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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2001//1187 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 153, Number 6,
, 2001 1187-1198
Original Article |
Intracellular Retention of Newly Synthesized Insulin in Yeast Is Caused by Endoproteolytic Processing in the Golgi Complex
arvan{at}aecom.yu.edu
An insulin-containing fusion protein (ICFP, encoding the yeast prepro-
factor leader peptide fused via a lysine-arginine cleavage site to a single chain insulin) has been expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae where it is inefficiently secreted. Single gene disruptions have been identified that cause enhanced immunoreactive insulin secretion (eis). Five out of six eis mutants prove to be vacuolar protein sorting (vps)8, vps35, vps13, vps4, and vps36, which affect Golgi
endosome trafficking. Indeed, in wild-type yeast insulin is ultimately delivered to the vacuole, whereas vps mutants secrete primarily unprocessed ICFP. Disruption of KEX2, which blocks intracellular processing to insulin, quantitatively reroutes ICFP to the cell surface, whereas loss of the Vps10p sorting receptor is without effect. Secretion of unprocessed ICFP is not based on a dominant secretion signal in the
-leader peptide. Although insulin sorting mediated by Kex2p is saturable, Kex2p functions not as a sorting receptor but as a protease: replacement of Kex2p by truncated secretory Kex2p (which travels from Golgi to cell surface) still causes endoproteolytic processing and intracellular insulin retention. Endoproteolysis promotes a change in insulin's biophysical properties. B5His residues normally participate in multimeric insulin packing; a point mutation at this position permits ICFP processing but causes the majority of processed insulin to be secreted. The data argue that multimeric assembly consequent to endoproteolytic maturation regulates insulin sorting in the secretory pathway.
Key Words: multimerization assembly secretory protein trafficking sorting by retention
© 2001 The Rockefeller University Press
| Introduction |
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factor is fused (via a single dibasic site that is recognized and processed by the Kex2p endoprotease, which acts in the yeast Golgi complex [Fuller et al. 1989]) to a single chain insulin (comprised of insulin B and A chains that are contiguous, linked by a short noncleaved peptide). Upon endoproteolytic cleavage to liberate the
-leader peptide, a crystallizable insulin is produced with a structure essentially isomorphous with that of authentic two-chain insulin (Thim et al. 1986; Hua et al. 1998; Kjeldsen et al. 1998). Despite this, various insulin and/or insulin-like growth factor–containing constructs have been found to be secreted inefficiently from yeast (Steube et al. 1991; Kjeldsen et al. 1997); these constructs are apparently subject to quality control in the secretory pathway. Indeed, the poor secretion of a variety of heterologous secretory proteins from S. cerevisiae is generally attributed to the recognition and retention of these proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (Kowalski et al. 1998), typically via binding of ER molecular chaperones (Ellgaard et al. 1999). Accumulated proteins that do not satisfy quality control requirements for export are generally degraded by ER-associated degradation (ERAD) (Brodsky and McCraken 1997; Kopito 1997).
By contrast, studies of insulin storage in the regulated secretory pathway of mammalian cells generally support a model known as "sorting by retention" (Kuliawat and Arvan 1994). The model suggests that endoproteolytic processing of the insulin precursor, resulting in polymeric assembly of the processed insulin product (Huang and Arvan 1995), prevents its rapid (constitutive-like) secretion and facilitates its intracellular retention (Arvan and Castle 1998). Recently, by introducing the PC1 cDNA into regulated secretory cells that do not normally express this endoprotease, we found that conversion to insulin (by endoproteolysis) improves the efficiency of intracellular hormone storage. Specifically, to the extent that the insulin precursor remains unprocessed it is very rapidly secreted, whereas the fraction effectively processed to insulin is retained intracellularly with remarkable efficiency (Kuliawat et al. 2000). Based on these findings and the existence of detailed structural information (Dodson and Steiner 1998), insulin seemed like a suitable substrate for further studies of quality control and sorting in S. cerevisiae (an organism particularly amenable to such studies) (Gillece et al. 1999; Wang and Chang 1999). In particular, we have been interested to learn if the reportedly inefficient insulin secretion occurs primarily in relation to ER quality control events or perhaps in relation to processing or other events that take place more distally in the secretory pathway.
Here, we describe an insulin-containing fusion protein (ICFP) that is secreted inefficiently from S. cerevisiae. However, instead of ERAD we find that the single chain insulin is sorted in the Golgi complex and is retained intracellularly and eventually degraded within the endosomal/vacuolar system. Remarkably, we find that this sorting requires KEX2 and is dependent on endoproteolytic processing to form mature insulin; either loss of this cleavage or a point mutation that is known to affect the nature of insulin crystal packing causes dramatically augmented secretion of ICFP or insulin, respectively. These data appear consistent with a model in which insulin's biophysical properties participate in its sorting in the secretory pathway.
| Materials and Methods |
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but otherwise isogenic to L5145 (from the lab of G. Fink, Whitehead Institute, Boston, MA). Unless stated otherwise, all strains used in this study are isogenic to L5145. To construct the pep4
strain called PA13 (Table ), a deletion construct marked with hisG-URA3-hisG (pAS173 cut with EcoRI and XhoI) was used for transformation (Chang and Fink 1995). Pop out of the URA3 marker was obtained by selection on 5-FOA (Boeke et al. 1987). pep4
was confirmed phenotypically by loss of carboxypeptidase Y (CPY) processing to the mature form. A strain (L5145/pMI316) expressing ICFP from a single chromosomal locus was generated by transformation of L5145 with a yeast integration plasmid (pRS304) bearing GAL1-ICFP; the plasmid was linearized with Stu1 for integration at ura3. A kex2
strain was generated by transformation with a BamHI fragment from pKX::HIS3-(S) (Redding et al. 1991). A vps1
::LEU2 strain was obtained by transformation with pCRK3A (Rothman et al. 1990). A vps10 strain was obtained by transformation with XhoI and BamHI fragment of pEM10-103 (Marcusson et al. 1994).
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1-kB XbaI-SpeI fragment (containing GAL1-ICFP) from pAK966 and subcloning it into the SpeI site of pRS314. pMI316 was created by excising an
1-kB SalI-NotI fragment (containing GAL1-ICFP) from pMI306 and subcloning it into the respective sites of pRS304 marked with URA3 (Sikorski and Hieter 1989). pMIGLC was created by excising an
0.6-kB BamHI-XbaI fragment from pAK966 and subcloning it into the respective sites of pUC19 and then excising an
0.6-kB BamHI-SalI fragment from the resulting plasmid and subcloning it into the respective sites of pRSGLC, a TRP1-marked centromeric plasmid that employs the GPD1 promoter (from Dr. J. Warner, Albert Einstein College of Medicine) (Warner 1991). pASZ-SL-GM was created by excising an
1-kb XbaI fragment (containing GAL1-ICFP) from the commercial pSL1180 shuttle vector (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and subcloning it into pASZ11, an ADE2-marked centromeric plasmid (Stotz and Linder 1990). pHSP150frag-insulin was constructed as follows. Single chain insulin was amplified from pAK966 by PCR using two primers: TATCCATGGCTGCAGCCAAGAGATTCGTTAACCAACAC (which introduces a PstI site, underlined) and GTCGACTCTAGAGCCTGCGG (which introduces an XbaI site, underlined). After digestion with PstI and XbaI, the
200-bp PCR product was subcloned into pSL1180 (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and then excised at PstI and ClaI and subcloned again into the respective sites of pKTH4536 (from Dr. M. Makarow, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland) (Simonen et al. 1994). The resulting plasmid contains the HSP150 promoter and encodes the HSP150 signal and a portion of the leader peptide up to amino acid 63, linked via KR to single chain insulin; the 3' ClaI site immediately precedes the alcohol dehydrogenase terminator. An
3-kb fragment containing all of these regions was excised by BamHI and finally cloned into the BamHI site of pRS315, a LEU2-marked centromeric plasmid (Sikorski and Hieter 1989). pKX::HIS3-S(yn), a plasmid for complete gene replacement of KEX2 with HIS3 (kex2
2::HIS3-S), and pAB23, a URA3-marked 2-µ plasmid in which the TDH3 promoter drives the overexpression of secretory Kex2p, were from Dr. R. Fuller (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI). pLS1-10, a plasmid for replacement of the HindIII-XbaI region of PEP4 with TRP1 (pep4::TRP1) was from Dr. A. Cooper (University of Missouri at Kansas City, Kansas City, MO); the plasmid was cut with SacI and XhoI before integration/disruption. The H90T mutant in ICFP (mutation of His5 of the insulin B-chain) was made by a 369-bp EcoRI-HindIII PCR-amplified fragment containing the relevant CAC(His)
ACC (Thr) mutation, which was used to replace the matching EcoRI-HindIII fragment of ICFP in pYES2.
Filter Blot Assays
To detect secretion of insulin or its precursor (defined as "immunoreactive insulin secretion"), colonies or patches were replica plated onto nitrocellulose filters placed on top of plates containing 2% galactose as the sole carbon source. After 24–40 h, cells were washed off the filter with PBS plus 0.1% Tween-20. The filter was then incubated with a 1:500 dilution of guinea pig antiinsulin serum (Linco Research) followed by peroxidase-conjugated goat anti–guinea pig secondary (1:2,500; Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories) and finally detected by ECL. To detect CPY secretion after overnight growth of the cells, the filter was incubated sequentially with a 1:4,000 dilution of mouse monoclonal anti-CPY (Molecular Probes) and a peroxidase-conjugated goat anti–mouse secondary antibody (1:3,000; Bio-Rad Laboratories).
Metabolic Labeling and Immunoprecipitation
Cells were grown to exponential phase in minimal medium supplemented with required amino acids but without methionine and cysteine using either 2% galactose or 2% glucose as appropriate and then sedimented at 3,000 g for 5 min and resuspended at 4 OD600/ml in the same medium plus 1 mg/ml BSA. Insulin contains six cysteine residues and the
-leader peptide contains one methionine. For pulse labeling, [35S]cysteine (NEN Life Science Products) was added at 50 µCi per OD600 for the times indicated. For chase, the cells were sedimented and resuspended in synthetic complete (SC) medium plus 10 mM methionine and cysteine. At various chase times, 1-ml aliquots were transferred to ice, and 10 mM sodium azide and a protease inhibitor cocktail (0.25 µg/ml aprotinin, 0.1 mM leupeptin, 10 µM pepstatin, 5 mM EDTA, 10 µM E64, 1 mM DFP, 0.02% BSA) were added immediately. Cells were then sedimented at 3,000 g for 5 min, and the supernate-containing secreted proteins were collected for further analysis. The cells were resuspended in 100 µl breaking buffer containing 6 M urea, 1% SDS, 1 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris, pH 7.5. In Fig. 10 B, urea and SDS were replaced by 1% NP-40 in the breaking buffer. The cells were lysed by vortexing with glass beads and then boiling for 4 min (although in Fig. 10 B the boiling step was omitted). Samples were diluted 10-fold to a final concentration of 1% Triton X-100, 150 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, debris was pelleted in a microcentrifuge, and immunoprecipitations were normalized to acid precipitable counts per minute. Samples were precleared with 20 µl Zysorbin for 30 min (Zymed Laboratories). Media and cell lysates were then immunoprecipitated with 10 µl guinea pig antiinsulin using 20 µl Zysorbin as a secondary immunoadsorbent. Immunoprecipitates were routinely digested with PNGase F (New England Biolabs, Inc.) and analyzed by tricine-urea–SDS-PAGE (Schagger and von Jagow 1987), fluorography or PhosphorImaging, and quantitation using ImageQuant software (Molecular Dynamics).
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Indirect Immunofluorescence
Indirect immunofluorescence was performed as described (Preuss et al. 1991) with the following modifications. In brief, cells growing exponentially in 2% galactose-containing medium were fixed with 4% formaldehyde in 0.1 M potassium phosphate, pH 6.5. Cells were spheroplasted with oxalyticase (Enzogenetics) and permeabilized briefly with methanol and acetone. Cells were then incubated overnight with antiinsulin at 1:500 followed by a Cy3-conjugated secondary antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories). Cells were viewed with an Olympus IX70 microscope; images were collected digitally and analyzed using Adobe Photoshop® software.
Sucrose Gradient and DTT Accessibility Assays
For in vitro analyses of intracellular ICFP and insulin, cells expressing ICFP from the GPD1 promoter were employed. Cells were labeled as described above. For sucrose gradient analysis, cells were lysed with glass beads in a buffer containing 50 mM NaCl, 2 mM ZnSO4, 2 mM CaCl2, and 25 mM MES, pH 5.0. The cell lysate (2 ml) was then loaded onto a discontinuous sucrose gradient comprised of 2 ml each of 15 and 30% sucrose in the same buffer. The velocity gradients were centrifuged at 100,000 gav for 90 min. Gradient collection was simplified to two fractions comprising the upper half (including all of the load and the upper half of the 15% sucrose layer) and the lower half (including the lower half of the 15% sucrose layer and all of the 30% sucrose layer). From equal aliquots of each half, sucrose was diluted and the samples were immunoprecipitated with an antiinsulin antibody. Immunoprecipitates were analyzed by SDS-PAGE and fluorography.
The disulfide accessibility assay was modified from Huang and Arvan 1995. In brief, cells were lysed and immunoprecipitated in a buffer containing 170 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 50 mM Tris, pH 7.5. The insulin immunoprecipitates were washed once in a buffer containing 150 mM NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 1% NP-40, 1% sodium deoxycholate, 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5. After a brief water wash, parallel samples were either employed as untreated controls or treated first with 20 mM DTT in water at 37°C for 30 min followed by incubation with 29 mM iodoacetamide. Subsequently, all samples were incubated with 1,000 U of endoglycosidase H at 37°C for 1 h. Samples to be used as untreated controls were boiled in SDS-gel sample buffer in the presence or absence of 20 mM DTT and finally incubated at 37°C for 30 min in the presence of 41 mM iodoacetamide before gel loading. The experimental sample was not further treated with DTT but brought to 41 mM iodoacetamide and incubated at 37°C for 30 min before boiling in SDS-gel sample buffer.
| Results |
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factor fused via a single dibasic (KR) cleavage site to a polypeptide in which the B chain (first 29 residues) and A chain of insulin are made contiguous by an alanine-alanine-lysine linker (Fig. 1 A). (For simplicity in this paper, we refer to this single chain insulin simply as insulin or mature insulin in reference to its endoproteolytic liberation from the ICFP precursor.) When ICFP driven by a GAL1 promoter (Fig. 1 A) was expressed as a single copy integrated in the genome (YIp), secretion of immunoreactive insulin (defined as secretion of protein blotable with antiinsulin antibody; described in Materials and Methods) was at the lower limits of detection when yeast were grown on galactose as the sole carbon source (Fig. 1 B). To examine further the expression of ICFP, cells were pulse labeled with [35S]cysteine for 1 min followed by immediate lysis, insulin immunoprecipitation, deglycosylation of the
-leader with PNGase F, and analysis by tricine-urea–SDS-PAGE. (Note that all cysteine residues are conserved between ICFP and mature insulin.) In this case, an intracellular ICFP band migrating at Mr
14 kD was observed (Fig. 2 A, left lane). In a parallel sample that was labeled for 5 min (Fig. 2 A, right lane), a second smaller band was produced that comigrated with an authentic insulin standard. These data suggested that ICFP may undergo relatively rapid proteolytic processing to mature insulin (described further below).
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Gene Disruptions That Enhance Immunoreactive Insulin Secretion
The foregoing results suggested some form of quality control of insulin secretion. To examine this further, a genetic approach was undertaken. Using yeast expressing ICFP from a single copy integrated in the genome (see Fig. 1 B) and a mutagenized genomic library containing random insertions of lacZ and LEU2 (Burns et al. 1994), 90,000 transformants were screened by the Western blot assay to yield nine eis mutants displaying enhanced immunoreactive insulin secretion (as described in Materials and Methods). The nine eis mutants corresponded to six distinct gene disruptions, five of which were identified as VPS35, VPS13, VPS4, VPS8, and VPS36. These genes have been shown previously to regulate trafficking in the Golgi
endosome
vacuole pathway (Stack and Emr 1993; Bryant and Stevens 1998). vps35 and vps8 appeared to produce the greatest enhancement of immunoreactive insulin secretion, vps4 and vps13 produced an intermediate enhancement, and vps36 produced only a slight increase (Fig. 3 A).
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leader (Elliott et al. 1989). We therefore employed a standard assay (Finger et al. 1993; Loayza et al. 1998) to examine whether ICFP is subject to ERAD. The ICFP was expressed in a sec18 strain in which traffic to the Golgi complex is blocked at the nonpermissive temperature. After shifting to 37°C, cells were pulse labeled, lysed at varying times of chase
1.5 h, and analyzed by immunoprecipitation with antiinsulin, PNGase F digestion, and tricine-urea–SDS-PAGE. Strikingly, no endoproteolytic processing of ICFP was observed in the sec18 background (Fig. 4A and Fig. B) in contrast to wild-type yeast (see Fig. 2 A). Furthermore, unlike what has been observed for ERAD substrates (Plemper and Wolf 1999) the ICFP molecule was completely stable throughout the 90-min time course. Thus, no evidence was obtained for ERAD of the insulin-containing chimera.
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strain (deficient for vacuolar protease activity) (Ammerer et al. 1986). In this case, fully processed intracellular insulin was stabilized dramatically, although no increase in insulin secretion was observed (Fig. 4 C). Indeed, insulin clearly accumulated in the vacuole (identified under Nomarski optics) as judged by indirect immunofluorescence in pep4
cells (Fig. 5, top panels). Furthermore, in an eis5/vps4 pep4 double mutant (known to accumulate an enlarged prevacuolar compartment [Bryant and Stevens 1998]) staining was concentrated in a bright spot next to the vacuole (Fig. 5, bottom panels), indicating accumulation in the prevacuolar compartment. These data prove that immunoreactive insulin is retained intracellularly by trafficking from the Golgi complex through the endosomal system to the vacuole.
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In addition to its receptor function in sorting of vacuolar proteases (Marcusson et al. 1994; Cooper and Stevens 1996), Vps10p has been proposed to function as a Golgi-based sorting receptor for targeting misfolded secretory proteins to the endosomal system for vacuolar degradation (Hong et al. 1996; Durr et al. 1998; Holkeri and Makarow 1998; Jorgensen et al. 1999). To test whether Vps10p plays a role in preventing immunoreactive insulin secretion, Western blot assays were used to compare the secretion of immunoreactive insulin and CPY in a vps10-null mutant versus the eis/vps mutants. As shown in the bottom panel of Fig. 3 B, all of the vps mutants exhibited markedly enhanced immunoreactive CPY secretion, and vps10 arguably yielded the strongest CPY secretion phenotype. However, enhanced immunoreactive insulin secretion for vps10 was less than that seen with any other vps mutants tested (Fig. 3 B, top panel).
A quantitative analysis of immunoreactive insulin secretion from vps mutants was then performed by following [35S]cysteine-labeled protein. First, the effect of each of the five eis/vps mutations and vps10 was examined in strains where ICFP expression was driven by a GAL1 promoter on a centromeric plasmid. To improve intracellular recovery, a pep4 mutation was introduced into each strain. As shown in Fig. 6, each vps mutant tested showed an increase in secretion of protein immunoprecipitable with antinsulin. Quantitation of the data showed that whereas the control strain secreted only
8% of the total, the vps36, vps4, vps13, vps8, and vps35 strains secreted
19,
26,
41,
55, and
76%, respectively. The vps10 strain showed the lowest level of enhancement over the control, secreting labeled insulin at a level approaching that of vps36 (
19%).
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36%). In addition, an assortment of vps mutants showed a further increase in fractional secretion (vps4,
47; vps1,
53; vps8,
57; vps13,
64; vps35,
79%). The one exception was vps10, which showed no further increase in fractional secretion (measured at
27%). Together, these data are inconsistent with a central role of Vps10p as a sorting receptor for ICFP targeting from the Golgi complex to the endosomal system.
Kex2p Is a Saturable Component Conferring Intracellular Retention of Insulin
The observations of proteolytic maturation of ICFP to a form comigrating with authentic insulin (Fig. 2 A and Fig. 4 C) and blockade of this processing in a sec18 mutant (Fig. 4A and Fig. B) are consistent with the notion that cleavage of ICFP in the Golgi complex is catalyzed by the yeast endoprotease, Kex2p (Fuller et al. 1989). Additionally, a striking finding in most of the vps mutants tested was that increased fractional secretion of protein immunoprecipitable with antiinsulin was comprised primarily of unprocessed ICFP. Although these findings are an expected side effect of perturbed Kex2p cycling between Golgi and endosome in vps mutants (Bryant and Stevens 1998), we noted that increased ICFP secretion as a consequence of simple overexpression (in the absence of VPS mutations) was also enriched in unprocessed precursor (described further below). These findings raised the possibility that Kex2p itself might be a limiting factor required for insulin sorting.
Therefore, we reexamined ICFP expression (driven from a GAL1 promoter on a centromeric plasmid) in a kex2 pep4 strain. As demonstrated before, in the presence of wild-type levels of Kex2p, virtually all ICFP was processed to single chain insulin, and only a small fraction (<10%) was secreted (Fig. 7, left). However, in the absence of Kex2p not only was there no ICFP cleavage, but the protein was near quantitatively rerouted to the medium (Fig. 7, right).
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-Leader Peptide
-leader peptide and that loss of this signal upon endoproteolytic cleavage might cause single chain insulin to be delivered to the vacuole. Because published evidence indicates that a fragment of the leader peptide from the secretory protein Hsp150 does not contain a dominant secretion signal (Holkeri and Makarow 1998), we replaced the
-leader with this fragment fused to single chain insulin (as described in Materials and Methods). This new insulin-containing chimera was quantitatively secreted (Fig. 8), indicating that secretion of the unprocessed ICFP does not require specific sorting information contained within the
-leader peptide. Thus, intracellular retention of mature insulin cannot be explained by endoproteolytic removal of a dominant secretion signal.
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Trafficking of Kex2p from the Golgi complex into the endosomal system requires specific information included in the COOH-terminal region of the protein: a COOH-terminal deletion removing the serine/threonine-rich domain, the transmembrane domain, and the cytosolic tail domain results in a truncated Kex2p, which is catalytically active but behaves as a secretory protein, traveling quantitatively from the Golgi to the cell surface (Brenner and Fuller 1992). Consequently, this secretory Kex2p cannot function as a sorting receptor to convey ligands from the Golgi to the endosomal system. Therefore, we tested ICFP secretion in a kex2 pep4 strain expressing secretory Kex2p. Confirming previous work, secretory Kex2p was massively secreted (Fig. 9 A). Loss of Kex2p expression resulted in nearly quantitative ICFP secretion when its expression was driven from a GAL1 promoter (Fig. 9 B, middle two lanes). Importantly, however, expression of secretory Kex2p restored both endoproteolytic processing and intracellular retention of insulin (Fig. 9 B, right two lanes). When the GPD1 promoter was used to further overexpress ICFP in excess of the ability of secretory Kex2p to cleave it, the fractional secretion of protein immunoprecipitable with antiinsulin was markedly increased, and all of the increase was comprised of unprocessed precursor (Fig. 9C compared with B). Moreover, endoproteolytic processing of ICFP (expressed from a GAL1 promoter) by secretory Kex2p also restored intracellular insulin retention in vps35 cells (Fig. 9 D). These findings confirm that (a) Kex2p is a specific saturable component responsible for intracellular insulin retention, and (b) Kex2p acts catalytically as an endoprotease rather than as a luminal sorting receptor for insulin trafficking.
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Single chain insulin was examined from pep4 mutant cells expressing ICFP under control of the strong GPD1 promoter. Cells were labeled continuously with [35S]cysteine for 45 or 60 min; under these conditions, significant amounts of labeled insulin and ICFP precursor coexist. First, we found, using a simplified sucrose velocity gradient (as described in Materials and Methods), that upon processing to insulin about half of the mature molecules exhibited very rapid sedimentation, which was not observed for the ICFP itself (Fig. 10 A). Using a second assay, in the experiment shown in Fig. 10 B insulin immunoprecipitates were resuspended and divided into various aliquots. As a control, one aliquot was denatured in conventional boiling SDS-containing gel sample buffer in the presence of 20 mM DTT and then subsequently alkylated with iodoacetamide. Denaturation allowed DTT to reduce all disulfide bonds in both the unprocessed precursor and mature insulin, causing a marked upward mobility shift for both bands (Fig. 10 B, lane 1). For comparison, a second aliquot was similarly denatured but without reduction, being alkylated only (Fig. 10 B, lane 2). A third aliquot was tested for disulfide accessibility to 20 mM DTT under nondenaturing conditions and then finally alkylated before SDS-PAGE. As shown, mature insulin was extremely resistant to reduction under nondenaturing conditions (equals 5% reduced), reflecting an inaccessibility of disulfide bonds in its tertiary/quaternary structure, whereas approximately half of the insulin precursor was reduced upon DTT exposure in the identical sample (Fig. 10 B, lane 3). Thus, by two independent assays endoproteolytic processing was associated with a significant change in the biophysical properties of insulin.
The foregoing data raised the question of whether sorting consequent to insulin precursor processing reflects any established features of insulin assembly. It is known that some key residues affecting insulin multimeric interactions lie along the proximal (that is NH2-terminal) portion of the insulin B chain. The B1–B8 sequence is notable for exhibiting great conformational flexibility, interconverting in a dynamic equilibrium between extended and more compact (
-helical) configurations (Renscheidt et al. 1984; Wollmer et al. 1989; Kadima et al. 1992); in particular, the B5 histidine residues in the insulin hexamer play not only an important local role in conformation of the proximal B chain (Bentley et al. 1976; Kim and Shields 1992) but also make structural contact in neighboring hexamers (Baker et al. 1988). Recently, it has been suggested that mutation of B5H can cause structural perturbations in adjacent hexamers, which may affect insulin packing in vivo (Tang et al. 1999). Interestingly, examination of an H90T-ICFP mutant in which the insulin B5H residue is replaced by B5T showed that the majority of processed mutant insulin was secreted rather than being retained intracellularly (Fig. 11 A, open arrows).
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-leader peptide of ICFP. Notably, however, our studies showed clearly that the B5T insulin is not glycosylated as demonstrated by an identical SDS-PAGE mobility to that of nonmutagenized insulin and a lack of effect of PNGase F digestion (Fig. 11 A). Moreover, whereas the nonmutagenized insulin exhibits multimeric assembly as judged by sucrose velocity gradient centrifugation in vitro (Fig. 10 A and Fig. 11 B), the B5T mutant insulin was unable to sediment from the upper to the lower half of a sucrose velocity gradient (Fig. 11 B), supporting the notion that perturbation of insulin targeting in the secretory pathway is related to structural effects of the threonine mutation itself. Together, these data suggest that intracellular retention of insulin in yeast cells is dependent on insulin structural maturation, which is remarkably similar to recent conclusions about intracellular insulin retention in the regulated secretory pathway of mammalian cells (Kuliawat and Arvan 1994; Huang and Arvan 1995; Kuliawat et al. 2000). | Discussion |
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-leader peptide with synthetic leader sequences that alter ER residence time, suggesting that ER quality control is an important feature of insulin secretion in yeast (Kjeldsen et al. 1997). However, we have discovered several additional features of the system not typical of ER quality control. First, using the ICFP construct described in Fig. 1 A, simple overexpression caused significantly enhanced secretion of immunoreactive insulin (Fig. 1 C), suggesting that one or more saturable components in the yeast secretory pathway limits insulin secretion. Second, newly-synthesized ICFP, containing a single dibasic cleavage site, was rapidly processed to a band comigrating with authentic insulin (Fig. 2 A) in a manner dependent on arrival in the Golgi complex (Fig. 4 A) and Kex2p activity (Fig. 7). Third, a direct assay for ERAD (in a sec18 mutant) showed ICFP to be completely stable over a 90-min time course (Fig. 4A and Fig. B), suggesting that it is not a ready substrate for typical ubiquitin-mediated proteasome-dependent proteolysis (Plemper and Wolf 1999). Fourth, in the absence of Pep4p (vacuolar proteinase A) insulin accumulates not in the ER but in the vacuole (Fig. 4 C) where it is delivered via the endosomal system (Fig. 5). These novel features of ICFP and insulin sorting are summarized in Fig. 12.
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A novel aspect of the present studies was our discovery that deletion of KEX2 causes quantitative secretion of ICFP (Fig. 7). We considered initially the possibility, albeit unprecedented, that the
-leader peptide might contain a dominant secretion signal, the loss of which would result in intracellular insulin retention. This possibility was excluded from the results of experiments in which the
-leader was replaced with a fragment of another leader peptide known to lack a dominant secretion signal (Fig. 8). These findings led us to consider a second hypothesis that Kex2p itself might serve as a sorting receptor that causes intracellular insulin retention. However, in either a kex2-null strain (Fig. 9 B) or a vps35 strain (Fig. 9 D), expression of secretory Kex2p is sufficient to cause intracellular insulin retention even though secretory Kex2p itself is delivered from the Golgi complex to the cell surface (Fig. 9 A). Moreover, the degree to which secretory Kex2p (or wild-type Kex2p) conferred intracellular retention was limited to the extent that the precursor protein was processed to mature insulin (Fig. 9 C). This indicates that Kex2p enzymatic activity in the Golgi complex is a saturable limiting component in the molecular sorting of the insulin precursor (Fig. 12). Moreover, when ICFP is mutated to make substitutions at the dibasic cleavage site, secretion of immunoreactive insulin (precursor) is also increased (our unpublished data). Altogether, our data indicate that it is endoproteolysis itself that prevents rapid secretion of the insulin precursor (Fig. 12).
Although our data do not formally exclude the possibility of sorting receptors for processed insulin, no genes encoding proteins with a luminal domain (that could serve as potential sorting receptors) were identified in our genetic screen. The fact that kex2 was not isolated in the eis screen may be accounted for by the fact that in our strain background, kex2 mutant cells seem to grow more slowly, and the filter blot assay used for screening is indirectly dependent on the size of the colonies secreting ICFP. Likewise, other gene disruptions that adversely affect cell growth would also be overlooked in the screen, and this conceivably could contribute to the fact that we did not recover a potential sorting receptor.
We have proposed in mammalian-regulated secretory cells that endoproteolytic conversion to insulin facilitates intracellular retention of the newly synthesized protein (Kuliawat et al. 2000). This may occur because homomultimerization limits the ability of insulin to enter post-Golgi transport intermediates leading ultimately to the cell surface (Kuliawat and Arvan 1992). It seems quite possible that related phenomena could account for insulin trafficking in the secretory pathway of yeast cells. Our evidence supports the idea that there is a change in biophysical properties upon endoproteolytic conversion to the mature insulin species (Fig. 10). Intriguingly, recent proposals for mechanisms that alter post-Golgi targeting of other proteins include homomultimerization facilitated by endoproteolytic cleavage at dibasic sites (Silletti et al. 2000) and ordered luminal protein aggregation (Wolins et al. 1997). Indeed, we find that upon endoproteolytic processing, a B5T mutant insulin is no longer efficiently retained, the majority being secreted instead (Fig. 11 A), and this is correlated with an inability of the protein to form a stable multimeric assembly, as measured by sucrose gradient centrifugation (Fig. 11 B). In conclusion, although the issue remains unresolved of whether a Golgi/post-Golgi membrane-associated receptor plays any role in intracellular insulin targeting, it would appear that precursor endoproteolysis unmasks information required for sorting by retention for the vast majority of, if not all, insulin molecules in the eukaryotic secretory pathway.
| Acknowledgments |
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants DK48280 (to P. Arvan) and GM58212 (to A. Chang).
Submitted: 21 February 2001
Revised: 5 April 2001
Accepted: 8 May 2001
Abbreviations used in this paper: CPY, carboxypeptidase Y; eis, enhanced immunoreactive insulin secretion; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; ERAD, ER-associated degradation; ICFP, insulin-containing fusion protein; vps, vacuolar protein sorting.
| References |
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