Abstract

The structure and post-translational processing of the metabotropic glutamate receptor 1α (mGluR1α) was analysed by in vitro cell-free translation, protease protection and deglycosylation. We show that mGluR1α can be synthesized in the rabbit-reticulocyte translation system to yield a predominant polypeptide product with an apparent molecular weight of 142 kDa. In the presence of dog-pancreatic microsomes this polypeptide was processed to an apparent molecular weight of 147 kDa. Treatment with the enzyme peptide- N-glycosidase F (PNGF) demonstrated that the increase in the apparent molecular weight of the processed translation product was due to N-linked glycosylation. Addition of the non-selective protease, proteinase K, resulted in the loss of this 147 kDa band and the appearance of a protected fragment of approx 92 kDa. A carboxy-terminal deletion mutant of mGluR1α was almost completely protected from protease action. These data show that the amino terminal of mGluR1α is translocated into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and will consequently be located extracellularly when targeted to the plasma membrane. The data presented here on mGluR1α indicates the potential of in vitro translation and protease protection in the study of the molecular structure and processing of glutamate receptors.

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