Selected article for: "amino acid and El protein"

Title: A Golgi retention signal in a membrane-spanning domain of coronavirus E1 protein
  • Document date: 1991_10_1
  • ID: s4a8zs5a_2
    Snippet: One current hypothesis involves the idea that proteins destined for constitutive secretion or insertion at the plasma membrane are transported by default with the bulk flow of lipid (35) . Proteins destined for lysosomes or secretory granules (in cells which perform regulated secretion) are directed by specific signals once they have traversed the Golgi complex . This hypothesis requires that resident proteins of the ER and Golgi complex have spe.....
    Document: One current hypothesis involves the idea that proteins destined for constitutive secretion or insertion at the plasma membrane are transported by default with the bulk flow of lipid (35) . Proteins destined for lysosomes or secretory granules (in cells which perform regulated secretion) are directed by specific signals once they have traversed the Golgi complex . This hypothesis requires that resident proteins of the ER and Golgi complex have specific signals that cause their retention in the appropriate compartment . Evidence is accumulating to support this idea. A tripeptide which is presumed to lack any signals for transport is secreted rapidly from cells and defines the rate of"bulk flow" (47) . Retention signals for both soluble and membranebound ER proteins have been identified (14, 30, 31) . The mannose-6-phosphate modification on lysosomal hydrolases is recognized by a receptor in the Golgi complex which targets these proteins to lysosomes (20 their single membrane-spanning domains were replaced with the first membrane-spanning domain from El. Single amino acid substitutions in this sequence released retention of the chimeric G protein, as well as a mutant El protein which lacks the second and third membrane-spanning domains. The important feature of the retention sequence appears to be the uncharged polar residues which line one face of a predicted alpha helix . This is the first retention signal to be defined for a resident Golgi protein . The fact that it is present in a membrane-spanning domain suggests a novel mechanism of retention in which the membrane composition of the Golgi complex plays an instrumental role in retaining its resident proteins.

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