登录

In the secretory pathway, vesicles transport proteins from one cellular compartment to another in forward transport to deliver the protein to its correct location. Occasionally, misfolded proteins and incorrect proteins escape their original compartments, and a retrieval pathway is used to return the escaped proteins to their original compartment.

The ER uses many checkpoints to prevent the entry of incorrectly folded or a resident protein as cargo onto a transport vesicle. These mechanisms include cargo selectivity of the receptors, aggregation of functionally similar proteins, and retention sequences on resident proteins.

Biochemical studies characterizing the cargo-sorting receptors have shown that they are ligand-specific and bind only at specific pH (pH 5.0 in yeast and mammals). Functionally similar ER-resident can proteins aggregate to form large complexes that cannot be loaded onto transport vesicles, thus avoiding the accidental escape of these proteins from the organelle. Additionally, the membrane-spanning domain of several ER and Golgi proteins contain a retention sequence that marks these proteins for staying back in the ER, so receptors do not bind them.

If an ER-resident protein escapes these checkpoints and gets loaded onto a Golgi-bound vesicle, a specific amino acid sequence called a retrieval signal helps the protein get recognized and transported back to the ER. The receptors involved in retrieval mechanisms recognize the retrieval signals at the carboxyl terminus of soluble proteins of the ER and in the cytoplasmic domain of some ER and Golgi membrane proteins. The receptors selectively capture such proteins and package them in vesicles that transport them back to the ER.

Two well-characterized retrieval signals are the carboxy-terminal tetrapeptide KDEL and KKXX found in many ER lumen resident proteins. BiP, a molecular chaperone, plays a vital role in preventing the aggregation of misfolded proteins. Interaction between BiP and unfolded proteins is mediated by a substrate-binding domain and a nucleotide-binding domain for ATPase activity. KDEL receptor in the post-ER compartments such as ERGIC and Golgi binds with the carboxyl-terminal retrieval signal of BiP and returns BiP to the ER via COPI vesicles.

Tags
ER Retrieval PathwaySecretory PathwayVesiclesProteinsCellular CompartmentForward TransportMisfolded ProteinsRetrieval PathwayCheckpointsCargo SelectivityAggregationRetention SequencesCargo sorting ReceptorsLigand specificPHER resident ProteinsComplexesTransport VesiclesOrganelleMembrane spanning DomainGolgi bound VesicleRetrieval SignalTransport Back To The ER

来自章节 17:

article

Now Playing

17.11 : ER Retrieval Pathway

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

3.5K Views

article

17.1 : 膜流量简介

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

6.1K Views

article

17.2 : COP 包被囊泡

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

7.1K Views

article

17.3 : 网格蛋白包被的囊泡

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

6.2K Views

article

17.4 : 磷酸肌醇和 PIP

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

6.0K Views

article

17.5 : 包被组装和 GTP 酶

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

3.4K Views

article

17.6 : 包被囊泡的夹断

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

2.8K Views

article

17.7 : Rab 蛋白

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

3.7K Views

article

17.8 : Rab Cascades

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

2.6K Views

article

17.9 : SNARE 和膜融合

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

8.0K Views

article

17.10 : 囊泡管簇

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

2.2K Views

article

17.12 : 高尔基体

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

10.3K Views

article

17.13 : 蛋白质糖基化

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

6.3K Views

article

17.14 : 蛋白多糖

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

3.8K Views

article

17.15 : 低聚糖组装

Intracellular Membrane Traffic

2.7K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

政策

使用条款

隐私

科研

教育

关于 JoVE

版权所属 © 2025 MyJoVE 公司版权所有,本公司不涉及任何医疗业务和医疗服务。