| Literature DB >> 35628387 |
Lea Daverkausen-Fischer1, Margarethe Draga1, Felicitas Pröls1.
Abstract
The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of mammalian cells is the central organelle for the maturation and folding of transmembrane proteins and for proteins destined to be secreted into the extracellular space. The proper folding of target proteins is achieved and supervised by a complex endogenous chaperone machinery. BiP, a member of the Hsp70 protein family, is the central chaperone in the ER. The chaperoning activity of BiP is assisted by ER-resident DnaJ (ERdj) proteins due to their ability to stimulate the low, intrinsic ATPase activity of BiP. Besides their co-chaperoning activity, ERdj proteins also regulate and tightly control the translation, translocation, and degradation of proteins. Disturbances in the luminal homeostasis result in the accumulation of unfolded proteins, thereby eliciting a stress response, the so-called unfolded protein response (UPR). Accumulated proteins are either deleterious due to the functional loss of the respective protein and/or due to their deposition as intra- or extracellular protein aggregates. A variety of metabolic diseases are known to date, which are associated with the dysfunction of components of the chaperone machinery. In this review, we will delineate the impact of ERdj proteins in controlling protein synthesis and translocation under physiological and under stress conditions. A second aspect of this review is dedicated to the role of ERdj proteins in the ER-associated degradation pathway, by which unfolded or misfolded proteins are discharged from the ER. We will refer to some of the most prominent diseases known to be based on the dysfunction of ERdj proteins.Entities:
Keywords: ERAD; UPR; co-chaperones; degradation; translocation; translocon
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35628387 PMCID: PMC9147092 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23105576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1(a) At the translocon (brown cylinder), the pore is gated by BiP, which, in its ADP-bound form, closes the gate and opens it in its ATP-bound form. Translational arrest occurs when BiP dissociates from the luminal domains of ERdj1, ERdj2, and PERK. The release of BiP from PERK results in the dimerization of PERK, its autophosphorylation, and the subsequent phosphorylation of eIF2α (p-eIF2α), which inhibits eIF2α-dependent translation. (b) The translation of proteins is controlled by the co-chaperones ERdj1, ERdj2/Sec62, and ERdj6. In their BiP-bound forms, ERdj1 and ERdj2/Sec62 enable protein synthesis. The silencing of PERK and the PERK-signaling pathway occur by the binding of BiP to its luminal domain, which results in the release of eIF2α-dependent translation and protein synthesis. BiP, immunoglobin binding protein; PERK, protein kinase RNA-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase; eIF2α, alpha subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor 2.
Figure 2ERdj6 surveys the activation state of PERK. ERdj6 can adopt various subcellular localizations. Under control conditions, ERdj6 is located luminally and transfers BiP to PERK to keep PERK in a silenced state and to enable eIF2α-dependent RNA translation. In ER-stressed cells (as observed after 8 h thapsigargin treatment), ERdj6 is inserted in the ER membrane. Half of the membrane-anchored pool faces the lumen, and half of the pool faces the cytosol. Due to the increased demand of chaperoning activity, BiP dissociates from the luminal domain of PERK and enables the activation and autophosphorylation of PERK. The subsequent phosphorylation of eIF2α inhibits eIF2α-dependent translational processes. The translational arrest can be released by interaction of the cytosolic ERdj6 pool with the C-terminus of PERK (see text).
Figure 3(a) Cotranslational translocation of proteins occurs via the Sec61 translocon and is mediated in a BiP-dependent way either in the absence or presence of ERdj2, depending on the respective target protein. Cotranslational degradation of a target proteins is controlled by ERdj6. The retrotranslocation of targets that clog the translocon is BiP-dependent. (b) The degradation of luminal target proteins is mediated by ERdj3, ERdj4, and ERdj5. ERdj3 seems to compete with target proteins for the binding of calnexin or calreticulin and controls the degradation or folding of proteins. ERdj4 also mediates either the folding of proteins or, in the case of enduring misfolding, targets the protein to the ERAD pathway. The specific feature of ERdj5 is its reductive ability, required to release disulifide bonds in order to enable a subsequent retrotranslocation across the ER membrane.
Examples of co-chaperone functions in mutant proteins causing metabolic diseases.
| Disease | Mutated Protein | Co-Chaperone | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s disease | Amyloid β-protein | ERdj3 | Chaperoning | [ |
| α1-Antitrypsin disease (AATD) | α1-Antitrypsin | ERdj3 | Chaperoning | [ |
| Diabetes | Insulin | ERdj4 | Chaperoning | [ |
| Gaucher’s disease | β-Glucocerebroside | ERdj3 | ERAD | [ |
| Cystic fibrosis | Transmembrane conductive regulator protein | |||
| Chloride channel | ERdj3 | ? | [ | |
| ENaC channel | ERdj3 | ERAD | [ | |
| Interstitial lung disease (ILD) | Surfactant protein-C | ERdj4 | ERAD | [ |
“?”, needs to be confirmed in future studies.