Intracellular Disposal of Incompletely Folded Human α1-Antitrypsin Involves Release from Calnexin and Post-translational Trimming of Asparagine-linked Oligosaccharides*
- From the ‡ Department of Pathology, Section of Molecular Pathobiology and the
- § Department of Cell Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030
- ¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Pathology, Section of Molecular Pathobiology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030. Tel.: 713-798-3169; Fax: 713-798-5838; E-mail: rsifers{at}bcm.tmc.edu
Abstract
Protection of lung elastin fibers from proteolytic destruction is compromised by inefficient secretion of incompletely folded allelic variants of human α1-antitrypsin from hepatocytes. Pulse-chase radiolabeling with [35S]methionine and sucrose gradient sedimentation and coimmunoprecipitation techniques were employed to investigate quality control of human α1-antitrypsin secretion from stably transfected mouse hepatoma cells. The secretion-incompetent variant null(Hong Kong) (Sifers, R. N., Brashears-Macatee, S., Kidd, V. J., Muensch, H., and Woo, S. L. C. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 7330-7335) cannot fold into a functional conformation and was quantitatively associated with the molecular chaperone calnexin following biosynthesis. Assembly with calnexin required cotranslational trimming of glucose from asparagine-linked oligosaccharides. Intracellular disposal of pulse-radiolabeled molecules coincided with their release from calnexin. Released monomers and intracellular disposal were nonexistent in cells chased with cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis. Post-translational trimming of asparagine-linked oligosaccharides and intracellular disposal were abrogated by 1-deoxymannojirimycin, an inhibitor of α-mannosidase activity, without affecting the monomer population. The data are consistent with a recently proposed quality control model (Hammond, C., Braakman, I., and Helenius, A. (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 91, 913-917) in which intracellular disposal requires dissociation from calnexin and post-translational trimming of mannose from asparagine-linked oligosaccharides.
Footnotes
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↵* This work was supported in part by an American Heart Association grant-in-aid and an American Lung Association research career investigator award (to R. N. S.). 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:
- ER
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endoplasmic reticulum
- AAT
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α1-antitrypsin
- PAGE
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polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
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↵2 R. N. Sifers, unpublished data.
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- Received November 22, 1996.
- Revision received January 13, 1997.
- © 1997 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











