scholarly journals A role for N-myristoylation in protein targeting: NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase requires myristic acid for association with outer mitochondrial but not ER membranes.

1996 ◽  
Vol 135 (6) ◽  
pp. 1501-1513 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Borgese ◽  
D Aggujaro ◽  
P Carrera ◽  
G Pietrini ◽  
M Bassetti

N-myristoylation is a cotranslational modification involved in protein-protein interactions as well as in anchoring polypeptides to phospholipid bilayers; however, its role in targeting proteins to specific subcellular compartments has not been clearly defined. The mammalian myristoylated flavoenzyme NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase is integrated into ER and mitochondrial outer membranes via an anchor containing a stretch of 14 uncharged amino acids downstream to the NH2-terminal myristoylate glycine. Since previous studies suggested that the anchoring function could be adequately carried out by the 14 uncharged residues, we investigated a possible role for myristic acid in reductase targeting. The wild type (wt) and a nonmyristoylatable reductase mutant (gly2-->ala) were stably expressed in MDCK cells, and their localization was investigated by immunofluorescence, immuno-EM, and cell fractionation. By all three techniques, the wt protein localized to ER and mitochondria, while the nonmyristoylated mutant was found only on ER membranes. Pulse-chase experiments indicated that this altered steady state distribution was due to the mutant's inability to target to mitochondria, and not to its enhanced instability in that location. Both wt and mutant reductase were resistant to Na2CO3 extraction and partitioned into the detergent phase after treatment of a membrane fraction with Triton X-114, demonstrating that myristic acid is not required for tight anchoring of reductase to membranes. Our results indicate that myristoylated reductase localizes to ER and mitochondria by different mechanisms, and reveal a novel role for myristic acid in protein targeting.

1991 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 5101-5112
Author(s):  
J S Flick ◽  
M Johnston

Growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae on glucose leads to repression of transcription of many genes required for alternative carbohydrate metabolism. The GRR1 gene appears to be of central importance to the glucose repression mechanism, because mutations in GRR1 result in a pleiotropic loss of glucose repression (R. Bailey and A. Woodword, Mol. Gen. Genet. 193:507-512, 1984). We have isolated the GRR1 gene and determined that null mutants are viable and display a number of growth defects in addition to the loss of glucose repression. Surprisingly, grr1 mutations convert SUC2, normally a glucose-repressed gene, into a glucose-induced gene. GRR1 encodes a protein of 1,151 amino acids that is expressed constitutively at low levels in yeast cells. GRR1 protein contains 12 tandem repeats of a sequence similar to leucine-rich motifs found in other proteins that may mediate protein-protein interactions. Indeed, cell fractionation studies are consistent with this view, suggesting that GRR1 protein is tightly associated with a particulate protein fraction in yeast extracts. The combined genetic and molecular data are consistent with the idea that GRR1 protein is a primary response element in the glucose repression pathway and is required for the generation or interpretation of the signal that induces glucose repression.


2008 ◽  
Vol 295 (5) ◽  
pp. F1314-F1323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca J. Clifford ◽  
Jack H. Kaplan

In eukaryotic cells, the apparent maintenance of 1:1 stoicheometry between the Na-K-ATPase α- and β-subunits led us to question whether this was alterable and thus if some form of regulation was involved. We have examined the consequences of overexpressing Na-K-ATPase β1-subunits using Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells expressing flag-tagged β1-subunits (β1flag) or Myc-tagged β1-subunits (β1myc) under the control of a tetracycline-dependent promoter. The induction of β1flag subunit synthesis in MDCK cells, which increases β1-subunit expression at the plasma membrane by more than twofold, while maintaining stable α1 expression levels, revealed that all mature β1-subunits associate with α1-subunits, and no evidence of “free” β1-subunits was obtained. Consequently, the ratio of assembled β1- to α1-subunits is significantly increased when “extra” β-subunits are expressed. An increased β1/α1 stoicheometry is also observed in cells treated with tunicamycin, suggesting that the protein-protein interactions involved in these complexes are not dependent on glycosylation. Confocal images of cocultured β1myc-expressing and β1flag-expressing MDCK cells show colocalization of β1myc and β1flag subunits at the lateral membranes of neighboring cells, suggesting the occurrence of intercellular interactions between the β-subunits. Immunoprecipitation using MDCK cells constitutively expressing β1myc and tetracycline-regulated β1flag subunits confirmed β-β-subunit interactions. These results demonstrate that the equimolar ratio of assembled β1/α1-subunits of the Na-K-ATPase in kidney cells is not fixed by the inherent properties of the interacting subunits. It is likely that cellular mechanisms are present that regulate the individual Na-K-ATPase subunit abundance.


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