The transmembrane segment of the human transferrin receptor functions as a signal peptide.

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Abstract

The human transferrin receptor (TR) is a protein comprising 760 amino acid residues that spans the membrane once with its N terminus towards the cytoplasm. It is synthesized without a cleavable signal peptide. We have tested whether the signal responsible for its membrane insertion is present within its transmembrane peptide using a combined recombinant DNA/in vitro translation approach. The complete TR coding region was first reconstructed from overlapping TR cDNA clones and then engineered into an SP6-based transcription vector. In vitro transcription and subsequent translation in the presence of rough microsomes yielded TR molecules that were glycosylated and correctly inserted into the membrane. Two kinds of experiments demonstrated that the spanning region of the TR polypeptide contained the signal for translocation across the membrane of the rough endoplasmic reticulum. First, we deleted the spanning region of TR and showed that this deletion mutant could not be inserted. Second, we showed that two cytoplasmic proteins (the mouse dihydrofolate reductase and the chimpanzee alpha-globin) could be inserted into the microsomal membrane in the expected orientation when the TR transmembrane segment was added to their N termini. Thus, the spanning peptide was shown to be both necessary and sufficient for chain translocation. Further analyses demonstrated that the translocation event was dependent on the signal recognition particle.

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Zerial, M., Melancon, P., Schneider, C., & Garoff, H. (1986). The transmembrane segment of the human transferrin receptor functions as a signal peptide. The EMBO Journal, 5(7), 1543–1550. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1460-2075.1986.tb04395.x

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