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Investigation of the Endoplasmic Reticulum Localization of UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase 2B7 with Systematic Deletion Mutants. | LitMetric

Investigation of the Endoplasmic Reticulum Localization of UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase 2B7 with Systematic Deletion Mutants.

Mol Pharmacol

Division of Pharmaceutical Cell Biology, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Y.M., A.K., K.K., Y.H., K.F., Y.T.) and Laboratory of Molecular Life Sciences, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Y.M., S.K., Y.I.), Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan; and Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Flinders Medical Centre and Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia (P.I.M.)

Published: May 2019

UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) plays an important role in the metabolism of endogenous and exogenous compounds. UGT is a type I membrane protein, and has a dilysine motif (KKXX/KXKXX) in its C-terminal cytoplasmic domain. Although a dilysine motif is defined as an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retrieval signal, it remains a matter of debate whether this motif functions in the ER localization of UGT. To address this issue, we generated systematic deletion mutants of UGT2B7, a major human isoform, and compared their subcellular localizations with that of an ER marker protein calnexin (CNX), using subcellular fractionation and immunofluorescent microscopy. We found that although the dilysine motif functioned as the ER retention signal in a chimera that replaced the cytoplasmic domain of CD4 with that of UGT2B7, UGT2B7 truncated mutants lacking this motif extensively colocalized with CNX, indicating dilysine motif-independent ER retention of UGT2B7. Moreover, deletion of the C-terminal transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains did not affect ER localization of UGT2B7, suggesting that the signal necessary for ER retention of UGT2B7 is present in its luminal domain. Serial deletions of the luminal domain, however, did not affect the ER retention of the mutants. Further, a cytoplasmic and transmembrane domain-deleted mutant of UGT2B7 was localized to the ER without being secreted. These results suggest that UGT2B7 could localize to the ER without any retention signal, and lead to the conclusion that the static localization of UGT results from lack of a signal for export from the ER.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/mol.118.113902DOI Listing

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