The intrinsic ability of ribosomes to bind to endoplasmic reticulum membranes is regulated by signal recognition particle and nascent-polypeptide-associated complex Journal Article


Authors: Lauring, B.; Kreibich, G.; Wiedmann, M.
Article Title: The intrinsic ability of ribosomes to bind to endoplasmic reticulum membranes is regulated by signal recognition particle and nascent-polypeptide-associated complex
Abstract: Signal peptides direct the cotranslational targeting of nascent polypeptides to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). It is currently believed that the signal recognition particle (SRP) mediates this targeting by first binding to signal peptides and then by directing the ribosome/nascent chain/SRP complex to the SRP receptor at the ER. We show that ribosomes can mediate targeting by directly binding to translocation sites. When purified away from cytosolic factors, including SRP and nascent-polypeptide-associated complex (NAC), in vitro assembled translation intermediates representing ribosome/nascent-chain complexes efficiently bound to microsomal membranes, and their nascent polypeptides could subsequently be efficiently translocated. Because removal of cytosolic factors from the ribosome/nascent-chain complexes also resulted in mistargeting of signalless nascent polypeptides, we previously investigated whether readdition of cytosolic factors, such as NAC and SRP, could restore fidelity to targeting. Without SRP, NAC prevented all nascent-chain-containing ribosomes from binding to the ER membrane. Furthermore, SRP prevented NAC from blocking ribosome-membrane association only when the nascent polypeptide contained a signal. Thus, NAC is a global ribosome-binding prevention factor regulated in activity by signal-peptide-directed SRP binding. A model presents ribosomes as the targeting vectors for delivering nascent polypeptides to translocation sites. In conjunction with signal peptides, SRP and NAC contribute to this specificity of ribosomal function by regulating exposure of a ribosomal membrane attachment site that binds to receptors in the ER membrane.
Keywords: gene translocation; nonhuman; binding affinity; proteins; models, biological; protein targeting; luciferase; endoplasmic reticulum; binding site; biological transport; ribosomes; prolactin; protein precursors; polypeptide; ribosome; cell-free system; rough endoplasmic reticulum; endoplasmic reticulum, rough; microsomes; signal recognition particle; priority journal; article; cell compartmentation; support, non-u.s. gov't; support, u.s. gov't, p.h.s.
Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume: 92
Issue: 21
ISSN: 0027-8424
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences  
Date Published: 1995-10-10
Start Page: 9435
End Page: 9439
Language: English
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.92.21.9435
PUBMED: 7568149
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC40816
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 28 August 2018 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors