SIGNAL-MEDIATED SORTING OF MEMBRANE PROTEINS BETWEEN THE ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM AND THE GOLGI APPARATUS
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
- Vol. 12 (1) , 27-54
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.cellbio.12.1.27
Abstract
Each organelle of the secretory pathway is required to selectively allow transit of newly synthesized secretory and plasma membrane proteins and also to maintain a unique set of resident proteins that define its structural and functional properties. In the case of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), residency is achieved in two ways: (a) prevention of residents from entering newly forming transport vesicles and (b) retrieval of those residents that escape. The latter mechanism is directed by discrete retrieval motifs: Soluble proteins have a H/KDEL sequence at their carboxy-terminus; membrane proteins have a dibasic motif, either di-lysine or di-arginine, located close to the terminus of their cytoplasmic domain. Recently it was found that di-lysine motifs bind the complex of cytosolic coat proteins, COP I, and that this interaction functions in the retrieval of proteins from the Golgi to the ER. Also discussed are the potential roles this interaction may have in vesicular trafficking.Keywords
This publication has 122 references indexed in Scilit:
- Coatomer is essential for retrieval of dilysine-tagged proteins to the endoplasmic reticulumPublished by Elsevier ,1994
- About turn for the COPs?Cell, 1994
- Mechanisms of intracellular protein transportNature, 1994
- Disruptions in Golgi structure and membrane traffic in a conditional lethal mammalian cell mutant are corrected by epsilon-COP.The Journal of cell biology, 1994
- Sar1 promotes vesicle budding from the endoplasmic reticulum but not Golgi compartments.The Journal of cell biology, 1994
- Vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein is sorted and concentrated during export from the endoplasmic reticulumCell, 1994
- 'Coatomer': a cytosolic protein complex containing subunits of non-clathrin-coated Golgi transport vesiclesNature, 1991
- Short cytoplasmic sequences serve as retention signals for transmembrane proteins in the endoplasmic reticulumCell, 1989
- Rapid redistribution of Golgi proteins into the ER in cells treated with brefeldin A: Evidence for membrane cycling from Golgi to ERCell, 1989
- Intracellular Aspects of the Process of Protein SynthesisScience, 1975