Daniel N. Hebert
University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Featured researches published by Daniel N. Hebert.
Cell | 1995
Daniel N. Hebert; Brigitte Foellmer; Ari Helenius
To determine the role of N-linked oligosaccharides in the folding of glycoproteins, we analyzed the processing of in vitro translated influenza hemagglutinin (HA) in dog pancreas microsomes. We found that binding to calnexin, a membrane-bound molecular chaperone, was specific to molecules that possessed monoglucosylated core glycans. In the microsomes, these were generated either by glucose removal from the original triglucosylated core oligosaccharide by glucosidases I and II or by reglucosylation of already unglucosylated high mannose glycans. Release of fully folded HA from calnexin required the removal of the remaining glucose by glucosidase II. The results provided an explanation for trimming and reglucosylation activities in the endoplasmic reticulum and established a direct correlation between glycosylation and folding.
The EMBO Journal | 1996
Daniel N. Hebert; Brigitte Foellmer; Ari Helenius
Calnexin (CNX) and calreticulin (CRT) are molecular chaperones that bind preferentially to monoglucosylated trimming intermediates of glycoproteins in the endoplasmic reticulum. To determine their role in the maturation of newly synthesized glycoproteins, we analyzed the folding and trimerization of in vitro translated influenza hemagglutinin (HA) in canine pancreas microsomes under conditions in which HAs interactions with CNX and CRT could be manipulated. While CNX bound to all folding intermediates (IT1, IT2 and NT), CRT was found to associate preferentially with the earliest oxidative form (IT1). If HAs binding to CNX and CRT was inhibited using a glucosidase inhibitor, castanospermine (CST), the rate of disulfide formation and oligomerization was doubled but the overall efficiency of maturation of HA decreased due to aggregation and degradation. If, on the other hand, HA was arrested in CNX‐CRT complexes, folding and trimerization were inhibited. This suggested that the action of CNX and CRT, like that of other chaperones, depended on an ‘on‐and‐off’ cycle. Taken together, these results indicated that CNX and CRT promote correct folding by inhibiting aggregation, preventing premature oxidation and oligomerization, and by suppressing degradation of incompletely folded glycopolypeptides.
Molecular Cell | 2003
Robert Daniels; Brad Kurowski; Arthur E. Johnson; Daniel N. Hebert
For proteins that traverse the secretory pathway, folding commences cotranslationally upon translocation into the endoplasmic reticulum. In this study, we have comprehensively analyzed the earliest maturation steps of the model glycoprotein influenza hemagglutinin (HA). These steps include cleavage of the signal sequence, glycosylation, binding by the chaperones calnexin and calreticulin, and the oxidoreductase ERp57, and oxidation. Our results show that the molecular choreography of the nascent HA chain is largely directed by multiple glycans that are strategically placed to elicit the binding of lectin chaperones. These chaperones are recruited to specific nascent chain locations to regulate and facilitate glycoprotein folding, thereby suggesting that the positioning of N-linked glycans in critical regions has evolved to optimize the folding process in the cell.
Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology | 2013
Ineke Braakman; Daniel N. Hebert
In this article, we will cover the folding of proteins in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), including the role of three types of covalent modifications: signal peptide removal, N-linked glycosylation, and disulfide bond formation, as well as the function and importance of resident ER folding factors. These folding factors consist of classical chaperones and their cochaperones, the carbohydrate-binding chaperones, and the folding catalysts of the PDI and proline cis-trans isomerase families. We will conclude with the perspective of the folding protein: a comparison of characteristics and folding and exit rates for proteins that travel through the ER as clients of the ER machinery.
Molecular Cell | 2009
James H. Cormier; Taku Tamura; Johan C. Sunryd; Daniel N. Hebert
Terminally misfolded or unassembled secretory proteins are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and subsequently cleared by the ER-associated degradation (ERAD) pathway. The degradation of ERAD substrates involves mannose trimming of N-linked glycans; however, the mechanisms of substrate recognition and sorting to the ERAD pathway are poorly defined. EDEM1 (ER degradation-enhancing alpha-mannosidase-like 1 protein) has been proposed to play a role in ERAD substrate signaling or recognition. We show that EDEM1 specifically binds nonnative proteins in a glycan-independent manner. Inhibition of mannosidase activity with kifunensine or disruption of the EDEM1 mannosidase-like domain by mutation had no effect on EDEM1 substrate binding but diminished its association with the ER membrane adaptor protein SEL1L. These results support a model whereby EDEM1 binds nonnative proteins and uses its mannosidase-like domain to target aberrant proteins to the ER membrane dislocation and ubiquitination complex containing SEL1L.
Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology | 2010
Daniel N. Hebert; Riccardo Bernasconi; Maurizio Molinari
Global folding of polypeptides entering the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) starts as soon as they emerge from the narrow Sec61 translocon. Attainment of the native structure can take from several minutes to hours, depending on the gene product. Until then, non-native folding intermediates must be protected from molecular chaperones that recognize misfolded determinants and could prematurely interrupt folding programs by re-directing them to disposal pathways. On the other hand, futile folding attempts must actively be stopped to prevent intraluminal accumulation of defective cargo. This review describes recent advances in understanding how terminally misfolded polypeptides are extracted from the folding environment and directed to specific dislocons within the ER membrane for transfer to the cytoplasm for proteasome-mediated degradation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Ruth Halaban; Robin S. Patton; Elaine Cheng; Sherri Svedine; E. Sergio Trombetta; Miriam L. Wahl; Stephen Ariyan; Daniel N. Hebert
In tyrosinase-positive amelanotic melanoma cells, inactive tyrosinase accumulates in the endoplasmic reticulum. Based on studies described here, we propose that aberrant vacuolar proton ATPase (V-ATPase)-mediated proton transport in melanoma cells disrupts tyrosinase trafficking through the secretory pathway. Amelanotic but not melanotic melanoma cells or normal melanocytes display elevated proton export as observed by the acidification of the extracellular medium and their ability to maintain neutral intracellular pH. Tyrosinase activity and transit through the Golgi were restored by either maintaining the melanoma cells in alkaline medium (pH 7.4–7.7) or by restricting glucose uptake. The translocation of tyrosinase out of the endoplasmic reticulum and the induction of cell pigmentation in the presence of the ionophore monensin or the specific V-ATPase inhibitors concanamycin A and bafilomycin A1 supported a role for V-ATPases in this process. Because it was previously shown that V-ATPase activity is increased in solid tumors in response to an acidified environment, the appearance of hypopigmented cells in tyrosinase-positive melanoma tumors may indicate the onset of enhanced glycolysis and extracellular acidification, conditions known to favor metastatic spread and resistance to weak base chemotherapeutic drugs.
Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology | 2015
Abla Tannous; Giorgia Brambilla Pisoni; Daniel N. Hebert; Maurizio Molinari
Asparagine-linked glycans (N-glycans) are displayed on the majority of proteins synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Removal of the outermost glucose residue recruits the lectin chaperone malectin possibly involved in a first triage of defective polypeptides. Removal of a second glucose promotes engagement of folding and quality control machineries built around the ER lectin chaperones calnexin (CNX) and calreticulin (CRT) and including oxidoreductases and peptidyl-prolyl isomerases. Deprivation of the last glucose residue dictates the release of N-glycosylated polypeptides from the lectin chaperones. Correctly folded proteins are authorized to leave the ER. Non-native polypeptides are recognized by the ER quality control key player UDP-glucose glycoprotein glucosyltransferase 1 (UGT1), re-glucosylated and re-addressed to the CNX/CRT chaperone binding cycle to provide additional opportunity for the protein to fold in the ER. Failure to attain the native structure determines the selection of the misfolded polypeptides for proteasome-mediated degradation.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Ruth Halaban; Elaine Cheng; Sherri Svedine; Rebecca Aron; Daniel N. Hebert
Tyrosinase is essential for pigmentation and is a source of tumor-derived antigenic peptides and cellular immune response. Wild type tyrosinase in melanoma cells and certain albino mutants in untransformed melanocytes are targeted to proteolytic degradation by the 26 S proteasome due to retention of the misfolded protein in the endoplasmic reticulum and its subsequent retranslocation to the cytosol. Here, we demonstrate that the substrates DOPA and tyrosine induced in melanoma cells a transition of misfolded wild type tyrosinase to the native form that is resistant to proteolysis, competent to exit the endoplasmic reticulum, and able to produce melanin. Because the enzymatic activity of tyrosinase is induced by DOPA, we propose that proper folding of the wild type protein, just like mutant forms, is tightly linked to its catalytic state. Loss of pigmentation, therefore, in tyrosinase-positive melanoma cells is a consequence of tumor-induced metabolic changes that suppress tyrosinase activity and DOPA production within these cells.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Christian Zuber; James H. Cormier; Bruno Guhl; Roger Santimaria; Daniel N. Hebert; Jürgen Roth
Immature and nonnative proteins are retained in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by the quality control machinery. Folding-incompetent glycoproteins are eventually targeted for ER-associated protein degradation (ERAD). EDEM1 (ER degradation-enhancing α-mannosidase-like protein 1), a putative mannose-binding protein, targets misfolded glycoproteins for ERAD. We report that endogenous EDEM1 exists mainly as a soluble glycoprotein. By high-resolution immunolabeling and serial section analysis, we find that endogenous EDEM1 is sequestered in buds that form along cisternae of the rough ER at regions outside of the transitional ER. They give rise to ≈150-nm vesicles scattered throughout the cytoplasm that are lacking a recognizable COPII coat. About 87% of the immunogold labeling was over the vesicles and ≈11% over the ER lumen. Some of the EDEM1 vesicles also contain Derlin-2 and the misfolded Hong Kong variant of α-1-antitrypsin, a substrate for EDEM1 and ERAD. Our results demonstrate the existence of a vesicle budding transport pathway out of the rough ER that does not involve the canonical transitional ER exit sites and therefore represents a previously unrecognized passageway to remove potentially harmful misfolded luminal glycoproteins from the ER.