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- Title
Degradation of unassembled Vph1p reveals novel aspects of the yeast ER quality control system.
- Authors
Hill, Kathryn; Cooper, Antony A.
- Abstract
The endoplasmic reticulum quality control (ERQC) system retains and degrades soluble and membrane proteins that misfald or fail to assemble. Vph1p is the 100 kDa membrane subunit of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae V-ATPase, which together with other subunits, assembles into the V-ATPase in the ER, requiring the ER resident protein Vma22p. In vma22Δ cells, Vph1p remains an integral membrane protein with wild-type topology in the ER membrane before undergoing a rapid and concerted degradation requiring neither vacuolar proteases nor transport to the Golgi. Failure to assemble targets Vph1p for degradation in a process involving ubiquitylation, the proteasome and cytosalic but not ER lumenal chaperones. Vph1p appears to possess the traits of a ‘classical’ ERQC substrate, yet novel characteristics are involved in its degradation: (i) UBC genes other than UBC6 and UBC7 are involved and (ii) components of the ERQC system identified to date (Der1p, Hrd1p/Der3p and Hrd3p) are not required. These data suggest that other ERQC components must exist to effect the degradation of Vph1p, perhaps comprising an alternative pathway.
- Subjects
ENDOPLASMIC reticulum; MEMBRANE proteins; SACCHAROMYCES cerevisiae; CYTOLOGY; BIOSYNTHESIS; BIOCHEMISTRY
- Publication
EMBO Journal, 2000, Vol 19, Issue 4, p550
- ISSN
0261-4189
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/emboj/19.4.550