Institut für Toxikologie und Genetik, Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Postfach 3640, 76021 Karlsruhe, Germany
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: nils.johnsson{at}itg.fzk.de)
Accepted 24 November 2004
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Summary |
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Key words: Sec complex, Split-ubiquitin, Signal sequence, Protein interaction, Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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Introduction |
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The isolation of the heptameric Sec complex and the reconstitution of protein translocation in otherwise protein-free liposomes allowed a detailed functional and structural characterization of its components (Panzner et al., 1995). Sec62p consists of two large cytosolic domains at its N- and C-terminus that are connected via two transmembrane elements (Deshaies and Schekman, 1989
). Sec62p is actively involved in signal-sequence-recognition during the targeting of the nascent chain to the translocation channel (Wittke et al., 2000
; Plath et al., 2004
). The N-terminal domain of Sec62p directly interacts with an acidic stretch located at the C-terminal end of Sec63p (Wittke et al., 2000
; Willer et al., 2003
). The C-terminal domain of Sec62p harbors an additional binding site whose corresponding partner in the Sec complex is not yet mapped (Wittke et al., 2000
). Sec63p is a member of the family of DnaJ proteins and has three membrane-spanning regions (Feldheim et al., 1992
). Its J-domain is located between the transmembrane regions two and three in the lumen of the ER, whereas its large C-terminal domain protrudes into the cytosol. The J-domain of Sec63p interacts with the ER-lumenal Hsp70 (Kar2p) to stimulate its ATPase and polypeptide binding activity (Brodsky and Schekman, 1993
; Matlack et al., 1999
). By transiently binding to the incoming nascent chain, Kar2p keeps the translocating polypeptide from sliding back into the cytosol (Sanders et al., 1992
; Matlack et al., 1999
). In contrast to the other members of the tetrameric Sec62/63 complex, Sec63p together with Kar2p fulfills additional functions during the cotranslational mode of protein translocation (Young et al., 2001
). Whether Sec63p performs this role in the context of the tetrameric Sec62/63 complex or in combination with other partner proteins is unknown.
Modulating the activity or changing the binding partners of a protein is often achieved by post-translational modifications. Indeed, the phosphorylation of some of the members of the mammalian trimeric Sec61 complex and a subsequent stimulation of cotranslational protein import into microsomes has been observed in vitro (Gruss et al., 1999). Here, we describe our finding that in yeast recruitment of Sec62p to the Sec complex is stimulated by protein kinase CK2 via phosphorylation of the C-terminal domain of Sec63p.
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Materials and Methods |
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Media, synthetic lethality, translocation and split-ubiquitin assays
Yeast rich (YPD) and synthetic minimal media with 2% dextrose (SD) followed standard recipes. Split-ubiquitin interaction assays and translocation assays were performed as described previously (Wittke et al., 2002). Interaction assays were performed on media containing 10 mM methionine to reduce the expression of PMET17-SEC63-Cub-RURA3. The tests for establishing a synthetic lethality between the different sec63 and sec62 alleles were performed as described (Wittke et al., 2000
).
[35S]-Pulse and carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) immunoprecipitation
Cells were grown at 30°C or 37.5°C to an OD600 of 1, and 2 OD units were spun down, washed with water and resuspended in 1 ml of SD medium without methionine. Cells were kept at the appropriate temperature for 20 minutes and labeled with 250 µCi of [35S]-Pro-mix labeling solution (Amersham Biosciences, Uppsala, Sweden). Cells were transferred after 5 minutes onto ice and the reaction was stopped by the addition of 0.25 ml 50% TCA. Cell extraction and immunoprecipitation with an anti-carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) monoclonal antibody (Molecular Probes, Portland, USA) was done as described previously (Bonifacino and Dell'Angelica, 1998).
In vivo phosphorylation
JD53 cells expressing F-Fpr1-63C14 or F-Fpr1-63C14T652; 654A were cultured in 5 ml SD-trp to high cell densities, washed once in low phosphate medium (50 µM KH2PO4 in phosphate-free medium) (Qbiogene, Heidelberg, Germany) and diluted 1:700 into 4 ml of the same medium. Cells were grown to an OD600 of 0.7 and CuSO4 was added to 100 µM. After 1 hour of further incubation at 30°C the cells were transferred into phosphate-free medium containing 100 µM copper and 50 µCi of [32P]O4 (Amersham Biosciences) per OD600. After 2 hours at 30°C the reaction was stopped by the addition of 50% TCA to 12.5%. Cells were washed once in acetone and prepared for immunoprecipitation with the anti-Flag antibody (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) as described (Bonifacino and Dell'Angelica, 1998).
Kinase assay
One hundred milliliters of cells expressing Cka1-ProA were grown at 30°C in YPD to an OD600 of approximately 1, washed once in water and then shock frozen in liquid nitrogen and either stored at 80°C or immediately processed for protein purification. Frozen cells from a 100 ml culture were ground under liquid nitrogen and the cell paste was extracted during thawing with 2 ml extraction buffer 1 (50 mM Hepes pH 7.5, 200 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 1 mM PMSF) containing phosphatase inhibitor cocktail 1 and 2 (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) and a protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche, Penzberg, Germany). The cell suspension was vortexed and centrifuged for 20 minutes at 16,000 g at 4°C. The supernatant was incubated with 40 µl IgG sepharose (Amersham Biosciences) for 4 hours at 4°C, the beads were washed five times with 10 ml of extraction buffer 1 and twice with kinase buffer (20 mM Hepes pH 7.5, 100 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2). The procedure was repeated with JD53 cells not expressing a ProA fusion for the control reaction.
Cells expressing F-Fpr1-63C14 or F-Fpr1-63C14T652; 654A under the PCUP1-promoter were grown in SD-trp containing 100 µM copper at 30°C to an OD600 of approximately 1. Cells were extracted as described but in extraction buffer 2 (50 mM Hepes pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT) containing phosphatase and protease inhibitors. Proteins were precipitated by incubation with anti-Flag antibody for 1 hour followed by incubation with 40 µl of Protein G sepharose (Amersham Biosciences) for 2 hours. Beads were washed four times with extraction buffer 2 and treated with phosphatase as described. After phosphatase treatment the beads were washed four times with extraction buffer 2 and the protein was recovered by incubating the beads with 50 µl of a 100 µg/ml solution of Flag peptide (Sigma) in 10 mM Tris pH 7.5, 100 mM NaCl for 1 hour at room temperature.
The kinase assay contained 20 µl of Cka1-ProA beads, 20 µM ATP, 1 µCi of [-32P]-GTP (Amersham) and 20 µl of Flag peptide eluate in a total volume of 50 µl kinase buffer. Inhibition of the kinase was achieved by 10 µg/ml Heparin (Sigma). The reaction was stopped after 30 minutes at 30°C by mixing the supernatant with an equal amount of twofold SDS sample buffer (SB) and boiling for 3 minutes.
Phosphatase treatment
Twenty microliters of Protein G sepharose presenting the anti-Flag antibody bound protein were treated with 10 units of calf intestinal phosphatase (CIP) (New England Biolabs, Beverly, USA) or without enzyme for 1 hour at 37°C in phosphatase buffer (NEB 3, New England Biolabs). Proteins immobilized on nitrocellulose were incubated with 5 ml of phosphatase buffer containing 30 units of CIP or no enzyme at 37°C for 1 hour.
Overlay assay
Protein extracts were derived from 10 ml yeast cultures as described (Wittke et al., 2002) or were obtained by resuspending the washed cell pellets in 100 µl twofold SB and subjecting them to four consecutive cycles of boiling, vortexing and freezing in liquid nitrogen. Extracts were separated by 12.5% SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and transferred onto nitrocellulose (Wittke et al., 1999
). The membrane was incubated for 2 hours at 4°C with 4 ml of 1:2 diluted extracts from cells expressing Sec62
C125-Dha under the inducible PCUP1-promoter. Bound Sec62
C125-Dha was detected with anti-Ha antibody (Hiss Diagnostics, Freiburg, Germany) essentially as described (Wittke et al., 2002
). The cells expressing Sec62
C125-Dha were grown in 100 ml SD-leu, 100 µM copper to an OD600 of 1-1.5. The extracts from these cells were prepared as described for the cells expressing F-Fpr1-63C14.
Binding assays
F-Fpr1-63C14 presenting beads were incubated with 2 ml of extract derived from cells expressing Sec62C125-Dha. After incubation for 2 hours at 4°C, the beads were washed four times with extraction buffer 2 and resuspended in 40 µl of twofold SB. Extractions of Sec63-ProA or Sec63T654A-ProA expressing cells were as for F-Fpr1-63C14-expressing cells but with buffer containing 0.2% Triton X-100. 1.5 ml of the extracts were incubated with 30 µl of IgG sepharose beads for 2 hours at 4°C. Beads were spun down and 20 µl of the supernatants were boiled directly with 20 µl of twofold SB. Beads were washed five times with extraction buffer 2 (plus 0.2% Triton) and boiled in 120 µl SB. Fifteen microliters of the supernatants and 40 µl of the bound fractions were used for western blot analysis. Yeast cells expressing F-Fpr1-63C14 together with Sec62
C125-Dha were grown to an OD600 of 1-1.5 and extracted as described for cells expressing F-Fpr1-63C14. The extract was incubated with anti-Ha antibody agarose (Hiss Diagnostics), washed four times with 1 ml of extraction buffer 2 and resuspended in 80 µl of twofold SB.
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Results |
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To conclusively map the phosphorylation sites in 63C14 we replaced the threonine residues individually (F-Fpr1-63C14T652A; F-Fpr1-63C14T654A) by alanines or exchanged the last three residues of Sec63p including Ser 661 from S-P-E to A-L-P (F-Fpr1-63C14S661A). The mutated F-Fpr1p fusion proteins were analyzed before and after phosphatase treatment by SDS-PAGE (Fig. 2A). Similar to F-Fpr1-63C14, untreated F-Fpr1-63C14S661A displayed two bands that merged into a single faster migrating band after phosphatase treatment (Fig. 2A; lanes a, b, and g, h). F-Fpr1-63C14T652A and the double mutation F-Fpr1-63C14T652; 654A were detected as single bands. The running positions of both mutants remained unaltered after phosphatase treatment and were identical to the dephosphorylated F-Fpr1-63C14 (Fig. 2A; lanes c, d, and i, j). Interestingly, F-Fpr1-63C14T654A migrated as a double band (Fig. 2A; lane e). After phosphatase treatment the upper band merged with the lower band, the mobility of which remained unchanged (Fig. 2A; lanes e, f), indicating a single phosphorylation in F-Fpr1-63C14T654A. These findings were confirmed and extended by the different binding affinities of the mutants to Sec62C125-Dha. The single and the double replacements of T652 and T654 by alanines drastically reduced their binding to the N-terminal domain of Sec62p, whereas the exchange of serine at position 661 had no detectable effect (Fig. 2B). Single exchanges of T652 and T654 against either aspartate or glutamate in F-Fpr1-63C14 or the replacement of both threonines by aspartates did not recover the binding to Sec62
C125-Dha (Fig. 2B; lanes h, i, and our unpublished observation).
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The borders of the C-terminal binding site of Sec63p have not yet been precisely defined. As the predominance of negative charges extends well beyond the last 14 residues of Sec63p we repeated the binding experiments with a fusion protein containing the last 47 residues of Sec63p (F-Fpr1-63C47). Fig. 2C,D shows that the binding of the complete C-terminal acidic domain of Sec63p to Sec62C125-Dha is drastically impaired after phosphatase treatment or through single alanine exchanges at positions 652 or 654. The residual affinities of the mutated or phosphatase-treated F-Fpr1-63C47 for the N-terminal domain of Sec62p are above the background and therefore significant (Fig. 2C,D, and our unpublished observation).
Sec63p is phosphorylated in vivo
Phosphatase treatment of the full-length Sec63p did not change the mobility of the protein during SDS-PAGE. We therefore exploited the phosphorylation-dependent binding of the N-terminal domain of Sec62p to the C-terminus of Sec63p to measure the phosphorylation status of Sec63p. Protein extracts of yeast cells were separated by SDS-PAGE and transferred onto nitrocellulose. Treatment of the membrane with an extract from yeast cells overexpressing Sec62C125-Dha was followed by incubations with an anti-Ha and a peroxidase-coupled anti-mouse antibody. A specific signal appeared at the running position of Sec63p, indicating the binding of Sec62
C125-Dha to the immobilized Sec63p (Fig. 3A,B; lane a). Phosphatase treatment of the membrane before the incubation with Sec62
C125-Dha or incubation with extracts from yeast cells not expressing Sec62
C125-Dha abolished the signal (Fig. 3A; lanes b, c). Further evidence that the signal reflects the phosphorylation-dependent binding of Sec62p to Sec63p was obtained by integrating the sequence of protein A (ProA) in frame to the sequence of the chromosomal SEC63. Extracts of these cells yielded a signal in the overlay assay that was shifted relative to Sec63p by the approximate size of ProA (Fig. 6D; lanes k, l). A mutant lacking the last 14 residues of Sec63p (Sec63
C14) was not detected by the overlay assay (Fig. 3B; lane e). To show the contributions of the phosphorylatable threonines to this binding we engineered alanine exchanges at position 652 or 654 or an aspartate exchange at position 654 into the chromosomal SEC63. All mutations abolished the binding to the N-terminal domain of Sec62p in the overlay assay (Fig. 3B; lanes b, c, d). We conclude that full-length Sec63p is phosphorylated at its C-terminus in vivo.
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Sec62/63 complex stability depends on phosphorylation in vivo
To confirm the influence of Sec63p phosphorylation on its interaction with Sec62p in living cells we replaced SEC63 by SEC63-PROA or Sec63T654A-PROA. The Sec62C125-Dha overlay assay with extracts from yeasts expressing Sec63-ProA or Sec63T654A-ProA confirmed the functionality of the ProA fusions and the contribution of the phosphorylatable threonine on the binding of Sec63p to the N-terminal domain of Sec62p (our unpublished observation). Precipitation of Sec63-ProA from cell extracts and the analysis of the bound material by an anti-Sec62p antibody revealed the interaction of the wild-type Sec63p with Sec62p and its strong reduction due to the T654A mutation (Fig. 4A). Additional evidence on the influence of the phosphorylation on the Sec62/63 complex stability in living cells was obtained by the split-ubiquitin assay (Johnsson and Varshavsky, 1994b
). Sec63p or its mutants were fused to the C-terminal half of ubiquitin that was extended by RUra3p (Sec63-Cub-RUra3p), whereas Sec62p was fused behind the N-terminal half of ubiquitin (Nug-Sec62p). In this configuration of the assay, interactions are detected by the nongrowth of the Nub/Cub-cotransformants on SD-ura (Wittke et al., 1999
). The split-Ub assay confirmed that wild-type Sec63p binds stronger to the full-length Sec62p than the mutants bearing a nonphosphorylatable residue at position 652 or 654 (Fig. 4B). Residual interactions between Sec62p and the mutants of Sec63p were still detectable in this assay as the cells that co-express Nug-Ubc6p together with Sec63-Cub-RUra3p grow better on SD-ura than the cells co-expressing Nug-Sec62p together with the mutants of Sec63-Cub-RUra3p (Fig. 4B). Ubc6p is a membrane protein of the ER that does not bind to Sec63p (Wittke et al., 2002
).
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Nonphosphorylatable Sec63p causes a protein translocation defect
Deletions of the last C-terminal 27 or 28 residues of Sec63p including the phosphorylatable threonines abolish post-translational protein translocation but leave the cotranslational translocation pathway largely intact (Ng et al., 1996; Young et al., 2001
). To monitor the influence of the phosphorylation of Sec63p on protein translocation we followed the maturation of the post-translational translocation substrate carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) (Hann and Walter, 1991
). CPY was immunoprecipitated from [35S]-methionine-labeled cells carrying the alleles sec63T652A or sec63T654A, and the ratio of translocated CPY versus cytosolic preproCPY was compared with the corresponding ratio measured in wild-type cells and cells carrying the sec62-1 allele (Fig. 5A). Sec62-1 cells display a strong translocation defect for post-translational translocation substrates (Deshaies and Schekman, 1989
). Both threonine exchanges cause a significant accumulation of preproCPY although clearly less severe than the sec62-1 allele (Fig. 5A). We made use of a sensitive growth assay to follow the influence of the threonine exchanges on the translocation of other signal-sequence-bearing proteins. A selection of signal sequences that at least partially rely on the post-translational translocation pathway were fused in front of the N-terminus of Ura3p. Cells expressing these fusion proteins and displaying a translocation defect grow on plates lacking uracil because of the accumulation of Ura3p activity in the cytosol, whereas nongrowth of the cells reflects the efficient import of translocation substrates into the lumen of the ER (Wittke et al., 2002
). According to this assay, cells expressing Sec63T652A, Sec63T654A, Sec63T654D or Sec63
C14 only incompletely translocate the fusion proteins containing the signal sequences of the
-factor, invertase, CPY and Kar2p (Fig. 5B). A similar phenotype was observed for the cells expressing a mutant of Sec62p (Sec62
N144) that lacks the N-terminal binding site for the C-terminus of Sec63p (Fig. 5B) (Wittke et al., 2000
). Fig. 5B also confirms that neither the deletion of the C-terminal binding site on Sec63p including the two threonines 652 and 654 nor the deletion of the corresponding N-terminal domain in Sec62p is deleterious for the cells (Ng and Walter, 1996
; Wittke et al., 2000
; Young et al., 2001
). As Sec62p contains an additional binding site for the Sec complex in its C-terminal domain, we assumed that the phosphorylatable threonines at positions 652 and 654 become only essential for the formation of the Sec complex once this alternative binding site has been removed. The synthetic lethality between the alleles sec62
C35-DHA and sec63T654A supports this hypothesis (Fig. 5C).
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Sec63p is constitutively phosphorylated by protein kinase CK2
The sequence environments of T652 and T654 both fulfill the requirements of the consensus protein kinase CK2 phosphorylation site (Pinna, 2003). In S. cerevisiae two CK2 isoforms are encoded by an essential gene pair, CKA1 and CKA2 (Glover, 1998
). To test the effect of CK2 on the phosphorylation of Sec63p and its C-terminal peptides we used the strain YDH8 that contains a temperature sensitive cka2 allele as its sole CK2 encoding copy (Hanna et al., 1995
). Because the phosphorylation of F-Fpr1-63C14 can be easily followed by the phosphorylation-induced shift of its apparent molecular weight during SDS-PAGE we first introduced F-Fpr1-63C14 into YDH8 and the isogenic wild-type strain YDH6. The expression of F-Fpr1-63C14 was immediately induced after the transfer to the restrictive temperature. The appearance of the indicative double band in the wild-type but not in the cka2ts strain clearly shows that the in vivo phosphorylation of the last 14 residues of Sec63p depends on CK2 (Fig. 6A). Treatment of F-Fpr1-63C14 with phosphatase confirmed that no phosphorylation had occurred in the cka2ts strain, whereas F-Fpr1-63C14 was very probably phosphorylated at both sites in the wild-type strain (Fig. 6B).
To verify that the C-terminal domain of Sec63p can be directly phosphorylated by CK2 we performed an in vitro phosphorylation assay with the isolated proteins. Phosphatase-treated F-Fpr1-63C14 and F-Fpr1-63C14T652; 654A were incubated with Cka1p purified from yeast in the presence of [-32P]-GTP. Cka1p significantly phosphorylated only F-Fpr1-63C14 but not the mutant (Fig. 6C; lanes a, c). The phosphorylation was blocked by the CK2-inhibitor heparin (Fig. 6C; lane b).
Using the Sec62C125-Dha overlay assay we failed to observe a rapid dephosphorylation of the endogenous full-length Sec63p in the YDH8 strain after the shift to the nonpermissive temperature (our unpublished observation). This observation raises the question whether full-length Sec63p is indeed a substrate for CK2. Alternatively, Sec63p is phosphorylated by CK2 but turned over only slowly. To distinguish between these two interpretations we expressed Sec63p ectopically from the inducible PMET17-promoter to selectively follow the modification of the newly made Sec63p in cells without CK2 activity (Fig. 6D). To separate the induced from the naturally expressed Sec63p we tagged the chromosomal SEC63 with PROA. The Sec62
C125-Dha overlay assay of extracts obtained at different times after the shift to the restrictive temperature revealed that the amount of phosphorylated Sec63p increased over time in the wild-type strain, whereas only traces of phosphorylated Sec63p were detected after 2 or 3 hours in the cka2ts strain (Fig. 6D, upper panel; compare lanes e, j). As Sec63p expression levels increased in both strains during the incubation at 37.5°C, the experiment provides further evidence that full-length Sec63p is phosphorylated at its C-terminal domain by CK2 in vivo (Fig. 6D, lower panel). Note that the endogenously expressed Sec63-ProA is only very slowly dephosphorylated during the course of the experiment (Fig. 6D; lanes i, j). The kinetics of dephosphorylation suggested that a defect in protein translocation might become apparent only after extended times of CK2-inactivation. To measure the translocation of CPY during the depletion of the CK2 activity, the ck2ts cells were pulsed with [35S]-methionine at different times after the shift to the restrictive temperature (Fig. 7A). Although the synthesis of CPY declined in the ck2ts strain during the incubation at 37.5°C, the small amount of phosphorylated Sec63p that persisted even 8 hours after the shift seemed to suffice to translocate the newly made CPY across the membrane (Fig. 7A).
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Discussion |
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The interaction between Sec63p and Sec62p is phosphorylation dependent
In vivo [32PO4] labeling and the phosphatase-induced decrease in the apparent molecular weight of a fusion protein harboring the last 14 residues of Sec63p or mutants thereof identified threonines 652 and 654 as phosphorylation sites in Sec63p (Figs 1 and 2). In vitro binding experiments and a newly developed overlay assay further revealed that the phosphorylation of both threonines are required for a strong interaction between the N-terminal domain of Sec62p and the C-terminus of Sec63p (Figs 2 and 3). Coprecipitation of the full-length proteins and the split-ubiquitin technique confirmed the necessity of phosphorylation for the formation of a stable Sec62p-Sec63p complex in vivo (Fig. 4). The threonine/alanine exchanges at position 652 and 654 of Sec63p mimic the effects of dephosphorylating Sec63p or its C-terminal peptides on their in vitro binding to Sec62p. Both alanine replacements also impair protein translocation in living cells. Together, this provides strong evidence that Sec63p phosphorylation is a prerequisite for tightly recruiting Sec62p to the Sec complex (Fig. 5). This proximity then allows Sec62p, which is part of the signal-sequence receptor, to efficiently deliver the signal sequences to Sec61p, the pore-forming subunit of the translocation channel (Matlack et al., 1997; Plath et al., 1998
; Dünnwald et al., 1999
; Wittke et al., 2000
; Plath et al., 2004
). The disruption of the phosphorylation-dependent Sec62p-Sec63p interaction impairs but does not prohibit protein translocation (Fig. 5). We therefore suspected a residual interaction between Sec62p and Sec63p that is independent of Sec63p phosphorylation. Indeed, such a residual interaction could be detected by the split-ubiquitin assay for the full-length proteins and by in vitro binding experiments between the N-terminal domain of Sec62p and the last 47 C-terminal residues of Sec63p (Figs 2 and 4) (Wittke et al., 2000
). Previous experiments have already identified an additional binding site for the Sec complex at the C-terminus of Sec62p (Wittke et al., 2000
). Our hypothesis that this site helps to keep Sec62p loosely attached to the Sec complex in the absence of a functional C-terminal domain of Sec63p was supported by the observed synthetic lethality between the alleles sec62
C35-DHA and sec63T654A (Fig. 5).
CK2 phosphorylates Sec63p in vivo and in vitro
The inability of a ck2ts strain to phosphorylate Sec63p at the restrictive temperature identified CK2 as the responsible kinase (Fig. 6). The in vitro phosphorylation of the C-terminal peptide of Sec63p by the enriched CK2 confirmed this conclusion (Fig. 6C). Considering the contribution of the phosphorylatable threonines to the translocation of CPY and other signal-sequence-bearing test substrates (Fig. 5), the lack of a detectable translocation defect in the ck2ts strain was unexpected (Fig. 7). The slow dephosphorylation of Sec63p during the CK2 heat inactivation might account for this observation as it leaves the cells with sufficient translocation capacity even hours after the inactivation of the kinase has occurred (Fig. 6D, Fig. 7A). We propose that, under the conditions tested, the phosphorylated Sec63p as part of the Sec62/63 complex is protected against rapid dephosphorylation (Fig. 7B). Consequently, those CK2-dependent processes displaying a higher phosphate turnover sense the depletion of CK2 much earlier and stop cell growth before a strong translocation defect manifests (Padmanabha et al., 1990; Hanna et al., 1995
; Rethinaswamy et al., 1998
).
The slow turnover of the phosphorylated Sec63p makes it less likely but does not necessarily exclude a phosphorylation-dependent regulation of the Sec complex assembly. A signal-dependent dephosphorylation of Sec63p could induce the dissociation of the Sec62/63 complex thereby freeing either of the subunits for alternative tasks (Fig. 7B). We know of two activities of Sec63p that are not shared by Sec62p cotranslational protein translocation and nuclear fusion during karyogamy (Ng and Walter, 1996; Young et al., 2001
). Both processes might require the dissociation of Sec62p from Sec63p, although a direct proof for this is still lacking (Prinz et al., 2000
; Helmers et al., 2003
; Schwartz and Blobel, 2003
).
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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