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    Date Issued1999 (1)1997 (1)AuthorJenness, Duane D. (2)Li, Yu (2)Spatrick, Phyllis (2)
    Tipper, Christopher (2)
    Kane, Thomas (1)UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology (2)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordLife Sciences (2)Medicine and Health Sciences (2)Amino Acid Sequence; *Amino Acid Transport Systems; Amino Acid Transport Systems, Basic; Cell Membrane; Cloning, Molecular; Endosomes; Fungal Proteins; Green Fluorescent Proteins; Luminescent Proteins; Membrane Proteins; Membrane Transport Proteins; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Molecular Sequence Data; Mutation; Peptides; Protein Folding; Receptors, Cell Surface; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins; Sequence Homology, Amino Acid; Suppression, Genetic (1)Biological Transport; Cell Compartmentation; Cell Membrane; Cloning, Molecular; Fungal Proteins; Models, Molecular; Mutation; Protein Conformation; Protein Folding; Receptors, Mating Factor; Receptors, Peptide; Reproduction; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Sequence Analysis, DNA; *Transcription Factors; Vacuoles (1)View MoreJournalMolecular and cellular biology (2)

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    Yeast mutants affecting possible quality control of plasma membrane proteins

    Li, Yu; Kane, Thomas; Tipper, Christopher; Spatrick, Phyllis; Jenness, Duane D. (1999-04-17)
    Mutations gef1, stp22, STP26, and STP27 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae were identified as suppressors of the temperature-sensitive alpha-factor receptor (mutation ste2-3) and arginine permease (mutation can1(ts)). These suppressors inhibited the elimination of misfolded receptors (synthesized at 34 degrees C) as well as damaged surface receptors (shifted from 22 to 34 degrees C). The stp22 mutation (allelic to vps23 [M. Babst and S. Emr, personal communication] and the STP26 mutation also caused missorting of carboxypeptidase Y, and ste2-3 was suppressed by mutations vps1, vps8, vps10, and vps28 but not by mutation vps3. In the stp22 mutant, both the mutant and the wild-type receptors (tagged with green fluorescent protein [GFP]) accumulated within an endosome-like compartment and were excluded from the vacuole. GFP-tagged Stp22p also accumulated in this compartment. Upon reaching the vacuole, cytoplasmic domains of both mutant and wild-type receptors appeared within the vacuolar lumen. Stp22p and Gef1p are similar to tumor susceptibility protein TSG101 and voltage-gated chloride channel, respectively. These results identify potential elements of plasma membrane quality control and indicate that cytoplasmic domains of membrane proteins are translocated into the vacuolar lumen.
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    Elimination of defective alpha-factor pheromone receptors

    Jenness, Duane D.; Li, Yu; Tipper, Christopher; Spatrick, Phyllis (1997-10-29)
    This report compares trafficking routes of a plasma membrane protein that was misfolded either during its synthesis or after it had reached the cell surface. A temperature-sensitive mutant form of the yeast alpha-factor pheromone receptor (ste2-3) was found to provide a model substrate for quality control of plasma membrane proteins. We show for the first time that a misfolded membrane protein is recognized at the cell surface and rapidly removed. When the ste2-3 mutant cells were cultured continuously at 34 degrees C, the mutant receptor protein (Ste2-3p) failed to accumulate at the plasma membrane and was degraded with a half-life of 4 min, compared with a half-life of 33 min for wild-type receptor protein (Ste2p). Degradation of both Ste2-3p and Ste2p required the vacuolar proteolytic activities controlled by the PEP4 gene. At 34 degrees C, Ste2-3p comigrated with glycosylated Ste2p on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, indicating that Ste2-3p enters the secretory pathway. Degradation of Ste2-3p did not require delivery to the plasma membrane as the sec1 mutation failed to block rapid turnover. Truncation of the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of the mutant receptors did not permit accumulation at the plasma membrane; thus, the endocytic signals contained in this domain are unnecessary for intracellular retention. In the pep4 mutant, Ste2-3p accumulated as series of high-molecular-weight species, suggesting a potential role for ubiquitin in the elimination process. When ste2-3 mutant cells were cultured continuously at 22 degrees C, Ste2-3p accumulated in the plasma membrane. When the 22 degrees C culture was shifted to 34 degrees C, Ste2-3p was removed from the plasma membrane and degraded by a PEP4-dependent mechanism with a 24-min half-life; the wild-type Ste2p displayed a 72-min half-life. Thus, structural defects in Ste2-3p synthesized at 34 degrees C are recognized in transit to the plasma membrane, leading to rapid degradation, and Ste2-3p that is preassembled at the plasma membrane is also removed and degraded following a shift to 34 degrees C.
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