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Calnexin

Mammalian protein found in humans


Mammalian protein found in humans

Calnexin (CNX) is a 67kDa integral protein (that appears variously as a 90kDa, 80kDa, or 75kDa band on western blotting depending on the source of the antibody) of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). It consists of a large (50 kDa) N-terminal calcium-binding lumenal domain, a single transmembrane helix and a short (90 residues), acidic cytoplasmic tail. In humans, calnexin is encoded by the gene CANX.

Function

Calnexin is a chaperone, characterized by assisting protein folding and quality control, ensuring that only properly folded and assembled proteins proceed further along the secretory pathway. It specifically acts to retain unfolded or unassembled N-linked glycoproteins in the ER.

Calnexin binds only those N-glycoproteins that have GlcNAc2Man9Glc1 oligosaccharides. These monoglucosylated oligosaccharides result from the trimming of two glucose residues by the sequential action of two glucosidases, I and II. Glucosidase II can also remove the third and last glucose residue. If the glycoprotein is not properly folded, an enzyme called UGGT (for UDP-glucose:glycoprotein glucosyltransferase) will add the glucose residue back onto the oligosaccharide thus regenerating the glycoprotein's ability to bind to calnexin. The improperly-folded glycoprotein chain thus loiters in the ER and the expression of EDEM/Htm1p which eventually sentences the underperforming glycoprotein to degradation by removing one of the nine mannose residues. The mannose lectin Yos-9 (OS-9 in humans) marks and sorts misfolded glycoproteins for degradation. Yos-9 recognizes mannose residues exposed after α-mannosidase removal of an outer mannose of misfolded glycoproteins.

Calnexin associates with the protein folding enzyme ERp57 to catalyze glycoprotein specific disulfide bond formation and also functions as a chaperone for the folding of MHC class I α-chain in the membrane of the ER. As newly synthesized MHC class I α-chains enter the endoplasmic reticulum, calnexin binds on to them retaining them in a partly folded state.

After the β2-microglobulin binds to the MHC class I peptide-loading complex (PLC), calreticulin and ERp57 take over the job of chaperoning the MHC class I protein while the tapasin links the complex to the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) complex. This association prepares the MHC class I for binding an antigen for presentation on the cell surface.

A prolonged association of calnexin with mutant misfolded PMP22 known to cause Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease leads to the sequestration, degradation and inability of PMP22 to traffic to the Schwann cell surface for myelination. After repeated rounds of calnexin binding, mutant PMP22 is modified by ubiquitin for degradation by the proteasome as well as a Golgi to ER retrieval pathway to return any misfolded PMP22 that escaped from the ER to the Golgi apparatus.

The x-ray crystal structure of calnexin revealed a globular lectin domain and a long hydrophobic arm extending out.

Cofactors

ATP and calcium ions are cofactors involved in substrate binding for calnexin.

References

References

  1. (1991). "SSR alpha and associated calnexin are major calcium binding proteins of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane". J Biol Chem.
  2. (2023). "Calnexin, More Than Just a Molecular Chaperone". Cells.
  3. (1993). "Association of folding intermediates of glycoproteins". Nature.
  4. (1984). "Role of N-linked oligosaccharide recognition, glucose trimming, and calnexin in glycoprotein folding and quality control". Proc Natl Acad Sci USA.
  5. (1991). "A major proportion of N-glycoproteins are transiently glucosylated in the endoplasmic reticulum". Biochemistry.
  6. (2001). "Htm1p, a mannosidase-like protein, is involved in glycoprotein degradation in yeast". EMBO Rep.
  7. (2001). "A novel ER alpha-mannosidase-like protein accelerates ER-associated degradation". EMBO Rep.
  8. (2003). "XBP-1 regulates a subset of endoplasmic reticulum chaperone genes in the unfolded protein response". Mol Cell Biol.
  9. (2008). "Defining the glycan destruction signal for endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation". Mol Cell.
  10. (1998). "Enhanced catalysis of ribonuclease B folding by the interaction of calnexin or calreticulin with ERp57". J Biol Chem.
  11. (1994). "Calnexin: a membrane-bound chaperone of the endoplasmic reticulum". Trends Biochem Sci.
  12. (2002). "Association of calnexin with mutant peripheral myelin protein-22 ex vivo: a basis for "gain-of-function" ER diseases". Proc Natl Acad Sci USA.
  13. (2014). "Rer1 and calnexin regulate endoplasmic reticulum retention of a peripheral myelin protein 22 mutant that causes type 1A Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease". Sci Rep.
  14. (2001). "The structure of calnexin, an ER chaperone involved in quality control of protein folding". Mol Cell.
  15. (1995). "Conformational changes induced in the endoplasmic reticulum luminal domain of calnexin by Mg-ATP and Ca2+". J Biol Chem.
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