Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P11021 (BiP)
2,049 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The intracellular processing and transport of the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) fusion (F) glycoprotein was examined by comparing the maturation and stability of wild-type F, uncleaved mutant F and chimeric F glycoproteins expressed by recombinant vaccinia viruses to that of F protein expressed by RSV. One of the recombinant viruses, vF317, expressed F protein (F317) that was processed like the RSV F glycoprotein. F317 was synthesized initially as F0, the uncleaved glycosylated precursor of mature F protein, and formed stable oligomeric structures that were maintained following cleavage of F0 to form the disulphide bond-linked F1 and F2 subunits. Most of the newly synthesized F0 expressed by either RSV or by vF317 was sensitive to treatment with endoglycosidase H (Endo H). Following cleavage of F0, F1 was resistant to Endo H, suggesting that conversion to complex-type sugars, which takes place in the medial Golgi apparatus, occurred simultaneously with or immediately prior to cleavage of F0 into F1 and F2. Another recombinant virus, vF313, synthesized only uncleaved F protein (F313) that comigrated with F0. Uncleaved F313 was expressed as a stable glycosylated protein; however, unlike cleaved F317, its oligosaccharides were not modified to complex forms, as determined from its Endo H sensitivity, and uncleaved F313 did not assemble into stable oligomeric structures. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the cDNA clones encoding F313 and F317 revealed four predicted amino acid sequence differences, none of which were located at the cleavage site. Expression of chimeric F proteins obtained by restriction fragment exchange between the two cDNA clones indicated that two amino acid changes in the F1 domain, located at amino acid residues 301 (Val to Ala) and 447 (Val to Met), resulted in the expression of uncleaved F protein. A change at either of these two amino acid residues, 301 or 447, resulted in the expression of inefficiently cleaved F protein, defining an additional F protein phenotype. Pulse-chase analyses to examine the association of recombinant F glycoproteins with gradient-purified fractionated membranes or with GRP78-BiP, a protein resident in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) which binds to nascent proteins, revealed that uncleaved F protein (F313) is associated with GRP78-BiP in the ER for a longer time than F317, and little if any F313 was transported to the cell surface. In addition, the uncleaved F protein (F313) was not recognized by a panel of F protein-specific monoclonal antibodies in ELISA or indirect immunofluorescence assays, suggesting that F313 was misfolded and, as a result, not transported properly or cleaved.
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PMID:Intracellular processing of the human respiratory syncytial virus fusion glycoprotein: amino acid substitutions affecting folding, transport and cleavage. 137 80

The influenza virus neuraminidase (NA), a type II transmembrane glycoprotein, is expressed at the surface of infected cells and is a major structural component of the virion. The kinetics of biosynthesis of NA, including modification of N-linked sugar chains, association with GRP78-BiP, oligomerization, and transport to the cell surface, were examined in A/WSN/33 influenza-infected BHK cells. Prior to gaining endoglycosidase H (endo H) resistance, NA was found to transiently associate with GRP78-BiP (t1/2 approximately 5 min). The protein was synthesized as a monomer and within 10 min a significant fraction of it was chased into dimers and tetramers with a t1/2 approximately 15 to 20 min before endo H resistance was acquired suggesting that oligomerization took place in the endoplasmic reticulum. WSN NA remained completely endo H sensitive up to 15 min after synthesis, acquired partial resistance to endo H between 15 and 30 min (t1/2 approximately 25 min) after synthesis and exhibited heterogeneity in endo H-resistant forms. NA was first detected at the cell surface 30 min after synthesis, increased to a maximum at 1 hr, after which it decreased, presumably due to incorporation into virions. The results on the biosynthesis of NA, a type II protein for which the three-dimensional structure is known, will be useful in structure/function and virion assembly studies.
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PMID:Synthesis and processing of the influenza virus neuraminidase, a type II transmembrane glycoprotein. 158 34

A detailed kinetic and quantitative analysis of the early and late biosynthetic events undergone by the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope protein expressed by a recombinant vaccinia virus was performed. Early folding events that occurred in the endoplasmic reticulum included disulfide bond formation (t1/2 approximately 10 min), folding of envelope protein into a form competent to bind CD4 (t1/2 approximately 15 min), and specific and transient association and dissociation with GRP78-BiP (t1/2 approximately 25 min). After initial folding, envelope protein monomers formed noncovalently associated dimers with high efficiency (t1/2 approximately 30 min). Studies with brefeldin A, a compound that inhibits endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi transport, suggested that assembly occurred in the endoplasmic reticulum while cleavage of gp160 into gp120/gp41 subunits occurred in a post-endoplasmic reticulum compartment. Transport to the Golgi was monitored by modification of N-linked sugars to forms partially resistant to endoglycosidase H. The kinetics of endoglycosidase H resistance were nearly identical to the kinetics of gp160 cleavage (t1/2 approximately 80 min). Cleavage efficiency was strongly cell type dependent, ranging from 13 to 70%. By contrast, approximately 50% of the gp120 generated by the cleavage event was shed (t1/2 approximately 120 min) regardless of the cell type used. The results are discussed in terms of the overall biosynthetic pathway of the envelope protein and provide a framework with which to assess the effects of mutations on structure and function.
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PMID:Folding, interaction with GRP78-BiP, assembly, and transport of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope protein. 190 May 40

We have investigated the role of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER) of UT-1 cells in the biogenesis of the glycoprotein (G) of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV). Using immunofluorescence microscopy, we observed the wild type G protein in the SER of infected cells. When these cells were infected with the mutant VSV strain ts045, the G protein was unable to reach the Golgi apparatus at 40 degrees C, but was able to exit the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and accumulate in the SER. Ribophorin II, a RER marker, remained excluded from the SER during the viral infection, ruling out the possibility that the infection had destroyed the separate identities of these two organelles. Thus, the mechanism that results in the retention of this mutant glycoprotein in the ER at 39.9 degrees C does not limit its lateral mobility within the ER system. We have also localized GRP78/BiP to the SER of UT-1 cells indicating that other mutant proteins may also have access to this organelle. Upon incubation at 32 degrees C, the mutant G protein was able to leave the SER and move to the Golgi apparatus. To measure how rapidly this transfer occurs, we assayed the conversion of the G protein's N-linked oligosaccharides from endoglycosidase H-sensitive to endoglycosidase H-resistant forms. After a 5-min lag, transport of the G protein followed first order kinetics (t1/2 = 15 min). In contrast, no lag was seen in the transport of G protein that had accumulated in the RER of control UT-1 cells lacking extensive SER. In these cells, the transport of G protein also exhibited first order kinetics (t1/2 = 17 min). Possible implications of this lag are discussed.
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PMID:The G protein of vesicular stomatitis virus has free access into and egress from the smooth endoplasmic reticulum of UT-1 cells. 215 42

The RER retains a specific subset of ER proteins, many of which have been shown to participate in the translocation of nascent secretory and membrane proteins. The mechanism of retention of RER specific membrane proteins is unknown. To study this phenomenon in yeast, where no RER-specific membrane proteins have yet been identified, we expressed the human RER-specific protein, ribophorin I. In all mammalian cell types examined, ribophorin I has been shown to be restricted to the membrane of the RER. Here we ascertain that yeast cells correctly target, assemble, and retain ribophorin I in their RER. Floatation experiments demonstrated that human ribophorin I, expressed in yeast, was membrane associated. Carbonate (pH = 11) washing and Triton X-114 cloud-point precipitations of yeast microsomes indicated that ribophorin I was integrated into the membrane bilayer. Both chromatography on Con A and digestion with endoglycosidase H were used to prove that ribophorin I was glycosylated once, consistent with its expression in mammalian cells. Proteolysis of microsomal membranes and subsequent immunoblotting showed ribophorin I to have assumed the correct transmembrane topology. Sucrose gradient centrifugation studies found ribophorin I to be included only in fractions containing rough membranes and excluded from smooth ones that, on the basis of the distribution of BiP, included smooth ER. Ribosome removal from rough membranes and subsequent isopycnic centrifugation resulted in a shift in the buoyant density of the ribophorin I-containing membranes. Furthermore, the rough and density-shifted fractions were the exclusive location of protein translocation activity. Based on these studies we conclude that sequestration of membrane proteins to rough domains of ER probably occurs in a like manner in yeast and mammalian cells.
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PMID:Protein retention in yeast rough endoplasmic reticulum: expression and assembly of human ribophorin I. 226 58

Human cytomegalovirus glycoprotein B (gB) plays a role in the fusion of the virion envelope with the host cell membrane and in syncytium formation in infected cells. Hydrophobic sequences at the carboxyl terminus, amino acids (aa) 714 to 771, anchor gB in the lipid bilayer, but the unusual length of this domain suggests that it may serve another role in gB structure. To explore the function(s) of this region, we deleted aa 717 to 747 (gB deltaI mutation), aa 751 to 771 (gB deltaII mutation), and aa 717 to 772 (gB deltaI-II mutation) and constructed a substitution mutation, Lys-748 to Val (Lys748Val)-Asn749Ala-Pro750Ile (gB KNPm). Mutated forms of gB were expressed in U373 glioblastoma cells and subjected to analysis by flow cytometry, confocal microscopy, and immunoprecipitation. Mutations gB deltaI-II and gB deltaII alone caused secretion of gB into the medium, confirming that aa 751 to 771 function as a membrane anchor. In contrast, mutations gB deltaI and gB KNPm blocked cell surface expression and arrested gB transport in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Detailed examination of gB deltaI and gB KNPm with a panel of monoclonal antibodies showed that the mutated forms were indistinguishable from wild-type gB in conformation and formed oligomers; however, they remained sensitive to endoglycosidase H and did not undergo endoproteolytic cleavage. Analysis of protein complexes formed by gB and molecular chaperones in the ER showed that calnexin and calreticulin, lectin-like chaperones, bound equal amounts of uncleaved wild-type gB, gB deltaI, and gB KNPm, but the glucose-regulated proteins 78 (BiP) and 94 formed stable complexes only with the mutated forms, causing their retention in the ER. Our studies show that aa 714 to 750 are key residues in the architecture of gB molecules and that the ER chaperones, which facilitate gB folding and monitor the quality of glycoproteins, detect subtle changes in folding intermediates that are conferred by mutations in this region.
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PMID:Mutations in the carboxyl-terminal hydrophobic sequence of human cytomegalovirus glycoprotein B alter transport and protein chaperone binding. 889 27

Familial hypothalamic diabetes insipidus is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by deficient vasopressin synthesis. Different point mutations in the vasopressin-neurophysin (VP-NP) precursor gene have been found in affected families. In a Dutch kindred, a single G to T transversion in the NP-encoding exon B of one allele converts the highly conserved glycine 17 to a valine residue. In order to examine whether this point mutation affects the processing and transport of the VP-NP precursor, the normal (HV2) and mutant (MT6) vasopressin cDNAs were stably expressed in the mouse pituitary cell line AtT20. The normal precursor was correctly glycosylated and processed, and NP was detected in the culture medium. Secretion of NP was stimulated by 8-bromo-cAMP, indicating that the normal precursor was targeted to the regulated secretory pathway. In contrast, the mutant precursor was synthesized, but processing and secretion were dramatically reduced. The mutant precursor was core-glycosylated but remained endoglycosidase H-sensitive, suggesting that the protein did not reach the trans-Golgi network. These results were supported by immunocytochemical studies. In HV2 cells, NP derived from the precursor was concentrated in the tips of the cell processes where secretory granules accumulate. In MT6 cells, NP staining was restricted to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) as determined by colocalization with an ER-resident protein, BiP. These results suggest that the mutation within the conserved part of NP alters the conformation of the precursor and thus triggers its retention in the ER.
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PMID:Heterologous expression of human vasopressin-neurophysin precursors in a pituitary cell line: defective transport of a mutant protein from patients with familial diabetes insipidus. 894 33

Calsequestrin (CSQ), the major low-affinity Ca(2+)-binding glycoprotein of striated muscle fibers, is concentrated to yield aggregates that occupy the lumen of the terminal cisternae of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). When infected or transfected into L6 myoblast, the protein is also concentrated, however, in dense vacuoles apparently separate from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). CSQ-rich cells appear otherwise normal; in particular, neither other proteins involved in Ca2+ homeostasis nor ER chaperones are increased. The CSQ dense vacuoles are shown herein to be specialized ER subdomains as demonstrated by 1) the endoglycosidase H sensitivity of their CSQ and 2) two markers, calreticulin and calnexin (but not others, protein disulfide isomerase and BiP), intermixed with the vacuole content. Their formation is shown to start with the aggregation of CSQ at discrete sites of the ER lumen. When cells were transfected with both CSQ and calreticulin, only the first gave rise to vacuoles; the second remained diffusely distributed within the ER lumen. The possibility that CSQ aggregation is an artifact of overexpression appears unlikely because 1) within dense vacuoles CSQ molecules are not disulfide cross-linked, 2) their turnover is relatively slow (t = 12 h), and 3) segregated CSQ is bound to large amounts of Ca2+. Transfection of a tagged CSQ into cells already overexpressing the protein revealed the continuous import of the newly synthesized protein into preassembled vacuoles. The tendency to aggregation appears, therefore, as a property contributing to the segregation of CSQ within the ER lumen and to its accumulation within specialized subdomains. The study of L6 cells expressing CSQ-rich vacuoles might thus ultimately help to unravel mechanisms by which the complexity of the sarcoplasmic reticulum is established in muscle fibers.
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PMID:Overexpression of calsequestrin in L6 myoblasts: formation of endoplasmic reticulum subdomains and their evolution into discrete vacuoles where aggregates of the protein are specifically accumulated. 930 74

To acquire information on the relationships between structural maturation of proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and their transport along the secretory pathway, we have analyzed the destiny of an assembly-defective form of the trimeric vacuolar storage glycoprotein phaseolin. In leaves of transgenic tobacco, where assembly-competent phaseolin is correctly targeted to the vacuole, defective phaseolin remains located in the ER or a closely related compartment where it represents a major ligand of the chaperone BiP. Defective phaseolin maintained susceptibility to endoglycosidase H and was slowly degraded by a process that is not inhibited by heat shock or brefeldin A, indicating that degradation does not involve transport along the secretory pathway. These results provide evidence for the presence of a quality control mechanism in the ER of plant cells that avoids intracellular trafficking of severely defective proteins and eventually leads to their degradation.
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PMID:Protein quality control along the route to the plant vacuole. 1118 57

We previously described secretion defects in four mutants of the murine anti-phosphocholine Ab, T15. The mutant heavy (H) chains had amino acid replacements in the V(H) complementarity-determining region 2 (HCDR2) and were expressed at normal intracellular levels. Here, the intracellular fate of the secretion-defective mutant heavy chains was investigated. Metabolic labeling demonstrated that the T15 wild-type Ab was secreted within a 4-h chase. In contrast, the mutant H chains accumulated with intracellular t(1/2) values ranging from 10 to 24 h. The mutant H chains were associated with increased levels of the molecular chaperones BiP and GRP94, and remained endoglycosidase H sensitive, suggesting retention in the endoplasmic reticulum. Assembly of the mutant H chains with T15 light (L) chain was arrested at the H2 and H2L intermediate stages of the T15 wild-type pathway (H2 --> H2L --> H2L2). Even though some assembly with L chain occurred, it was not as a secretion-competent H2L2 Ig moiety. The T15 L chains coexpressed with mutant H chains were degraded efficiently except for a minor L chain population with a long t(1/2) that was apparently protected at the H2L stage. To our knowledge, this is the first study demonstrating that intracellular half-lives of Ig H and L chains can be influenced by somatic mutations in HCDR2.
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PMID:Inefficient assembly and intracellular accumulation of antibodies with mutations in V(H) CDR2. 963 10


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