Abstract

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) degradation-enhancing α-mannosidase-like 1 protein (EDEM1) is a protein quality control factor that was initially proposed to recognize N-linked glycans on misfolded proteins through its mannosidase-like domain (MLD). However, recent studies have demonstrated that EDEM1 binds to some misfolded proteins in a glycan-independent manner, suggesting a more complex binding landscape for EDEM1. In this study, we have identified a thiol-dependent substrate interaction between EDEM1 and the α1-antitrypsin ER-associated protein degradation (ERAD) clients Z and NHK, specifically through the single Cys residue on Z/NHK (Cys256), required for binding under stringent detergent conditions. In addition to the thiol-dependent interaction, the presence of weaker protein-protein interactions was confirmed, suggestive of bipartite client-binding properties. About four reactive thiols on EDEM1 were identified and were not directly responsible for the observed redox-sensitive binding by EDEM1. Moreover, a protein construct comprising the EDEM1 MLD had thiol-dependent binding properties along with its active glycan-trimming activities. Lastly, we identified an additional intrinsically disordered region (IDR) located at the C terminus of EDEM1 in addition to its previously identified N-terminal IDR. We also determined that both IDRs are required for binding to the ERAD component ERdj5 as an interaction with ERdj5 was not observed with the MLD alone. Together, our findings indicate that EDEM1 employs different binding modalities to interact with ERAD clients and ER quality control (ERQC) machinery partners and that some of these properties are shared with its homologues EDEM2 and EDEM3.

Highlights

  • Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) degradation-enhancing ␣-mannosidase–like 1 protein (EDEM1) is a protein quality control factor that was initially proposed to recognize N-linked glycans on misfolded proteins through its mannosidase-like domain (MLD)

  • ER degradation-enhancing ␣-mannosidase–like 1 protein (EDEM1)-FLAG was coexpressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293T cells with wildtype (WT) A1AT, Z, or NHK

  • Protein-to-protein interactions have been observed between EDEM1 and multiple ER-associated protein degradation (ERAD) clients, including BACE457, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), Rhodopsin, H2a, and A1AT (10 –12, 14, 20, 31)

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Summary

Results

EDEM1 preferentially interacts with misfolded A1AT variants NHK and Z in a glycan-independent manner [10]. We determined whether the reactive thiols contributed to the thiol-dependent interaction that was observed under stringent detergent conditions To this end, WT EDEM1-FLAG, C95S/C302S/C629S, and C95S/C302S/C555S/ C629S were coexpressed with A1AT WT, Z, and NHK (Fig. 2D). EDEM1-FLAG possesses multiple reactive thiols as Cys at positions 95, 302, 555, and 629 appear unpaired and accessible to maleimide modification at steady state; these residues do not appear to mediate the thiol-dependent interaction that was observed between EDEM1 and NHK/Z. We postulated that the MLD construct, which lacks both IDRs, would have the longest half-life To this end, each construct bearing a C-terminal FLAG epitope was expressed in HEK293T cells and subjected to a pulse-chase experiment after radiolabeling. Cells were lysed under stringent detergent conditions (TX/SDS), lysates were split into equal portions, and protein complexes were isolated by anti-FLAG or anti-A1AT immunoprecipitation. The proteins are predicted to contain IDRs; in the case of EDEM1, these regions do not contribute to Z/NHK binding as the catalytically active EDEM1 MLD alone is capable of selectively binding to ERAD clients

Discussion
Reagents and plasmids
Sequential immunoprecipitation
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