* Department of Tumor Cell Biology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee 38105; Laboratoire
d'Enzymologie and Centre d'Ingénierie des Protéines, Institut de Chimie B6, Université de Liège, Sart-Tilman, B-4000 Liège,
Belgium; § Argonne National Laboratories, Argonne, Illinois 60439; and ¶ Department of Biochemistry, University of Tennessee,
Memphis, Tennessee 38163
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Abstract |
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Immunoglobulin heavy chain-binding protein (BiP) is a member of the hsp70 family of chaperones and one of the most abundant proteins in the ER
lumen. It is known to interact transiently with many nascent proteins as they enter the ER and more stably with protein subunits produced in stoichiometric excess
or with mutant proteins. However, there also exists a
large number of secretory pathway proteins that do not
apparently interact with BiP. To begin to understand
what controls the likelihood that a nascent protein entering the ER will associate with BiP, we have examined the in vivo folding of a murine I immunoglobulin (Ig) light chain (LC). This LC is composed of two Ig
domains that can fold independent of the other and
that each possess multiple potential BiP-binding sequences. To detect BiP binding to the LC during folding, we used BiP ATPase mutants, which bind irreversibly to proteins, as "kinetic traps." Although both the
wild-type and mutant BiP clearly associated with the
unoxidized variable region domain, we were unable to
detect binding of either BiP protein to the constant region domain. A combination of in vivo and in vitro
folding studies revealed that the constant domain folds rapidly and stably even in the absence of an intradomain disulfide bond. Thus, the simple presence of a
BiP-binding site on a nascent chain does not ensure
that BiP will bind and play a role in its folding. Instead,
it appears that the rate and stability of protein folding
determines whether or not a particular site is recognized, with BiP preferentially binding to proteins that
fold slowly or somewhat unstably.
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Introduction |
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PROTEINS that traverse the mammalian secretory pathway are translated on polyribosomes attached to
the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane (Walter
and Johnson, 1994). This allows cotranslational translocation of the nascent chain into the ER as an extended or unfolded polypeptide. Upon entering the lumen of the ER,
the nascent protein encounters a variety of molecular
chaperones and folding enzymes and begins to fold, in
some cases, even before translation is complete (Hammond et al., 1994
). One of the molecular chaperones
encountered by newly synthesized polypeptides is BiP/ GRP78, the ER cognate of the hsp70 family (Haas, 1991
;
Gething and Sambrook, 1992
). In yeast, immunoglobulin
heavy chain-binding protein (BiP)1 is required for translocation and may act to pull the nascent chain into the ER
through cycles of binding and release (Vogel et al., 1990
).
Mammalian BiP is present at the translocon where it serves
to maintain the permeability barrier of the ER during the
early stages of targeting nascent chains into the translocon (Hamman et al., 1998
). However, there is no clear evidence that mammalian BiP plays a direct role in pulling
proteins into the ER, and this point remains unresolved
(Gorlich and Rapoport, 1993
; Nicchitta and Blobel, 1993
).
BiP, like all hsp70 family members, binds to unfolded
nascent polypeptides (Landry et al., 1992; Simons et al.,
1995
; Hendershot et al., 1996
), although exactly what BiP
recognizes on a newly synthesized protein and how this
binding contributes to protein folding in not clearly understood. Several in vitro (Munro and Pelham, 1986
; Hendrick and Hartl, 1993
; Palleros et al., 1993
) and in vivo
(Hendershot et al., 1995
; Simons et al., 1995
) studies demonstrated that hsp70 release and polypeptide folding are
dependent on ATP binding to hsp70. In vitro peptide-binding studies revealed that BiP recognizes heptapeptides and prefers those with aliphatic residues (Flynn et al.,
1991
). Flynn et al. (1991)
speculated that sequences of this
type would appear approximately every 16 residues in the
average globular protein. A somewhat similar recognition motif was identified when purified BiP was used to affinity
pan a library of peptides displayed on bacteriophages
(Blond-Elguindi et al., 1993
). Further analysis of these
peptides revealed that the aliphatic residues were preferred only for alternating residues, suggesting that if a
protein containing this sequence was extended, the hydrophobic residues would all face the same direction and perhaps fit in to the BiP polypeptide-binding pocket (Blond-Elguindi et al., 1993
). Although sequences of this type can
indeed be found in most proteins entering the ER, it appears that some secretory pathway proteins do not normally bind to BiP (Hurtley et al., 1989
; Graham et al.,
1990
; Morris et al., 1997
). This is perplexing if these proteins are entering the ER in an extended conformation and BiP, which is present at the translocon at least initially (Hamman et al., 1998
), "scans" nascent chains as they enter the ER. It is possible that for some proteins BiP binding is very transient and limited to chains that are not fully
translated, or conversely that the presence of a potential
BiP-binding sequence does not in itself dictate whether
BiP will bind.
The algorithm generated by phage display analysis to
identify BiP binding sites (Blond-Elguindi et al., 1993) has
been applied to immunoglobulin (Ig) domain sequences
(Knarr et al., 1995
). As predicted by Flynn et al. (1991)
,
multiple "BiP-binding sites" were identified in both the
variable and constant region domains of the heavy and
light chains subjected to this analysis. Peptides corresponding to these sequences were generated and shown to
stimulate the ATPase activity of BiP (Knarr et al., 1995
),
which is presumed to be an indication of their binding to
the protein-binding domain of BiP. It is unclear which, if
any, of these sites are used in vivo and how BiP binding to
various "hydrophobic sequences" might be regulated during translocation and folding.
Ig heavy and light chains are comprised of a series of
tandemly aligned Ig domains (four or five and two, respectively) that can fold independent of each other in vitro
(Goto et al., 1979; Goto and Hamaguchi, 1982
) into a compact structure composed of two twisted
sheets stabilized
by a single disulfide bond (Amzel and Poljak, 1979
). Ig
LCs bind transiently to BiP and can be secreted without
heavy chains, making them a relatively simple protein for
in vivo folding analyses. In a recent study, we coexpressed murine
light chain (LC) in COS cells together with either wild-type hamster BiP or BiP ATPase mutants that
bind substrate proteins but do not release them (Wei et al.,
1995
). The LCs were synthesized in the presence of dithiothreitol (DTT), which is a fully reversible reducing agent
in vivo (Braakman et al., 1992a
,b). This treatment prevents LC oxidation and maximizes the binding of LCs to
both wild-type and mutant BiP. Removing the DTT, allows LCs expressed with wild-type BiP to fold and form
intradomain disulfide bonds in both domains, whereas
those coexpressed with mutant BiP were only capable of
oxidizing a single domain (Hendershot et al., 1996
). In
spite of the structural similarity between the variable (V)
and constant (C) domain of the LC and the prediction of
multiple BiP-binding sites per Ig domain, these data argue
that only a single LC domain binds to BiP in vivo. This
suggests that either the algorithm is not a good detector of
BiP-binding sites or that these two domains have different
requirements for folding in vivo, and that the simple presence of a BiP-binding sequence does not ensure that it will
be used.
In the present study, we confirmed that BiP binds to a
single LC domain in vivo and determined which one it is.
Then using a combination of in vivo and in vitro BiP-binding and protein-folding assays, we examined the reason for
the differential association of BiP with these domains in
the ER.
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Materials and Methods |
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Construction of I LC Mutants
Before producing LC cysteine mutants, it was necessary to obtain a cDNA
clone of the I LC gene. The pJDE
I genomic clone (gWT
) originally
obtained from the murine myeloma HOPC 2020 (Bernard et al., 1978
)
and provided by Dr. Y. Argon (University of Chicago, Chicago, IL) was
transiently expressed in COS 1 cells. RNA was isolated (RNAzol B; Tel-Test) and
-specific mRNA was amplified by reverse transcription PCR
using (CTGACCAATCTAGAAAAGAATAG) as the 5' primer and
(CCTCTGTGGATCCAATGAAGGTT) as a 3' primer. The PCR product was digested with XbaI and BamHI and ligated into the pTZ vector.
The entire cDNA clone was sequenced before recloning it into the pSVL
eukaryotic expression vector (cWT
) for use in transfection studies.
The variable region cysteines (C41 and C109) and constant region cysteines (C156 and C215) responsible for forming the intradomain disulfide
bonds were mutated to serine by overlap extension PCR as described (Ho
et al., 1989). The final PCR products were digested with XbaI and BbsI
(Vmut) or BbsI and BamHI (Cmut) and inserted into pTZ-cWT
in place of
the corresponding wild-type sequence. The alterations of the cysteine residues to serine and the absence of other mutations were verified by DNA
sequencing before the mutants were subcloned into the pSVL vector.
An ER-targeted constant region domain was created by removing 107 amino acids (Val22-Leu128) which encode the variable region of the I LC.
Oligonucleotides were designed to give a PCR product that joined the sequence encoding Ala21 (the second amino acid of the mature variable region) to Gly129 (the first amino acid of the constant region). The resulting
cDNA (ER-C
) encodes a protein with the ER-targeting signal sequence,
the first two amino acids of the variable domain (to ensure proper cleavage of the signal sequence after translocation), and the entire constant region domain. The cDNA product was sequenced to verify the deletion and to ensure the constant region was not altered before inserting it into
pSVL, a eukaryotic expression vector.
Construction of Recombinant Variable and Constant Domains
For in vitro protein folding studies, individual domains were produced in bacteria and purified using the 6× histidine tag methodology (QIAGEN). A BamHI site followed by a factor Xa site (Ile-Glu-Gly-Arg) was introduced immediately 5' of the sequence encoding the NH2 terminus of the mature variable domain (Glu20) or the NH2 terminus of the constant domain (Gly129). Additionally, a stop codon was inserted at the end of the variable region coding sequence (Leu128). Each modified domain was excised and ligated into the QE-10 vector for expression in bacteria cells. The final coding sequence for the variable domain was MRGSHHHHHHTDPIEGRQ20-L128 and for the constant domain MRGSHHHHHHTDPIEGRG129-S234. This construction allowed for purification on Ni2+-agarose columns and would allow us, if necessary, to cleave the tag with factor Xa leaving an intact Ig domain.
Recombinant Protein Isolation
Bacteria transformed with the individual Ig domains were grown to an
OD595 of 0.7 and protein expression was induced for 2 h with 1 mM IPTG. Initial experiments showed that neither construct (particularly the variable domain) gave high yields of soluble protein when the standard isolation protocol was followed (Wei and Hendershot, 1995). In an attempt to
increase the yield of soluble protein, the bacterial pellets were resuspended in 16 ml (5 ml/g of bacteria) of buffer A (0.1 M NaH2PO4, 0.01 M
Hepes, 6 M GdmCl, pH 8) containing 1 mM DTT. The cell lysate was
stirred at room temperature for 40 min and then 10 mM 2-mercaptoethanol (2-ME) was added and the sample was stirred for an addition 20 min.
The lysate was sonicated and centrifuged at 10,000 rpm. Batch adsorption
was performed by adding 1 ml Ni-NTA-agarose (QIAGEN) equilibrated
in buffer A containing 10 mM 2-ME to the supernatant. The sample was
stirred for 90 min at room temperature and loaded into a polypropylene disposable column. The resin was extensively washed with buffer A containing 2-ME, and the bound protein was allowed to refold on the column
through successive washes with the following solutions: (a) buffer B (0.1 M
NaH2PO4, 0.01 M Hepes, 0.5 M NaCl, pH 7.5) containing 3 M GdmCl and
10 mM 2-ME; (b) buffer B containing 1 M GdmCl and 3 mM 2-ME; (c)
buffer B containing 0.3 M GdmCl and 1 mM 2-ME; (d) buffer B; (e)
buffer B containing 10% (vol/vol) glycerol. Proteins were eluted with 2 ml
of buffer B containing 10% glycerol and 250 mM imidazole. The sample
was loaded on a 5-ml polyacrylamide desalting column (Pierce) equilibrated with 20 mM Hepes, 300 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, pH 7.5, to remove the imidazole.
Thermal Unfolding Curves
Thermal unfolding curves were obtained for recombinant BiP and for
DTT-reduced C domain and analyzed as described (Vanhove et al., 1995).
The experiments were performed in 20 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, 300 mM NaCl,
10% glycerol, 10 mM DTT. Protein concentrations were 2 µM for the C
domain and 4 µM for BiP, and temperature was increased at a rate of 1°C/
min. Unfolding of the protein was monitored by fluorescence spectroscopy and data are presented as the fraction of native protein remaining at
each temperature.
BiP Score Algorithm
Potential BiP-binding sites on the V and C domain were identified by a
computer algorithm we developed using the BiP-binding scores determined by Blond-Elguindi et al. (1993). These scores reflected the probability of finding particular amino acids at specific positions within octomeric peptides that bound to BiP. For each of the 20 amino acids,
numerical scores ranging from negative to positive values were assigned
based on the likelihood that the amino acid was excluded or included at
positions 1-8 in BiP-binding peptides. The LC sequence was analyzed
eight amino acids at a time, and the algorithm determined scores associated with each overlapping octomer and reported the values on a position by position basis. This provided an indication of the propensity of the following octomer to interact with BiP.
COS Transfections
For in vivo analysis of BiP binding to the various I LC mutants, COS-1
cells were cotransfected with the various
constructs along with cDNAs
for either wild-type (WT) hamster BiP (obtained from A.S. Lee, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA) or a BiP ATPase mutant
created by changing Thr37 to Gly37 (G37) (Gaut and Hendershot, 1993
;
Wei et al., 1995
) as described previously (Hendershot et al., 1995
). In all
cases, the transfected cells were analyzed 40 h after transfection, but the
constructs and labeling conditions varied for the individual experiments and are detailed in the results section and figure legends. Transfected cells
were biosynthetically labeled with [35S] Translabel (ICN). For pulse-chase
experiments, cells were preincubated in met
-cys
labeling media for 45 min before the isotope was added. When labeled proteins were analyzed
under nonreducing conditions, cells were washed first with PBS containing 20 mM NEM before lysing. NEM and apyrase were included in the
lysing buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 0.5% DOC, and 0.5%
NP-40). Labeled lysates were reacted with a polyclonal rabbit anti-rodent
BiP antiserum (Hendershot et al., 1995
) or with a polyclonal goat anti-
mouse
antiserum (Southern Biotechnology), and immune complexes
were precipitated by binding to protein A-Sepharose beads. Proteins were resolved on SDS-polyacrylamide gels under either reducing or nonreducing conditions and visualized by fluorography using the Amplify reagent (Amersham).
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Results |
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BiP ATPase Mutants Block Folding of Only One
LC Domain
Previous studies using a genomic I LC clone suggested
that only a single LC domain binds to BiP and is unable to
fold in the presence of BiP ATPase mutants (Hendershot
et al., 1996
). As a first step toward identifying the domain
that BiP binds, we produced a
I LC cDNA clone (cWT
)
that would serve as a template for producing LC domain
mutants. This construct was transiently coexpressed with
either wild-type hamster BiP or a BiP ATPase mutant,
G37, which binds stably to target proteins in vivo (Wei et al.,
1995
). As was observed with the genomic clone, the cDNA produced a
LC that was expressed at high levels and
bound to both wild-type and mutant BiP when synthesized
under reducing conditions (Fig. 1). Subsequent removal of
DTT allows the formation of disulfide bonds in both domains, which is dependent on LC folding to bring the intradomain cysteine residues into the correct position (Goto and Hamaguchi, 1981
). This oxidation causes an increase in the mobility of the protein that, unlike protein
folding itself, can be monitored on SDS-polyacrylamide
gels (Braakman et al., 1992a
; Hendershot et al., 1996
).
When DTT was removed, the LC expressed with wild-type
BiP folded completely and disulfide bonds were formed in
both domains (Fig. 1). When LCs coexpressed with mutant BiP were analyzed similarly, approximately half of the LCs underwent complete folding and oxidation. This is
presumably due to the fact that the endogenous wild-type
BiP present in these cells competes with the mutant BiP
for binding to the reduced LCs (Hendershot et al., 1996
).
When DTT is removed, those LC bound to the endogenous BiP are capable of folding completely. The other half
of the LC (i.e., those bound to the mutant BiP), underwent partial folding and oxidization as determined by their intermediate mobility. If both domains contained BiP-binding sites that could be used simultaneously, a portion of
the LC should have remained completely reduced. Thus, it
appears that either a single domain expresses BiP-binding
sites or that only a single domain can bind to BiP at a time.
|
Production of LC Domain Mutants That Lack Cysteine Residues Required for Intrachain Disulfide Bonds
To determine which LC domain was bound to BiP and unable to fold in the presence of BiP mutants, we mutated
the cysteine pairs that form the intradomain disulfide
bond to serine in each of the domains separately. Both LC mutants were transiently expressed in COS cells and
the resultant LC proteins were compared with wild-type
LC. On reducing gels, the V and C domain mutants migrated exactly the same as wild-type LC produced from either the genomic (gWT
) or cDNA (cWT
) clone (Fig. 2).
These labeled LCs were also analyzed under nonreducing
conditions to determine their oxidation status. During the
final 10 min of biosynthetic labeling, DTT was added to a
dish transfected with cWT
in order to produce a mixture
of completely reduced (F0), partially oxidized (F1), and
completely oxidized (Fox) intermediates of
LC for comparison. The genomic and cDNA clones of wild-type
produced completely oxidized LC that comigrated with
the fastest migrating band in the DTT-treated sample (Fig.
2). Both the V and C domain cysteine mutants migrated
with an intermediate mobility (F1), which was expected if
one domain folded and formed an intradomain disulfide bond but the other did not. This demonstrated that mutation of the cysteines prevented disulfide bond formation in
the targeted domain but did not alter folding and disulfide
bond formation in the nonmutated domain.
|
We examined the effects of genetically interrupting disulfide bond formation on secretion of the two LC mutants. Under labeling conditions where the wild-type LC
was readily secreted, we observed no secretion of either
the Vmut or the Cmut
(Fig. 3). Thus, disulfide bond formation in both domains is required for LC secretion. All
LC possess a COOH-terminal cysteine that remains unpaired in LCs that have not formed homodimers or assembled with heavy chains. To determine if a thiol-mediated
retention mechanism (Alberini et al., 1990
; Fra et al.,
1993
) was responsible for the lack of secretion, we treated
cells with 2-
mercaptoethanol. This did not induce the secretion of either LC mutant (data not shown), suggesting
that the thiol-mediated retention system (Alberini et al.,
1990
; Fra et al., 1993
) is not solely responsible for keeping
these LCs in the cell.
|
Expression of a BiP ATPase Mutant Had No Additional
Effect on the Folding of the Vmut, Whereas It Further
Inhibited the Folding of
Cmut
If BiP binds to a single LC domain, expression of the BiP
ATPase mutant should only further affect oxidation of the
LC mutant that had cysteine changes in the non-BiP-binding domain. Conversely, if both domains were capable of
binding to BiP but only one BiP molecule could bind to
the LC at a time, the mutant BiP should either further prevent the oxidation (i.e., from F1 to F0) of both LC mutants
or have no further effect on either, depending on whether
BiP was already associated with the nondisulfide-bonded domains. Either way, BiP mutant expression should affect
both domains equally. Wild-type and both
mutants
were coexpressed with either wild-type or G37 mutant
BiP. Transfected cells were pulse labeled with [35S]methionine and [35S]cysteine in the presence of DTT to inhibit disulfide bond formation and then chased in the absence of DTT to allow the LC domains to fold and form
disulfide bonds. As in previous experiments, wild-type
LCs were oxidized completely during the 1-h chase when
expressed with wild-type BiP, but about half of the LC expressed with mutant BiP failed to be oxidized completely
as evidenced by the presence of the F1 form of the LC
(Fig. 4). There is some variability in the percentage of LC
in the F1 and Fox forms between experiments, which may
relate to the relative pool size of transfected mutant BiP
and endogenous WT BiP. The Vmut
migrated with an intermediate mobility (F1) when coexpressed with wild-type
BiP. This was anticipated because the V region cannot
form a disulfide bond due to mutation of its cysteine residues, and the other domain was shown to fold independently when synthesized in the absence of DTT (Fig. 2). Coexpression of the BiP ATPase mutant with Vmut
did
not significantly inhibit the LC from forming the F1 intermediate. When the Cmut
was analyzed in the same way,
we found that in the presence of wild-type BiP, it oxidized
to the F1 intermediate after 1 h of chase, although not as
efficiently as either the wild-type
LC or the Vmut
(Fig. 4).
However, when the Cmut
was coexpressed with the BiP
ATPase mutant it was almost completely inhibited in its
ability to form the F1 intermediate indicating that in the absence of BiP release both the VL and CL domain remained unoxidized. This strongly suggests that BiP binds to only a
single domain in the
LC and that it is the V domain.
|
There are several other interesting observations in this experiment. First, the wild-type and Vmut LC appear to be more resistant to DTT-mediated reduction than the Cmut, because in the pulse material (0) a portion of both these LC are partially oxidized (F1 form). Since the oxidized domain in the Vmut can only be the constant region domain, this suggests that the C domain is more resistant to reduction. In keeping with this, when the C domain cannot form disulfide bonds (Cmut), the V domain is readily reduced (i.e., no evidence of a partially oxidized, F1 form). Thus, although the folded tertiary structure is very similar for both domains, their ability to bind BiP and the susceptibility of their disulfide bonds to reducing agents are not the same. Previous studies have shown that buried disulfide bonds in Ig domains are fairly resistant to reducing agents. Thus, it is reasonable to suggest that during biosynthesis the C domain is folding and burying its disulfide bond so rapidly that a portion of it is resistant to DTT. The second interesting finding is that coexpression of mutant BiP diminished the post-DTT recovery of both wild-type and Cmut LC but did not greatly change the amount of Vmut LC (Fig. 4). The significance of this observation is not clear but may relate to the fact that mutant BiP expression would adversely affect the folding of both wild-type and Cmut LC by preventing the oxidation of the V domain. However, irreversible binding of the BiP mutant to the V domain would not have any further affect on the Vmut, because this domain was already unable to fold.
BiP Only Binds to the V domain of the LC In Vivo
The data in the previous experiment strongly suggest that
BiP binds to the unoxidized variable region domain but
does not associate with the unoxidized constant region domain. To examine this directly, both Vmut and Cmut LCs
were coexpressed with wild-type BiP. Transfected cells
were metabolically labeled in the presence of DTT and
then chased without DTT. Lysates were immunoprecipitated with antibodies specific for LC and for rodent BiP.
Immediately after labeling (0 chase), both the unfolded
Vmut and Cmut LCs were coprecipitated with BiP (Fig. 5).
After a 1-h chase, a portion of the Vmut had folded to the
F1 intermediate. Both this intermediate and the completely reduced (F0) form bound to BiP and could be coprecipitated with the anti-BiP antiserum. Interestingly,
BiP appeared to bind better to the completely reduced
form than to the partially oxidized LC, as suggested by the
fact that a larger proportion of the F0 form was coprecipitated with BiP than the F1 form. Although we do not understand the reason for this difference, it is possible that if
BiP binds to V region sequences that are close to the C domain, folding and oxidation of the C domain could somehow weaken this interaction and make it less stable during immunoprecipitation. Examination of the Cmut LC revealed that although half of the LC achieved the F1 folding
intermediate, they did not bind to BiP. Only the completely reduced (F0) form (in which the V domain was also
unoxidized) was capable of associating with BiP (Fig. 5).
Thus, BiP only binds to the unoxidized V domain of the
full-length LC in vivo.
|
ER-targeted C Domain Does Not Associate with BiP
It is possible that because the V domain enters the ER
first, BiP binds to this domain, and then sterically hinders
a second BiP molecule from binding to the C domain as it
enters. To examine this possibility, we produced a I constant domain that could be translocated into the ER lumen
(ER-C
) by engineering the cleavable ER signal sequence
from the original full-length
LC (Bernard et al., 1978
)
onto the NH2 terminus of the C domain. Both full-length wild-type
LC and the ER-directed C domain were transiently expressed in COS cells. Metabolic labeling revealed that similar to WT
LC, the ER-C
was synthesized and secreted from the transfected cells (Fig. 6 A).
This demonstrated that, not only did the signal sequence
target this domain to the ER, but that the signal sequence was efficiently cleaved and the isolated C domain was
transport competent. Under steady-state labeling, some
BiP was coprecipitated with wild-type
LC and vice versa.
However, when the C domain was analyzed in the same
way, there was no evidence of BiP coprecipitating with the
C domain or of the C domain coprecipitating with BiP (Fig. 6 A).
|
Steady-state labeling is not the most sensitive way to detect BiP association with proteins because the interactions
are often transient or unstable. Therefore, we reexamined
the ability of the isolated C domain to associate with BiP
by coexpressing it with either wild-type or mutant BiP and
pulse labeling under reducing conditions to inhibit folding
of the domain. Under these conditions, the WT LC was
easily detected in association with BiP (Fig. 6 B). Conversely, even under the most sensitive conditions for demonstrating BiP association with target proteins, there was
no detectable evidence for BiP interacting with the ER-C
in vivo.
BiP-binding Sites Are Predicted to Occur in Both the V
and C Domain of the I LC
Our inability to detect BiP complexed to the C domain by
any of the methods described above could mean the C domain does not possess BiP-binding sites. Alternatively, potential BiP-binding sites might be present but the C domain could fold too rapidly and stably, even in the absence
of disulfide bond formation, to express them. A BiP-binding site algorithm (Blond-Elguindi et al., 1993) was applied to the
I LC. Peptide scores of between six and 10 were previously shown to be good predictors of peptides that were able to stimulate the ATPase activity of BiP and
scores of above 10 were considered to be excellent predictors (Knarr et al., 1995
). The relevance of a peptide to
stimulate the ATPase activity of BiP is not clear, but it is
generally assumed to indicate the ability of a peptide to
bind BiP (Flynn et al., 1991
; Blond Elguindi et al., 1993;
Knarr et al., 1995
). Although the variable domain clearly
possesses more peptides with high "BiP scores," numerous
peptides scoring above 6 were found in the constant domain (Fig. 7). Two peptides had BiP scores of above 10 in
the constant domain compared with four such sequences
in the variable domain. Because we were unable to detect
BiP binding to either an isolated constant domain or the
cysteine-substituted constant domain in vivo, we must conclude that either the algorithm is not a good predictor of
BiP-binding sites, or the constant domain folds so rapidly
and stably that BiP does not have the opportunity to interact with it.
|
Thermal Unfolding of Native and Reduced C Domain
To address these two possibilities, recombinant LC V
domain and C domain were produced in bacteria, purified,
and then analyzed on reducing SDS gels. The C domain
was relatively pure (Fig. 8 A), but much smaller quantities
of the V domain were obtained and our preparations
continuously had a major contaminating band (data not
shown). The band corresponding to the anticipated size of
the C domain was microsequenced to confirm its identity.
The C domain migrated as a monomer on nonreducing
gels and appeared to have formed the intradomain disulfide bond based on its decreased mobility after DTT treatment (Fig. 8 A). The contaminating protein in the V
domain sample prevented us from using it in thermal
unfolding assays, but the C domain was sufficiently pure
for this analysis. The intrinsic fluorescence of a protein
changes as it unfolds. Thus, a protein's stability can be assessed by monitoring its fluorescence at increasing temperatures. Thermal unfolding curves were generated for
the C domain in the presence of 10 mM DTT. This was
sufficient to reduce the intradomain disulfide bond, because the recombinant C domain migrated slower after
DTT treatment (Fig. 8 A). The protein exhibited a single,
cooperative unfolding transition as the temperature increased (Fig. 8 B). The melting temperature (Tm) (i.e., the
temperature at which 50% of the protein is unfolded) of
the C domain under reducing conditions was calculated to
be 50.4°C. Interestingly, even after reduction, the C domain was still completely folded at 37°C and was slightly
more stable than the molecular chaperone BiP (Tm = 49.2°C). This precluded in vitro studies to examine BiP association with an unfolded C domain since we were not
able to find conditions where the C domain would be unfolded and the BiP still functional. Unfortunately it was
not possible to establish a thermal unfolding curve for the
C domain in the absence of DTT, presumably because the
COOH-terminal cysteine, which pairs with a cysteine in
the Ig heavy chain, contributes to aggregate formation under these experimental conditions (data not shown). Thus,
although the exact contribution of the intradomain disulfide bond to the stability of the C domain could not be determined, it is clear that the C domain remains remarkably
stable even in the absence of this bond. This may explain
the lack of BiP binding to the C domain in vivo, even when
LCs are synthesized in the presence of reducing agents.
|
![]() |
Discussion |
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The Ig domain is one of the elementary structures that
serve as building blocks for many proteins. Although the
sequences of these domains vary between different proteins, most are composed of seven strands that fold into
an antiparallel barrel structure that is stabilized by a single
disulfide bond. The data presented here demonstrate that
in spite of the strong structural similarities between Ig domains, the involvement of molecular chaperones in their
folding in vivo can be quite different. All Ig domains that have been examined thus far possess potential BiP-binding sites, as detected by a BiP-binding algorithm (Knarr
et al., 1995
). It should be stressed that there are currently
no data to demonstrate that any of these sites can be recognized in an intact protein, nor has an actual in vivo BiP-binding site been mapped on any protein. As a result,
there is not a consensus in the field as to what is the best
method for identifying potential BiP-binding sites. However, despite some differences in the sequences identified by the various hsp70-binding site algorithms, all of them
detect multiple peptides within a given protein that have
the potential to bind an hsp70 family member (Flynn et al.,
1991
; Blond-Elguindi et al., 1993
; Takenaka et al., 1995
;
Rudiger et al., 1997
). From the present study, at least in
the case of BiP, it is clear that this does not necessarily
mean they will be used in vivo during the folding of the
protein. Although the NH2-terminal variable domain examined here is clearly bound to BiP before its complete folding and oxidation, we were unable to demonstrate BiP
binding to the COOH-terminal constant region domain by
any method. This included both the use of reducing agents
or mutagenesis of cysteine residues to destabilize domain
folding and the expression of BiP ATPase mutants to trap
and stabilize complexes. All of these methods readily allowed us to detect BiP bound to the V domain.
Hsp70 family members interact with substrate proteins
in an ATP-dependent fashion. In vitro experiments have
demonstrated that the ATP-bound form of hsp70 binds
proteins more rapidly than the ADP-bound form, but hydrolysis of the bound ATP to ADP is required to stabilize
this binding (Bukau and Horwich, 1998). The G37 BiP
mutant used in this study binds ATP as well as wild-type BiP, but it is unable to undergo the appropriate conformation change upon binding to ATP and therefore resembles
the ADP-bound form of BiP (Wei et al., 1995
). Thus, it
might be argued that our BiP mutant is less able to complete with endogenous BiP for substrate proteins and
therefore would not act as a kinetic trap for the C domain.
However, the G37 mutant is able to compete well with endogenous wild-type BiP for binding to the V domain of the LC (this study), the CH1 domain of the Ig heavy chain
(Gaut and Hendershot, 1993
), and factor VIII, a component of the blood coagulation cascade (Morris et al., 1997
).
Nevertheless, it is conceivable that BiP has a much lower
affinity for the C domain and the mutant BiP drops below
a threshold of detectable binding. This would not be a factor in the experiments where reducing agents or cysteine mutants were employed. In this case, there was no evidence that either the endogenous BiP or the transfected
wild-type BiP were capable of binding to the unoxidized C
domain. So, at the very least, one must conclude that if BiP
binds to the C domain it must be at a very reduced affinity
so that mutant BiP can no longer compete, and this binding must be very transient and not prolonged by preventing the oxidation of the C domain. Clearly this is in contrast to BiP's interaction with the V domain.
Our data suggest that it is not the presence of BiP-binding sites per se that determines whether or not a protein
will associate with BiP. Instead it appears that the folding
pathway and rate at which folding occurs control whether
an individual protein, or region of a protein, will bind to
BiP. If the "BiP-binding" sequences are rapidly sequestered within the interior of the newly synthesized protein,
they may never be exposed long enough to allow BiP to
bind. The resistance of a portion of newly synthesized C
domain to reducing agents strongly suggests that this domain folds rapidly, and the thermal stability of the reduced
C domain demonstrates that it does not require a disulfide
bond to stabilize this folding state. Consistent with this
idea, in vitro folding studies on an isolated human C domain revealed that the conformation of the C domain is
not greatly affected by reducing agents (Goto and Hamaguchi, 1981
).
In spite of the fact that we were readily able to detect
the V domain bound to BiP when it was reduced, we are
not sure how much of the wild-type V domain binds to BiP
when it is produced and folded under physiological conditions. Although clearly some of it can be trapped with the
BiP mutants, we get a much higher proportion binding to
BiP when they are synthesized in the presence of reducing
agents (Hendershot et al., 1996), which destabilizes this
domain. We interpret this to suggest that instead of BiP playing an active role in folding these proteins, that it may be standing by to "catch" proteins that are either unable
or slow to fold and prevent them from aggregating. Thus,
only proteins that have difficulties in folding or perhaps
multisubunit proteins would require BiP to obtain their
mature conformation. This conclusion is consistent with
data showing that alterations in the levels of wild-type BiP
can change the rate of folding of some proteins (Dorner
et al., 1988
; Braakman et al., 1991
). Perhaps by greatly increasing the levels of BiP in the ER, low-affinity sites on proteins that are not normally occupied by BiP would be.
It is interesting to speculate on why these two domains
might have evolved to have different folding stabilities and
chaperone requirements. The variable domains of both Ig
heavy and light chains contain the antigen-binding site and
as such must accommodate a large variety of amino acid
changes to recognize a nearly infinite number of antigens.
Thus, the stability or rate of folding of variable regions
may vary greatly and in some cases require more help to
fold. Recently another LC, the nonsecreted NS-1 LC, was shown to bind to BiP via its unfolded V domain
(Skowronek et al., 1998
). Unlike the V domains, the constant domains do not contribute directly to the antigen-binding site and do not vary in sequence within a given isotype. The single constant domain of the LC (CL) pairs
with the first constant domain (CH1) of the heavy chain,
which possesses a stable BiP-binding site (Hendershot et
al., 1987
). The LC in some as yet undefined way must displace BiP from the heavy chain so Ig assembly can proceed (Lee, Y.-K., J.W. Brewer, R. Hellman, and L.M.
Hendershot, manuscript submitted for publication). Thus,
the conserved C domain may have evolved to fold rapidly
and stably in order to assist the folding of the CH1 domain.
In support of this role for CL, domain pairing appears to
play a role in the folding of some of the other constant domains of the heavy chain (Kaloff and Haas, 1995
).
In conclusion, the studies described here demonstrate
that the two structurally similar Ig domains of the I LC
behave very differently in respect to their association with
BiP during folding even though both domains possess potential BiP-binding sites. The data suggest that the simple
presence of BiP-binding sites on a nascent chain does not
ensure that BiP will bind and play a role in its folding. Instead, our data support a model in which BiP preferentially recognizes proteins that are slower to fold to a stable conformation.
![]() |
Footnotes |
---|
Address correspondence to L.M. Hendershot, Dept. of Tumor Cell Biology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, 332 N. Lauderdale, Memphis, TN 38105. Tel.: (901) 495-2475. Fax: (901) 495-2381. E-mail: linda. hendershot{at}stjude.org
Received for publication 4 May 1998 and in revised form 9 November 1998.
This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (GM-54068), the Cancer Center CORE (P30 CA21765), and the American Lebanese Syrian Associated Charities of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
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Abbreviations used in this paper |
---|
2-ME, 2-mercaptoethanol;
BiP, immunoglobulin heavy chain-binding protein;
C, constant;
CH1, first constant
domain of the heavy chain;
CL, single constant domain of the light chain;
cWT, pSV
eukaryotic expression vector;
ER-C
, a
1 constant domain
that could be translocated to the ER lumen;
gWT
, pJDE
I genomic
clone;
LC, light chain;
V, variable;
WT, wild-type.
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