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A microsomal ATP‐binding protein involved in efficient protein transport into the mammalian endoplasmic reticulum.
Author(s) -
Dierks T.,
Volkmer J.,
Schlenstedt G.,
Jung C.,
Sandholzer U.,
Zachmann K.,
Schlotterhose P.,
Neifer K.,
Schmidt B.,
Zimmermann R.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1996.tb01085.x
Subject(s) - endoplasmic reticulum , chemistry , biochemistry
Protein transport into the mammalian endoplasmic reticulum depends on nucleoside triphosphates. Photoaffinity labelling of microsomes with azido‐ATP prevents protein transport at the level of association of precursor proteins with the components of the transport machinery, Sec61alpha and TRAM proteins. The same phenotype of inactivation was observed after depleting a microsomal detergent extract of ATP‐binding proteins by passage through ATP‐agarose and subsequent reconstitution of the pass‐through into proteoliposomes. Transport was restored by co‐reconstitution of the ATP eluate. This eluate showed eight distinct bands in SDS gels. We identified five lumenal proteins (Grp170, Grp94, BiP/Grp78, calreticulin and protein disulfide isomerase), one membrane protein (ribophorin I) and two ribosomal proteins (L4 and L5). In addition to BiP (Grp78), Grp170 was most efficiently retained on ATP‐agarose. Purified BiP did not stimulate transport activity. Sequence analysis revealed a striking similarity of Grp170 and the yeast microsomal protein Lhs1p which was recently shown to be involved in protein transport into yeast microsomes. We suggest that Grp170 mediates efficient insertion of polypeptides into the microsomal membrane at the expense of nucleoside triphosphates.

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