Title: Purposes%20of%20post-translational%20modifications
1- Purposes of post-translational modifications
- 2. Quality control in the cytoplasm
- Quality control in the ER
- 4. Selective post-translational proteolysis
- 5. Glycosylation in the ER and beyond N-linked
vs. O-linked - Other post-translational modifications
-
- Modifications that alter location
- A. Acylation myristoylation, palmitoylation,
prenylation - B. GPI anchor formation
- 8. Examples from pathobiology
- A. ERAD discovered through studying CMV US 11
protein - B. HIV-1 envelope undergoes critical
post-translational modifications
2 3- Purposes of Post-translational Events
Modifications - A. Quality Control Chaperones, Glycosylation
- B. Degradation of misfolded proteins
Ubiquitination, ERAD -
- C. Proper protein function Glycosylation,
Phosphorylation, Ubiquitination - D. Target protein to proper locations
Acylation, GPI anchors
4- 2. Quality Control in the Cytoplasm
- A. Anfinsen's dogma
- All information needed for folding contained in
the amino acid sequence - Leads to the concept of spontaneous protein
folding. -
- B. Problems with Anfinsen's dogma (and the
notion of spontaneous folding) - Features of cellular environments cause
misfolding aggregation. - 1. Some proteins take a very long time to fold
spontaneously. - 2. Some protein domains are prone to
misfolding and aggregation. -
-
-
5Protein folding in vivo
- 2. Quality Control in the Cytoplasm
- Problems with Anfinsen's dogma, cont.
- Folding in the cell differs from refolding of a
denatured protein in vitro due to - Vectorial nature of protein synthesis in vivo.
- Exposure of hydrophobic regions during synthesis.
- Translation happens more slowly than folding,
requiring a delay mechanism to allow
translation to "catch up". - Highly crowded cytoplasm 300 mg/ml prot.
- Folding in vitro is inefficient (20 - 30) in
the cell, efficiency close to 100. - Conditions of stress found in vivo exacerbate
misfolding and aggregation.
6- 2. Quality Control in the Cytoplasm
- C. Molecular Chaperones Proteins that mediate
correct fate of other polypeptides but are not
part of the final structure. - Fate includes folding, assembly, interaction
with other cellular components, transport, or
degradation. - A. History
- ?Molecular chaperones initially identified as
heat shock proteins, i.e. proteins upregulated by
heat shock and other stresses. - ?Heat shock causes protein denaturation with
exposure and aggregation of interactive surfaces.
- ?Heat shock proteins inhibit
aggregation by binding to exposed surfaces during
times of stress but also during normal protein
synthesis - ?Thus, the stress response is simply an
amplification of a normal function that is used
by cells under non-stress conditions.
7- D. Features of molecular chaperones
- i. Hsp 70 family members
- ?70 kD protein monomers.
- ? Include DnaJ (bacteria) BiP (ER)
- ?Stabilize polypeptide surfaces in an unfolded
state. - ?Bind transiently to newly-synthesized
proteins paradoxically, efficient folding
requires "antifolding". - ?Bind permanently to misfolded protein.
- ?Have affinity for exposed hydrophobic
peptides. - ?Do NOT bind a specific sequence.
- ?Present in bacteria, eukaryotes all
compartments. - ?Regulated by ATP hydrolysis.
- ?Undergo cycles of binding and release
- ?Act with cofactors (i.e. DnaJ, GrpE, Hip, Hop,
Bag1).
8- D. Features of molecular chaperones
- ii. Chaperonins (GroEL, Hsp 60, TCP-1)
- ?Facilitate proper folding
- ?Bind and hydrolyze ATP
- ?Bind transiently to 10-15 proteins, but
2-3fold more w/stress - ?60 kD proteins that form oligomeric, stacked
double rings - ?Bring non-native substrate protein to central
cavity folding where protected from aggregation
with other non-native proteins - ?Cycles of binding and release until the protein
is properly folded - ?GroEL (prokaryotic hsp 60) uses a cofactor,
GroES. - Others I.e. small heat shock proteins, hsp 90,
etc. -
9- iv. Cytosolic chaperone co-ordination
- Chaperones act in tandem. Stabilization by Hsp
70 plus cofactors) may be followed by use of Hsp
60 for proper folding.
From Frydman, J. Annual Rev. of Biochemistry
70603, 2001
10- 3. Quality control in the ER
- A. Translation and translocation of proteins
into the ER - ? Proteins that translocate into ER of
mammalian cells include secretory proteins, TM
proteins, or residents of a membranous
compartment. - ? These are targeted to the ER
CO-TRANSLATIONALLY by an N-terminal signal
sequence that generally gets cleaved during
translocation across the ER membrane.
The Signal Hypothesis
SRP and SRP Receptor
11Translocation of Secretory Protein
Translocation of Single Pass TM Protein
Translocation of Double Pass TM Protein
12- 3. Quality Control in the ER
- B. Features of the ER
- ?Proteins need to be unfolded to translocate
- ?Until signal sequence cleaved, N terminus of
protein is constrained "incorrectly - ?ER lumen is topologically equivalent to
extracellular space - ?High oxidizing potential (unlike cytoplasm
which is highly reduced) - ?High Ca2 concentration unlike cytoplasm
- ?Many sugars present along with machinery for
glycosylation - ?As in cytoplasm high protein conc. (100
mg/ml) promotes aggregation - ?As in cytoplasm delay between translation/
translocation vs. folding - ?Site of specific post-translational events
signal cleavage, S-S bond formation, N-linked
glycosylation and GPI anchor addition
13- 3. Quality Control in the ER
- C. Specific ER chaperones
- i. HSP 70 family members BiP/GRP78
- ?Recognize hydrophobic sequences in nascent
chains. - ?Undergo successive rounds of ATP-dependent
binding and release. - ?Essential for translocation of
newly-synthesized proteins across the ER lumen
and for retrograde transport into the cytosol
(see ERAD, below). - ii. Immunophilins/ FKBP - peptidyl prolyl
isomerases. - iii. Thiol-disulfide isomerases - PDI and
ERp57 -
- iv. Calnexin and Calreticulin
- ?Unique to the ER
- ?Are lectins (carbohydrate binding proteins)
- ?Calreticulin - lumenal Calnexin - integral
membrane protein -
14- 3. Quality Control in the ER
- D. Mechanisms
- To pass QC checkpoints, protein must be
correctly folded (most energetically favorable,
native state) -
- If protein fails to fold properly it must be
degraded -
- I. Example 1 BiP
- BiP (Hsp70 in ER) binds to newly-synthesized and
unfolded chains. - BiP stays associated with misfolded (but not
properly folded) proteins. - Retention by BiP leads to degradation (see
proteolysis below).
153. Quality Control in the ER
- D. Mechanisms, cont.
- Example 2 Calnexin/calreticulin bind to
incompletely folded monoglucosylated glycans - Cycles of binding/release controlled by
- Glucosidase II cleaves glucose from core glycan
- UDP-glucose glucosyltransferase (GT)
reglucosylates incompletely-folded proteins so
that they bind lectins again - Thus GT acts as a folding sensor proteins exit
the cycle when GT fails to re-glucosylate.
Glucose is a tag that signifies incomplete
folding
16- 3. Quality Control in the ER
- D. Mechanisms, cont.
- iii. Example 3 Trimming of a single mannose is
a signal for degradation. - Causes association with ER degradation-enhancing
mannosidase like protein (EDEM), which is a link
to ER-associated degradation (see proteolysis
below)
Tsai, B. et al. Nature Rev. Mol. Cell Bio. 3 246
(2002).
17- 4. Selective post-translational proteolysis.
- Selective proteolysis is critical for cellular
regulation. - 3 steps for proteolysis in the cytoplasm
- identify protein to be degraded
- mark it by ubiquitination
- deliver it to the proteasome, a protease complex
that degrades it -
- A. The Ubiquitin/Proteasome system
- Ubiquitin
- A highly-conserved 76 aa protein present in all
eukaryotes. - Covalently attached to e-amino groups in lysine
side chains, - Can be a single ubiquitin or multiple branched
ubiquitins. -
- Signal for ubiquitination can be
- 1. Programmed via hydrophobic sequence or
other motif - 2. Acquired by 1) phosphorylation, 2) binding
to adaptor protein, or 3) protein damage due to
fragmentation, oxidation or aging. -
18- Post-translational Quality Control Selective
proteolysis. - B. Ubiquitination requires 3 enzymes
- E1 (ubiquitin-activating enzyme) activates
ubiquitin (U) - E2 (ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme) acquires U
via high-energy thioester - E3 (ubiquitin ligase) transfers U to target
proteins - Hierarchical organization one or few E1s exist,
more E2s, many E3s. - Other functions for ubiquitination (to be
discussed in plasma membrane lecture).
19- 4. Post-translational Quality Control
Selective proteolysis - B. The Proteasome - high molecular weight (28S)
protease complex that degrades ubiquitinated
proteins in the cytoplasm - Present in cytoplasm and nucleus, not ER
- Uses ATP
- Contains a 700 kD protease core and two 900 kD
regulatory domains. - Highly conserved and similar to proteases found
in bacteria. - Shaped like a cylinder.
- Proteins enter the cavity, and are cleaved into
small peptides. - Most but not all proteasome substrates are
ubiqutinated.
20- 4. Post-translational Quality Control
Selective Proteolysis - Misfolding in the ER results in
- ER-associated degradation (see below)
- Lysosomal degradation (next lecture)
-
- ER-Associated Protein Degradation (ERAD)
- Earlier notion was that ER had proteases.
- However, in fact most ER proteins targeted for
degradation undergo retrograde translocation
into cytosol and delivery to the proteasome.
21- Glycosylation in the ER and beyond
- Role of sugars in the ER bulky hydrophilic
groups that maintain proteins in solution, affect
protein conformation, and allow lectins to
facilitate folding and exert quality control. - A. N-linked glycosylation - co-translational
recognizes Asn-x-Ser/Thr on nascent chain - Catalyzed by oligosaccharyltransferases -
integral membrane proteins with active site in
the lumen. Transfers a preformed "high mannose"
14-residue sugar(Glc3Man9GlcNAc2) en bloc to
asparagine residues on the acceptor nascent
polypeptide chains. Highly conserved in
mammals, plants, fungi. - i. Donor molecule is dolichol-P-P-Glc3Man9GlcNAc
2. Dolichol is a very long lipid carrier. - ii. Subsequent trimming of residues (also
called processing) off core sugar attached to
protein occurs in the ER via glucosidases and
mannosidases. - N glycosylation can be prevented using
- Tunicamycin inhibits formation of the
dolichol-P-P precursor. -
22Bacteria no N-glycosylation via dolichol Yeast
have only oligomannose type N-glycans, because
they don't have the ability to add GlcNac in the
trans Golgi Since bacteria yeast lack
Glc-Nac transferase enzyme, this enzyme
demarcates a fundamental evolutionary boundary
between uni- and multicellular organisms.
- Glycosylation in the ER and beyond
- A. N-linked glycosylation, cont.
- iii. ? -Glucosyltransferase recognizes misfolded
glycoproteins and reglycosylates them. - Calreticulin and calnexin serve as sensors by
binding to mono-glucosylated proteins,
facilitating their folding and assembly. - Only glycoproteins that have been correctly
folded (by calnexin and calreticulin), get
packaged into ER-to-Golgi transport vesicles. - In the cis Golgi, further processing addition
of GlcNac's to form branched structures - Addition of more sugar residues in the
trans-Golgi (I.e. fucose and sialic acid) to
produce the diversity that is seen in mature
glycans.
23(No Transcript)
24- Glycosylation in the ER and beyond
- B. O-linked glycosylation
- Many different types of sugars are added onto
-OH of serine or threonine residues. - Most of these are added in ER or Golgi
- However, addition of N-acetylglucosamine
(GlcNac) can occur in cytoplasm on many different
types of proteins - May play an important role in signaling, much
like phosphorylation - May act in signaling to oppose phosphorylation
25- Other post-translational modifications
- A. Disulfide bond formation in the ER
- Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) in the ER
catalyzes oxidation of disulfide bonds - in the cytosol and at the plasma membrane
reduces disulfide bonds - Other proteins that act like PDI may be even
more important in disulfide bond formation - Requires action of a regenerating molecule (i.e.
glutathione) NADPH is the source of redox
equivalents.
26- 6. Other post-translational modifications, cont.
- B. Phosphorylation
- Kinases phosphorylate proteins at the hydroxyl
groups of serine, threonine, and tyrosine - Occurs in cytoplasm and nucleus
- C. Intracellular Proteolytic Cleavage
- Furin - protease that cleaves specific sites,
located in the trans-Golgi network and in
endosomes. -
- D. Modified amino acids
- hydroxyproline, hydroxylysine,
3-methylhistidine - E. Lipidation
27- 7. Post-translational Modifications that Alter
Location - A. Acylation - Lipid attachments that anchor
proteins to the membranes - Include myristoylation, palmitoylation,
prenylation - Involves addition to protein of fatty acids
(long hydrocarbon ending in COOH) - Allows proteins to target to the cytoplasmic
faces of membrane compartments -
28- 7. Post-translational Modifications that Alter
Location - i. Myristoylation addition of C-14 FA
myristate to N-terminus in cytoplasm - Donor is myristoyl CoA
- Occurs co-translationally in the cytoplasm can
occur post-translationally when hidden motif is
revealed by protein cleavage (i.e. pro-apoptotic
protein BID) - Enzyme NMT recognizes consensus sequence at
N-terminus often revealed by a - conformational change (myristoyl switch).
- Promotes weak but typically irreversible
interaction with cytosolic membrane face - Myristoylated proteins traffic through the
cytoplasm - Myristoylation necessary but not sufficient for
membrane binding - Second signal needed for membrane binding
myristate plus basic (basic aas interact with
acidic phospholipids PS and PI), or myristate
plus palmitate -
Myristoylation
29- 7. Post-translational Modifications that Alter
Location - ii. Palmitoylation - addition of a C-16 fatty
acid to the thiol side chain of an internal
cysteine residue. - Promotes a reversible interaction with membrane
- Palmitoylated proteins traffic to membrane via
cytoplasm or via secretory pathway - Enzymes not well understood
- Myristoylated and palmitoylated proteins
are enriched in caveolae and rafts -
-
Palmitoylation
30- 7. Post-translational Modifications that Alter
Location - iii. Prenylation - addition of prenyl groups
(two types) to S in internal cysteine - a. Farnesylation - C15 fatty acid to C
terminus by thioester linkage - Occurs at CAAX sequences cys, 2 aliphatic
residues and C-terminal residue - After attachment, last 3 residues are removed
and new C terminal methylated - Creates a highly hydrophobic C terminus
- b. Geranylgeranylation - similar to above but
addition of C-20 to C terminal Cys
Farnesylation
31- 7. Post-translational Modifications that Alter
Location - iii. Examples of acylated proteins important
for pathogenesis - Myristoylated proteins HIV-1 Gag, HIV-1 Nef
which target to the PM Arfs involved in coat
protein binding to vesicles (see ER-Golgi
lecture) -
- Palmitoylated proteins caveolin (see PM
lecture) -
- Dual acylated proteins (myr plus palm) found
in Src tyrosine kinases, i.e. Lyn, Fyn, Hck, etc.
(see Signaling overview lecture) - Met-Gly-Cys signal for dual acylation
-
- Farnesylation Ras, does not insert into the
membrane or act in signal transduction unless
farnesylated. -
- Geranylgeranylation Rab GTP-binding proteins
that mediate initial vesicle targeting events
(see PM lecture)
32- 7. Post-translational Modifications that Alter
Location - B. GPI anchors - Glycophosphatidyl inositol (GPI)
attached to the C terminus - ?Composed of oligosaccharides and inositol
phospholipids - ?Provides a mechanism for anchoring cell-surface
proteins to the membrane - as a flexible leash that allows the entire
protein (except for anchor) to be in
extracellular space (unlike a transmembrane
protein) - ?Added to translocated proteins in ER
- ?Targets to PM via secretory pathway
- ?Unlike with N- or O-glycosylation, no more than
ONE GPI anchor per protein - ?Unlike acylation, targets proteins to outer
leaflet of plasma membrane - ?Can be cleaved by PI-phospholipase C (PI-PLC)
- ?Are minor components on mammalian cells but
abundant on surfaces of parasitic protozoa (i.e.
trypanosomes and Leishmania) and yeasts - ?Concentrated in lipid rafts
33(No Transcript)
34- 7. Post-translational Modifications that Alter
Location - B. GPI anchors - Functions
- Stronger anchoring to PM than acylation
- Some GPI anchors can be replaced with TM anchors
and be functional others cannot - Crosslinking results in signal transdcution
across bilayer, including Ca influx, tyrosine
phosphorylation, cytokine secretion, etc. - Can interact with TM proteins capable of
intracellular signaling - Can indirectly modulate activity of cytosolic
signaling molecules assoc. w/ lipid rafts
35- 8. Examples from Pathobiology
- ERAD discovered through study of CMV US11 (Wiertz
et al., Cell 84 769, 1996). - 1. MHC class I, a TM protein, binds viral
peptides produced in cells and presents them at
the cell surface to cytotoxic T cells. - 2. CMV evades the immune system by targeting
MHC class I for destruction soon after it is
synthesized and translocated into the ER. How
does it do this? - 3. CMV US11 protein expressed alone causes MHC
class I destruction. - 4. US 11 effect is sensitive to proteasome
inhibitors and involves MHC class I localization
to cytoplasm, implying movemnt of US 11 out of ER
into cytoplasm for degradation. - 5. Before this paper, only forward movement
thru translocon was thought to occur this paper
by Ploeghs group studying a CMV protein raised
the possibility of retrograde movement thru
translocon.
ERAD
6. Subsequently, retrograde movement thru
translocon for degradation (ERAD) was shown to be
a common in non-infected cells. 7. Note that MHC
class I needs to be poly-ubiquitinated for
retrograde transport to occur, implying a role
for ubiqutination in retrolocation, not just in
targeting for degradation. 8. Additional studies
reveal that other pathogens use this mechanism
I.e. HIV-1 accessory protein Vpu promotes
degradation of CD4 by ERAD.
36- 8. Examples from Pathobiology
- HIV-1 envelope protein undergoes many critical
post-translational modifications - 1. HIV env consists of gp120 soluble portion
bound non-covalently to TM gp41. - Role is to bind CD4 and chemokine receptors
during HIV-1 entry. - 2. Co-translationally translocated into ER as
gp160. - 3. Has 30 potential sites for N-linked
glycosylation in ER. - If non-glycosylated wont bind CD4.
- Some glycosylations are dispensible for proper
folding others are needed. - 4. Forms 10 disulfide bonds in ER (9 are in
gp120 portion). - 5. Trimerization of HIV-1 env in ER
- 6. Proper folding/trimerization equires BiP,
calnexin, calreticulin, and PDI. - 7. In Golgi protease-mediated cleavage of
gp160 to gp120 and gp41.
Land, A. and I. Braakman, Biochimie 83 783
(2001).
37- Additional Reading
- Tsai, B. et al. Retro-translocation of proteins
from the endoplasmic reticulum into the cytosol.
Nature Rev. Mol. Cell Bio. 3 246 (2002). - Freiman, R. N. and R. Tijan. Regulating the
regulators Lysine modifications make their
mark. Cell 112 11 - 17 (2003). - Resh, M. Fatty acylation of proteins new
insights into membrane targeting of myristoylated
and palmitoylated proteins. BBA 1451 1 (1999). - Land, A. and I. Braakman. Folding of the human
immunodeficiency virus type I envelope
glycoprotein in the endoplasmic reticulum.
Biochimie 83 783 (2001). - Chatterjee, S. and S. Mayor. The GPI-anchor and
protein sorting. Cell Mol. Life Sci 58 1969
(2001). - McClellan A et al. Protein quality control
chaperones culling corrupt conformations. Nat
Cell Biol. 2005 Aug7(8)736-41. - Gill, G. SUMO and ubiquitin in the nucleus
different functions, similar mechanisms? Genes
Dev. 2004 Sep 118(17)2046-59. Review.