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Opposing regulation of endoplasmic reticulum retention under stress by ERp44 and PDIA6.

Authors :
Yassin, Olaya
Praveen, Bellam
Darawshi, Odai
LaFramboise, Thomas
Shmuel, Miriam
Pattanayak, Shakti P.
Law, Brian K.
Hatzoglou, Maria
Tirosh, Boaz
Source :
Biochemical Journal. Dec2024, Vol. 481 Issue 24, p1921-1935. 15p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Conditions of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress reduce protein synthesis by provoking translation regulation, governed by the eIF2a kinase PERK. When PERK is inhibited during ER stress, retention of a selective subset of glycoproteins occurs, a phenomenon we termed selective ER retention (sERr). sERr clients are enriched with tyrosine kinase receptors (RTKs), which form large molecular weight disulfide bonded complexes in the ER. The protein disulfide isomerase ERp44 promotes sERr and increases the size of sERr complexes. Here we show that sERr is reversible upon washout. Pulse chase analyses show that upon recovery, only a small fraction of the sERr complexes disintegrates and contributes to the matured proteins, while most are newly synthesized. Sequential inductions of sERr and washouts demonstrate an accelerated recovery that is dependent on the unfolded protein response transducer IRE1. Since IRE1 regulates the expression level PDIA6, we analyzed its contribution to sERr. We found that PDIA6 and ERp44 constitu-tively interact by disulfides and have opposite effects on resumed recovery of trafficking following removal of sERr conditions. Deletion of ERp44 accelerates, while deletion of PDIA6 slows down recovery with a minimal effect on total protein synthesis. ERp44 is a primary interactor with sERr clients. When missing, PDIA6 partitions more into sERr complexes. Deletion of the tumor suppressor PTEN, which induces RTK signaling, promoted sERr formation kinetics, and accelerated the recovery, suggesting feedback between RTKs signaling and sERr. This study suggests that sERr, should develop physiologically or pathologically, is counteracted by adaptation responses that involve IRE1 and PDIA6. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02646021
Volume :
481
Issue :
24
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biochemical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
182128161
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1042/BCJ20240444