylation (ssr4 CDG). In this article, I describe the current understanding of the TRAP complex in the light of its possible function(s).Entities:
Keywords: calcium-binding domain; endoplasmic reticulum protein translocation; endoplasmic-reticulum-associated protein degradation; glycosylation; translocon-associated protein complex; unfolded protein response
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32453970 PMCID: PMC7276530 DOI: 10.1098/rsob.190244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Biol ISSN: 2046-2441 Impact factor: 6.411
Figure 1.Schematic of the TRAP subunits inserted in the ER membrane: α, β and δ are single-spanning proteins (type I) with an SP that ranges between 17 and 23; instead, the subunit γ has four TMDs and no SP. N-terminus in yellow, middle of the sequence in black and C-terminus in green.
Figure 2.RaptorX structure prediction of TRAP subunits and structure of the complex determined by cryo-ET: (a) TRAP α, (b) TRAP β, (c) TRAP γ (d) TRAP δ, (e) schematic of TRAP complex structure solved by cryo-ET; the subunits α and β form the prominent ER luminal domain, instead, γ has a big cytosolic domain.
Figure 3.(a) Human TRAP α (ssr1) isoforms listed by experimental evidence (UniProt). (b) The mRNA alignment (Geneious) of human TRAP α isoforms (retrotranslation). (c) The protein sequence alignment (Geneious) of human TRAP α isoforms: same N-terminus except for the shortest form which is just 103 residues long (C9JY01). The isoforms are membrane proteins type I with luminal N-term and cytosolic C-term, TMD: 208–228 (red rectangle).
Figure 4.(a) Human TRAP β isoforms listed by experimental evidence (UniProt). (b) The alignment of mRNA (Geneious) of human TRAP β isoforms (retrotranslation). (c) The protein alignment (Geneious) of human TRAP β isoforms: except for the form with 114 amino acid residues (E9PQ05), same N terminal tail. The isoforms are membrane proteins type I with luminal N-term and cytosolic C-term, TMD: 147–167 (red rectangles).
Figure 6.(a) The two human TRAP (ssr4) isoforms are listed by experimental evidence (UniProt). (b) The mRNA alignment (Geneious) of human TRAP δ (ssr4) isoforms (retrotranslation). (c) The protein sequence alignment (Geneious) of human TRAP δ (ssr4) isoforms points out lack of middle sequence in the isoform of 148 residues (A6NLM8), the remaining alignment matches 100%. The isoforms are membrane proteins type I with luminal N-term and cytosolic C-term, TMD: 145–165 (red rectangle).
Figure 7.Retention TM motif—K(5)X(4)K(3)X(2)X(1)—present in the C-terminus of TRAP β M. musculus (above) and human (below). The difference between them is a proline in position 4 (M. musculus) instead of threonine (human).
Figure 8.Human TRAP δ protein sequence most common isoform (P51571): two cysteine residues in the luminal domain (N-term) of the mature protein form the disulfide bridge, 3 and 34 residues (arrows). SP (bracket).
Figure 9.Schematic of the RTC addressed by cryo-EM: (a) the frontal view of the ribosome, Sec61 and TRAP under the channel; (b) frontal view of the ribosome and Sec61.
Figure 10.Schematic of the ER-membrane-associated ribosome determined by cryo-ET: Sec61 (blue), TRAP (yellow) and OST (red). It is visible a prominent ER luminal domain of TRAP (α and β) under the channel Sec61 and a cytosolic domain of TRAP (γ) close to the subunits 60s of the ribosome and precisely to the ribosomal protein rpl38 (green). TRAP complex is also close to the OST complex which interacts with the translocon and the ribosome.
Figure 11.Calnexin-like ssr1 is a component of the RTC, both are close to the translocating polypeptide. The interaction of calnexin with TRAPα depends on Calx palmitoylation by DHHC6 which recruits also the actin cytoskeleton.
Figure 12.(a) Non-canonical EF-hand domain present in human α-Palvalbumin (Parv). Parvalbumin is a calcium-binding protein involved in intracellular calcium signalling. CD, calcium-binding. (b) The alignment between TRAPα sequence and the non-canonical EF-hand domain (Parv); red bars: hydrophobicity. (c) The entire M. musculus TRAPα sequence (most common isoform) and the probable non-canonical EF-hand domain (blue) in the N-terminus. (d) The sequence of human TRAP α (most common isoform) and the probable non-canonical EF-hand domains (blue) in the N-terminus. SP highlighted in grey.
Summary of processes, TRAP expression, possible TRAP function(s) and effects.
| processes | TRAP expressions | TRAP functions | effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| co-translation protein translocation [ | Sec61 and TRAP stoichiometric ratio 1 : 1 | – assists Sec61 open state | substrate-dependent |
| unfolded protein response (UPR) [ | TRAP overexpressed | – chaperone: protein maturation | ↑UPR |
| ER-associated protein degradation (ERAD) [ | TRAP silencing | – secondary effect of UPR | ↓ERAD |
| protein glycosylation [ | – TRAP | – chaperone: assists protein modification | ssr4 CDG: under-glycosylated |