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The human signal peptidase complex acts as a quality control enzyme for membrane proteins

Andrea Zanotti, João P. L. Coelho, Dinah Kaylani, Gurdeep Singh, Marina Tauber, Manuel Hitzenberger, Dönem Avci, Martin Zacharias, Robert B. Russell, Marius K. Lemberg, Matthias J. Feige

2022Science31 citationsDOI

Abstract

Cells need to detect and degrade faulty membrane proteins to maintain homeostasis. In this study, we identify a previously unknown function of the human signal peptidase complex (SPC)-the enzyme that removes endoplasmic reticulum (ER) signal peptides-as a membrane protein quality control factor. We show that the SPC cleaves membrane proteins that fail to correctly fold or assemble into their native complexes at otherwise hidden cleavage sites, which our study reveals to be abundant in the human membrane proteome. This posttranslocational cleavage synergizes with ER-associated degradation to sustain membrane protein homeostasis and contributes to cellular fitness. Cryptic SPC cleavage sites thus serve as predetermined breaking points that, when exposed, help to target misfolded or surplus proteins for degradation, thereby maintaining a healthy membrane proteome.

Topics & Concepts

Endoplasmic reticulumSignal peptidaseMembrane proteinCell biologyProteomeSignal recognition particleSignal peptideBiologyBiochemistryEnzymeCleavage (geology)MembranePeptide sequenceFracture (geology)PaleontologyGeneEndoplasmic Reticulum Stress and DiseaseCellular transport and secretionBacterial Genetics and Biotechnology
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