The K/HDEL receptor does not recycle but instead acts as a Golgi-gatekeeper

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Abstract

Accurately measuring the ability of the K/HDEL receptor (ERD2) to retain the ER cargo Amy-HDEL has questioned earlier results on which the popular receptor recycling model is based upon. Here we demonstrate that ERD2 Golgi-retention, rather than fast ER export supports its function. Ligand-induced ERD2 redistribution is only observed when the C-terminus is masked or mutated, compromising the signal that prevents Golgi-to-ER transport of the receptor. Forcing COPI mediated retrograde transport destroys receptor function, but introducing ER-to-Golgi export or cis-Golgi retention signals re-activate ERD2 when its endogenous Golgi-retention signal is masked or deleted. We propose that ERD2 remains fixed as a Golgi gatekeeper, capturing K/HDEL proteins when they arrive and releasing them again into a subdomain for retrograde transport back to the ER. An in vivo ligand:receptor ratio far greater than 100 to 1 strongly supports this model, and the underlying mechanism appears to be extremely conserved across kingdoms.

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Alvim, J. C., Bolt, R. M., An, J., Kamisugi, Y., Cuming, A., Silva-Alvim, F. A. L., … Denecke, J. (2023). The K/HDEL receptor does not recycle but instead acts as a Golgi-gatekeeper. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37056-0

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