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MARCH6 and TRC8 facilitate the quality control of cytosolic and tail-anchored proteins.


ABSTRACT: Misfolded or damaged proteins are typically targeted for destruction by proteasome-mediated degradation, but the mammalian ubiquitin machinery involved is incompletely understood. Here, using forward genetic screens in human cells, we find that the proteasome-mediated degradation of the soluble misfolded reporter, mCherry-CL1, involves two ER-resident E3 ligases, MARCH6 and TRC8. mCherry-CL1 degradation is routed via the ER membrane and dependent on the hydrophobicity of the substrate, with complete stabilisation only observed in double knockout MARCH6/TRC8 cells. To identify a more physiological correlate, we used quantitative mass spectrometry and found that TRC8 and MARCH6 depletion altered the turnover of the tail-anchored protein heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1). These E3 ligases associate with the intramembrane cleaving signal peptide peptidase (SPP) and facilitate the degradation of HO-1 following intramembrane proteolysis. Our results highlight how ER-resident ligases may target the same substrates, but work independently of each other, to optimise the protein quality control of selected soluble and tail-anchored proteins.

SUBMITTER: Stefanovic-Barrett S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5934766 | biostudies-literature | 2018 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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MARCH6 and TRC8 facilitate the quality control of cytosolic and tail-anchored proteins.

Stefanovic-Barrett Sandra S   Dickson Anna S AS   Burr Stephen P SP   Williamson James C JC   Lobb Ian T IT   van den Boomen Dick Jh DJ   Lehner Paul J PJ   Nathan James A JA  

EMBO reports 20180308 5


Misfolded or damaged proteins are typically targeted for destruction by proteasome-mediated degradation, but the mammalian ubiquitin machinery involved is incompletely understood. Here, using forward genetic screens in human cells, we find that the proteasome-mediated degradation of the soluble misfolded reporter, mCherry-CL1, involves two ER-resident E3 ligases, MARCH6 and TRC8. mCherry-CL1 degradation is routed via the ER membrane and dependent on the hydrophobicity of the substrate, with comp  ...[more]

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