RETICULONS BIND SPHINGOLIPIDS TO ACTIVATE THE ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM CELL CYCLE CHECKPOINT, THE ER SURVEILLANCE PATHWAY

Reticulons bind sphingolipids to activate the endoplasmic reticulum cell cycle checkpoint, the ER surveillance pathway

Reticulons bind sphingolipids to activate the endoplasmic reticulum cell cycle checkpoint, the ER surveillance pathway

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Summary: The inheritance of a functional endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is ensured by the ER stress surveillance (ERSU) pathway.Here, we made the unexpected discovery that reticulon 1 half hopples (Rtn1) and Yop1, well-known ER-curvature-generating proteins, each possess two sphingolipid-binding motifs within their transmembrane domains and that these motifs recognize the ER-stress-induced sphingolipid phytosphingosine (PHS), resulting in an ER inheritance block.Upon binding PHS, Rtn1/Yop1 accumulate on the ER tubule, poised to enter the emerging daughter cell, and cause its misdirection Butt Plugs to the bud scars (i.e.

, previous cell division sites).Amino acid changes in the conserved PHS-binding motifs preclude Rtn1 or Yop1 from binding PHS and diminish their enrichment on the tubular ER, ultimately preventing the ER-stress-induced inheritance block.Conservation of these sphingolipid-binding motifs in human reticulons suggests that sphingolipid binding to Rtn1 and Yop1 represents an evolutionarily conserved mechanism that enables cells to respond to ER stress.

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