Biosynthesis of surfactant protein C: characterization of aggresome formation by EGFP chimeras containing propeptide mutants lacking conserved cysteine residues

2001 ◽  
Vol 114 (2) ◽  
pp. 293-302
Author(s):  
A.F. Kabore ◽  
W.J. Wang ◽  
S.J. Russo ◽  
M.F. Beers

Surfactant protein C (SP-C) is a lung-specific secreted protein, which is synthesized as a 21-kDa propeptide (SP-C(21)) and then proteolytically processed as a bitopic transmembrane protein in subcellular compartments distal to the medial Golgi to produce a 3.7 kDa mature form. We have shown that initial processing of SP-C(21) involves two endoproteolytic cleavages of the C terminus and that truncation of nine amino acids from the C-flanking peptide resulted in retention of mutant protein in proximal compartments. Because these truncations involved removal of a conserved cysteine residue (Cys(186)), we hypothesized that intralumenal disulfide-mediated folding of the C terminus of SP-C(21) is required for intracellular trafficking. To test this, cDNA constructs encoding heterologous fusion proteins consisting of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) attached to the N terminus of wild-type rat proSP-C (EGFP/SP-C(1–194)), C-terminally deleted proSP-C (EGFP/SP-C(1–185); EGFP/SP-C(1–191)) or point mutations of conserved cysteine residues (EGFP/SP-C(C122G); EGFP/SP-C(C186G); or EGFP/SP-C(C122/186G)) were transfected into A549 cells. Fluorescence microscopy revealed that transfected EGFP/SP-C(1–194) and EGFP/SP-C(1–191)were expressed in a punctate pattern within CD-63 positive, EEA-1 negative cytoplasmic vesicles. In contrast, EGFP/SP-C(1–185), EGFP/SP-C(C122G), EGFP/SP-C(C186G) and EGFP/SP-C(C122/186G) were expressed but retained in a juxtanuclear compartment that stained for ubiquitin and that contained (γ)-tubulin and vimentin, consistent with expression in aggresomes. Treatment of cells transfected with mutant proSP-C with the proteasome inhibitor lactacysteine enhanced aggresome formation, which could be blocked by coincubation with nocodazole. Western blots using a GFP antibody detected a single form in lysates of cells transfected with EGFP/SP-C cysteine mutants, without evidence of smaller degradation fragments. We conclude that residues Cys(122) and Cys(186) of proSP-C are required for proper post-translational trafficking. Mutation or deletion of one or both of these residues results in misfolding with mistargeting of unprocessed mutant protein, leading to formation of stable aggregates within aggresomes.

Author(s):  
Surafel Mulugeta ◽  
Adam Kotorashvili ◽  
Ming Zhao ◽  
Wenge Ding ◽  
Michael F. Beers

2002 ◽  
Vol 361 (3) ◽  
pp. 663-671 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anja ten BRINKE ◽  
Arie B. VAANDRAGER ◽  
Henk P. HAAGSMAN ◽  
Anja N. J. A. RIDDER ◽  
Lambert M. G. van GOLDE ◽  
...  

Pulmonary surfactant protein C (SP-C) propeptide (proSP-C) is a type II transmembrane protein that is palmitoylated on two cysteines adjacent to its transmembrane domain. To study the structural requirements for palmitoylation of proSP-C, His-tagged human proSP-C and mutant forms were expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells and analysed by metabolic labelling with [3H]palmitate. Mutations were made in the amino acid sequence representing mature SP-C, as deletion of the N- and C-terminal propeptide parts showed that this sequence by itself could already be palmitoylated. Substitution of the transmembrane domain by an artificial transmembrane domain had no effect on palmitoylation. However, an inverse correlation was found between palmitoylation of proSP-C and the number of amino acids present between the cysteines and the transmembrane domain. Moreover, substitution by alanines of amino acids localized on the N-terminal side of the cysteines had drastic effects on palmitoylation, probably as a result of the removal of hydrophobic amino acids. These data, together with the observation that substitution by alanines of the amino acids localized between the cysteines and the transmembrane domain had no effect on palmitoylation, suggest that the palmitoylation of proSP-C depends not on specific sequence motifs, but more on the probability that the cysteine is in the vicinity of the membrane surface. This is probably determined not only by the number of amino acids between the cysteines and the transmembrane domain, but also by the hydrophobic interaction of the N-terminus with the membrane. This may also be the case for the palmitoylation of other transmembrane proteins.


2010 ◽  
Vol 222 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
J Pöschl ◽  
P Ruef ◽  
M Griese ◽  
P Lohse ◽  
C Aslanidis ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 369-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albena Jordanova ◽  
Georgi As. Georgiev ◽  
Svobodan Alexandrov ◽  
Roumen Todorov ◽  
Zdravko Lalchev

2004 ◽  
Vol 279 (17) ◽  
pp. 17384-17390 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kwon-Sik Park ◽  
Jeffrey A. Whitsett ◽  
Tina Di Palma ◽  
Jeong-Ho Hong ◽  
Michael B. Yaffe ◽  
...  

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