Identification of Routing Determinants in the Cytosolic Domain of a Secretory Granule-associated Integral Membrane Protein*
- From the ‡ Physiology Department, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599 and
- § Neuroscience and Physiology Departments, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
Abstract
We have investigated the trafficking of integral membrane peptidylglycine α-amidating monooxygenase (PAM) in the neuroendocrine AtT-20 cell line. This bifunctional enzyme has two domains which together catalyze the COOH-terminal α-amidation of peptidylglycine substrates yielding amidated products stored in secretory granules. As soluble proteins, both catalytic domains were independently targeted to secretory granules. In contrast, membrane PAM was largely localized to the trans-Golgi network (TGN). Upon truncation of its cytoplasmic COOH-terminal domain, membrane PAM was less efficiently cleaved by secretory granule enzymes and accumulated on the plasma membrane. When transferred to the lumenal domain of the interleukin 2 receptor α-chain (Tac protein), the cytoplasmic domain of PAM caused rerouting of Tac from the surface to the TGN and supported internalization of Tac antibody from the plasma membrane. To define sequences in the cytoplasmic domain of integral membrane PAM involved in its trafficking, we expressed PAM proteins containing truncations, deletions, or point mutations in the COOH-terminal cytoplasmic domain. PAM proteins were not retained in the TGN when half of the cytoplasmic domain was deleted; such proteins accumulated on the plasma membrane, were not efficiently internalized, and were cleaved to generate a bifunctional PAM protein that was not stored in secretory granules. A tyrosine-based internalization motif was identified, which was not required for efficient cleavage of full-length integral membrane PAM by secretory granule enzymes. Deletion of an 18-amino acid domain surrounding this Tyr residue both diminished cleavage of membrane PAM by secretory granule enzymes and eliminated internalization of PAM from the plasma membrane. The cytoplasmic domain is responsible for retaining membrane PAM in the TGN and for retrieving membrane PAM from the cell surface, while the lumenal catalytic domains of PAM appear to be responsible for targeting the protein to secretory granules.
Footnotes
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↵* This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants DK-32948 (to R. E. M.) and GM-15293 (to S. L. M.). 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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↵1 The abbreviations used are:
- PAM
-
peptidylglycine α-amidating monooxygenase
- TGN
-
trans-Golgi network
- PHM
-
monooxygenase domain
- PAL
-
lyase domain
- PCR
-
polymerase chain reaction
- Ab
-
antibody
- FITC
-
fluorescein isothiocyanate
- PMA
-
phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate
- CLV
-
constitutive-like vesicle.
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- Received December 14, 1995.
- Revision received April 11, 1996.
- © 1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











