Combination of hydrophobicity and codon usage bias determines sorting of model K+ channel protein to either mitochondria or endoplasmic reticulum

Author:

Engel Anja J.1,Paech Steffen2ORCID,Langhans Markus2,van Etten James L.3ORCID,Moroni Anna4ORCID,Thiel Gerhard1ORCID,Rauh Oliver1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Biology Technical University of Darmstadt Darmstadt Germany

2. Faculty of Chemistry, Macromolecular and Paper Chemistry Technical University of Darmstadt Darmstadt Germany

3. Department of Plant Pathology and Nebraska Center for Virology University of Nebraska‐Lincoln Lincoln Nebraska USA

4. Department of Biosciences and CNR IBF‐Mi Università degli Studi di Milano Milan Italy

Abstract

AbstractWhen the K+ channel‐like protein Kesv from Ectocarpus siliculosus virus 1 is heterologously expressed in mammalian cells, it is sorted to the mitochondria. This targeting can be redirected to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by altering the codon usage in distinct regions of the gene or by inserting a triplet of hydrophobic amino acids (AAs) into the protein's C‐terminal transmembrane domain (ct‐TMD). Systematic variations in the flavor of the inserted AAs and/or its codon usage show that a positive charge in the inserted AA triplet alone serves as strong signal for mitochondria sorting. In cases of neutral AA triplets, mitochondria sorting are favored by a combination of hydrophilic AAs and rarely used codons; sorting to the ER exhibits the inverse dependency. This propensity for ER sorting is particularly high when a common codon follows a rarer one in the AA triplet; mitochondria sorting in contrast is supported by codon uniformity. Since parameters like positive charge, hydrophobic AAs, and common codons are known to facilitate elongation of nascent proteins in the ribosome the data suggest a mechanism in which local changes in elongation velocity and co‐translational folding in the ct‐TMD influence intracellular protein sorting.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry,Structural Biology

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