1 research outputs found
Sec61 channel subunit Sbh1/Sec61β promotes ER translocation of proteins with suboptimal targeting sequences and is fine-tuned by phosphorylation
The highly conserved endoplasmic reticulum (ER) protein
translocation channel contains one nonessential subunit,
Sec61β/Sbh1, whose function is poorly understood so far. Its
intrinsically unstructured cytosolic domain makes transient
contact with ER-targeting sequences in the cytosolic channel
vestibule and contains multiple phosphorylation sites suggesting a potential for regulating ER protein import. In a microscopic screen, we show that 12% of a GFP-tagged secretory
protein library depends on Sbh1 for translocation into the ER.
Sbh1-dependent proteins had targeting sequences with less
pronounced hydrophobicity and often no charge bias or an
inverse charge bias which reduces their insertion efficiency into
the Sec61 channel. We determined that mutating two N-terminal, proline-flanked phosphorylation sites in the Sbh1
cytosolic domain to alanine phenocopied the temperaturesensitivity of a yeast strain lacking SBH1 and its ortholog
SBH2. The phosphorylation site mutations reduced translocation into the ER of a subset of Sbh1-dependent proteins,
including enzymes whose concentration in the ER lumen is
critical for ER proteostasis. In addition, we found that ER
import of these proteins depended on the activity of the
phospho-S/T–specific proline isomerase Ess1 (PIN1 in mammals). We conclude that Sbh1 promotes ER translocation of
substrates with suboptimal targeting sequences and that its
activity can be regulated by a conformational change induced
by N-terminal phosphorylation