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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 277, Issue 40, 37798-37803, October 4, 2002
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From the Marion Bessin Liver Research Center and the Departments of
A membrane protein trafficking mutant
(Trf1) of HuH-7 alters the asialoglycoprotein (ASGPR) and
transferrin receptor subcellular distribution. Expression cloning of a
cDNA complementing the trf1 mutation led to the
discovery of a novel casein Kinase 2 catalytic subunit (CK2
Phosphorylation-dependent Interaction of the
Asialoglycoprotein Receptor with Molecular Chaperones*
,
, and
¶
Medicine and § Developmental and Molecular
Biology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461
''). To
purify potential CK2
'' phosphorylation-dependent sorting proteins from cytosol, the ASGPR cytoplasmic domain was expressed as a GST fusion protein and immobilized on
glutathione-agarose. In the absence of phosphorylation, only trace
amounts of cytosol protein were bound and eluted. When the
fusion protein was phosphorylated, a heterocomplex of potential sorting
proteins was recovered. Mass spectrometer and immunoblot analysis
identified five of these proteins as gp96, HSP70, HSP90,
cyclophilin-A, and FKBP18. Treatment of HuH-7 with rapamycin to disrupt
the heterocomplex reduced surface ASGPR binding activity by 65 ± 5.7%. In Trf1 cells, surface-binding activity was 48 ± 7% of
that in HuH-7 and was not further reduced by rapamycin
treatment. Immunoanalysis showed significantly fewer surface receptors
on rapamycin-treated HuH7 cells than on nontreated cells, with no
affect on the level of surface receptors in Trf1 cells. The data
presented provide evidence that phosphorylation of the ASGPR
cytoplasmic domain is required for the binding of specific molecular
chaperones with the potential to regulate receptor trafficking.
*
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health
Grants DK 41918 and DK 17702.The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement" in
accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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