Abstract

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is a membrane-bound organelle responsible for protein folding, lipid synthesis, and calcium homeostasis. Maintenance of ER structural integrity is crucial for proper function, but much remains to be learned about the molecular players involved. To identify proteins that support the structure of the ER, we performed a proteomic screen and identified nodal modulator (NOMO), a widely conserved type I transmembrane protein of unknown function, with three nearly identical orthologs specified in the human genome. We found that overexpression of NOMO1 imposes a sheet morphology on the ER, whereas depletion of NOMO1 and its orthologs causes a collapse of ER morphology concomitant with the formation of membrane-delineated holes in the ER network positive for the lysosomal marker lysosomal-associated protein 1. In addition, the levels of key players of autophagy including microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 and autophagy cargo receptor p62/sequestosome 1 strongly increase upon NOMO depletion. In vitro reconstitution of NOMO1 revealed a “beads on a string” structure likely representing consecutive immunoglobulin-like domains. Extending NOMO1 by insertion of additional immunoglobulin folds results in a correlative increase in the ER intermembrane distance. Based on these observations and a genetic epistasis analysis including the known ER-shaping proteins Atlastin2 and Climp63, we propose a role for NOMO1 in the functional network of ER-shaping proteins.

Highlights

  • The membrane-shaping proteins necessary to support the curvature of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) tubules have largely been established [6], which include reticulons (RTNs), atlastins (ATLs), and receptor expression-enhancing proteins [7, 8]

  • Previous proteomes of the ER were obtained by subcellular fractionation–based techniques that encompassed the entire ER membrane network [21, 22], whereas we were interested in the ER lumen

  • We identified nodal modulator 1 (NOMO1) as an abundant ER constituent of unknown function (Fig. 1), motivating our functional characterization in the context of ER morphology

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Summary

Introduction

The membrane-shaping proteins necessary to support the curvature of ER tubules have largely been established [6], which include reticulons (RTNs), atlastins (ATLs), and receptor expression-enhancing proteins [7, 8]. We transfected Atl2-FLAG into NOMO-depleted cells and observed that Atl2-FLAG overexpression could significantly rescue the NOMO knockdown phenotype (Fig. 3, B and C). In an analogous experiment, we found that Climp63-FLAG did rescue the hole phenotype under NOMO depletion to a similar extent compared with Atl2 (Fig. 3C and Fig. S2A).

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