Skip to Content
Merck
CN
  • The endoplasmic reticulum-residing chaperone BiP is short-lived and metabolized through N-terminal arginylation.

The endoplasmic reticulum-residing chaperone BiP is short-lived and metabolized through N-terminal arginylation.

Science signaling (2018-01-04)
Sang Mi Shim, Ha Rim Choi, Ki Woon Sung, Yoon Jee Lee, Sung Tae Kim, Daeho Kim, Su Ran Mun, Joonsung Hwang, Hyunjoo Cha-Molstad, Aaron Ciechanover, Bo Yeon Kim, Yong Tae Kwon
ABSTRACT

BiP and other endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident proteins are thought to be metabolically stable and to function primarily in the ER lumen. We sought to assess how the abundance of these proteins dynamically fluctuates in response to various stresses and how their subpopulations are relocated to non-ER compartments such as the cytosol. We showed that the molecular chaperone BiP (also known as GRP78) was short-lived under basal conditions and ER stress. The turnover of BiP was in part driven by its amino-terminal arginylation (Nt-arginylation) by the arginyltransferase ATE1, which generated an autophagic N-degron of the N-end rule pathway. ER stress elicited the formation of R-BiP, an effect that was increased when the proteasome was also inhibited. Nt-arginylation correlated with the cytosolic relocalization of BiP under the types of stress tested. The cytosolic relocalization of BiP did not require the functionality of the unfolded protein response or the Sec61- or Derlin1-containing translocon. A key inhibitor of the turnover and Nt-arginylation of BiP was HERP (homocysteine-responsive ER protein), a 43-kDa ER membrane-integrated protein that is an essential component of ER-associated protein degradation. Pharmacological inhibition of the ER-Golgi secretory pathway also suppressed R-BiP formation. Finally, we showed that cytosolic R-BiP induced by ER stress and proteasomal inhibition was routed to autophagic vacuoles and possibly additional metabolic fates. These results suggest that Nt-arginylation is a posttranslational modification that modulates the function, localization, and metabolic fate of ER-resident proteins.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-LC3B antibody produced in rabbit, ~1 mg/mL, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous solution
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-BiP (GRP78) Antibody, arginylated (Nt-Glu19), from rabbit, purified by affinity chromatography
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-β-Actin antibody, Mouse monoclonal, clone AC-15, purified from hybridoma cell culture