4.7 Article

Active translocon complexes labeled with GFP-Dad1 diffuse slowly as large polysome arrays in the endoplasmic reticulum

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 158, Issue 3, Pages 497-506

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200201116

Keywords

translocon complex; oligosaccharyltransferase; lateral mobility; FRAP; endoplasmic reticulum

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In the ER, the translocon complex (TG) functions in the translocation and cotranslational modification of proteins made on membrane-bound ribosomes. The oligosaccharyltransferase (OST) complex is associated with the TC, and performs the cotranslational N-glycosylation of nascent polypeptide chains. Here we use a GFP-tagged subunit of the OST complex (GFP-Dad1) that rescues the temperature-sensitive (ts) phenotype of tsBN7 cells, where Dad1 is degraded and N-glycosylation is inhibited, to study the lateral mobility of the TC by FRAP. GFP-Dad1 that is functionally incorporated into TCs diffuses extremely slow, exhibiting an effective diffusion constant (Deft) about seven times lower than that of GFP-tagged ER membrane proteins unhindered in their lateral mobility. Termination of protein synthesis significantly increases the lateral mobility of GFP-Dad1 in the ER membranes, but to a level that is still lower than that of free GFP-Dad1. This suggests that GFP-Dad1 as part of the OST remains associated with inactive TCs. Our findings that TCs assembled into membrane-bound polysomes diffuse slowly within the ER have mechanistic implications for the segregation of the ER into smooth and rough domains.

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