SGD Paper Help



Wang S and Ng DT  (2010) Evasion of endoplasmic reticulum surveillance makes Wsc1p an obligate substrate of Golgi quality control. Mol Biol Cell 21(7):1153-65

Abstract: In the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), most newly synthesized proteins are retained by quality control mechanisms until folded. Misfolded molecules are sorted to ER-associated degradation (ERAD) pathways for disposal. Reports of mutant proteins degraded in the vacuole/lysosome suggested an independent Golgi-based mechanism also at work. Although little is understood of the post-ER pathway, the growing number of variants using it suggests a major role in quality control. Why seemingly redundant mechanisms in sequential compartments are needed is unclear. To understand their physiological relationship, the identification of endogenous pathway-specific substrates is a prerequisite. With ERAD substrates already well characterized, the discovery of Wsc1p as an obligate substrate of Golgi quality control enabled detailed cross-pathway analyses for the first time. By analyzing a panel of engineered substrates, the data show that the surveillance mode is determined by each polypeptide's intrinsic design. Although most secretory pathway proteins can display ERAD determinants when misfolded, the lack thereof shields Wsc1p from inspection by ER surveillance. Additionally, a powerful ER export signal mediates transport whether the luminal domain is folded or not. By evading ERAD through these passive and active mechanisms, Wsc1p is fully dependent on the post-ER system for its quality control.

Status: Published Type: Journal Article | Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't PubMed ID: 20130083

Topics addressed in this paper

Number of different genes curated to this paper: 9

  • To find other papers on a gene and topic, click on the colored ball in the appropriate box.
  • displays other papers with information about that topic for that gene.
  • displays other papers in SGD that are associated with that topic.
    The topic is addressed in these papers but does not describe a specific gene or chromosomal feature.
  • To go to the Locus page for a gene, click on the gene name.
Topics Genes linked to topics
CUE1 HRD1 KAR2 KRE2 KTR1 KTR3 SEC12 SLG1 SSM4
Additional Literature blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball
Mutants/Phenotypes blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball
Primary Literature blue ball
Protein Processing/Modification/Regulation blue ball
Protein-protein Interactions blue ball blue ball
Strains/Constructs blue ball

Author Searches

To find contact information or other publications by the authors of this paper, follow these three steps:
  1. (1) Choose an author,
  2. (2) Choose a search parameter,
  3. (3) Click to implement