The ER membrane protein complex interacts cotranslationally to enable biogenesis of multipass membrane proteins

Matthew J. Shurtleff(University of California, San Francisco), Daniel N. Itzhak(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Jeffrey A. Hussmann(University of California, San Francisco), Nicole T Schirle Oakdale(University of California, San Francisco), Elizabeth A. Costa(University of California, San Francisco), Martin C. Jonikas(University of California, San Francisco), Jimena Weibezahn(University of California, San Francisco), Katerina D. Popova(University of California, San Francisco), Calvin H. Jan(University of California, San Francisco), Pavel Sinitcyn(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Shruthi Sridhar Vembar(University of Pittsburgh), Hilda Hernández(University of California, San Francisco), Jürgen Cox(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Alma L. Burlingame(University of California, San Francisco), Jeffrey L. Brodsky(University of Pittsburgh), Adam Frost(University of California, San Francisco), Georg H. H. Borner(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Jonathan S. Weissman(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
eLife
May 29, 2018
Cited by 244Open Access
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Abstract

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) supports biosynthesis of proteins with diverse transmembrane domain (TMD) lengths and hydrophobicity. Features in transmembrane domains such as charged residues in ion channels are often functionally important, but could pose a challenge during cotranslational membrane insertion and folding. Our systematic proteomic approaches in both yeast and human cells revealed that the ER membrane protein complex (EMC) binds to and promotes the biogenesis of a range of multipass transmembrane proteins, with a particular enrichment for transporters. Proximity-specific ribosome profiling demonstrates that the EMC engages clients cotranslationally and immediately following clusters of TMDs enriched for charged residues. The EMC can remain associated after completion of translation, which both protects clients from premature degradation and allows recruitment of substrate-specific and general chaperones. Thus, the EMC broadly enables the biogenesis of multipass transmembrane proteins containing destabilizing features, thereby mitigating the trade-off between function and stability.


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