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Export of the High Affinity IgE Receptor From the Endoplasmic Reticulum Depends on a Glycosylation-Mediated Quality Control Mechanism
Author(s) -
Bettina Albrecht,
Maximilian Woisetschläger,
Michael W. Robertson
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.165.10.5686
Subject(s) - calnexin , endoplasmic reticulum , calreticulin , er retention , chaperone (clinical) , protein subunit , chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , alpha chain , biochemistry , receptor , biology , mutant , gene , medicine , pathology
The high affinity IgE receptor (FcepsilonRI) is a multisubunit complex comprised of either alphagamma(2) or alphabetagamma(2) chains. The cotranslational assembly of the IgE-binding alpha-chain with a dimer of gamma-chains occurs in a highly controlled manner and is proposed to involve masking of a dilysine motif present at the cytoplasmic C terminus of the FcepsilonRI alpha-chain that targets localization of this subunit to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Here, we show that ER quality control modulates export from the ER of newly synthesized alphagamma(2) and alphabetagamma(2) receptors. We demonstrate that the presence of untrimmed N-linked core glycans (Glc(3)Man(9)GlcNAc(2)) on the FcepsilonRI alpha-chain activates the ER quality control mechanism to retain this subunit in the ER, despite the presence of gamma-chains. At the same time, the untrimmed, ER-localized alpha-chain exhibits IgE-binding activity, suggesting that FcepsilonRI alpha-chain folding occurs before constitutive glucose trimming. In additional experiments, we demonstrate that cell surface expression of an alpha-chain C-terminal truncation mutant is also dependent on glucose trimming, but not on gamma-chain coexpression. We suggest that glucosidase trimming of terminal glucose residues is a critical control step in the export of FcepsilonRIalpha from the ER. Finally, we show that the constitutive ER FcepsilonRI alpha-chain, expressed in the absence of the other FcepsilonRI subunits, associates with the ER lectin-like chaperone calnexin, but not the structurally similar ER chaperone calreticulin, presumably through interaction with monoglucosylated alpha-chain ER glycoforms.

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