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Publication : Dissection of Thrombospondin-4 Domains Involved in Intracellular Adaptive Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress-Responsive Signaling.

First Author  Brody MJ Year  2016
Journal  Mol Cell Biol Volume  36
Issue  1 Pages  2-12
PubMed ID  26459760 Mgi Jnum  J:235831
Mgi Id  MGI:5803767 Doi  10.1128/MCB.00607-15
Citation  Brody MJ, et al. (2016) Dissection of Thrombospondin-4 Domains Involved in Intracellular Adaptive Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress-Responsive Signaling. Mol Cell Biol 36(1):2-12
abstractText  Thrombospondins are a family of stress-inducible secreted glycoproteins that underlie tissue remodeling. We recently reported that thrombospondin-4 (Thbs4) has a critical intracellular function, regulating the adaptive endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress pathway through activating transcription factor 6alpha (Atf6alpha). In the present study, we dissected the domains of Thbs4 that mediate interactions with ER proteins, such as BiP (Grp78) and Atf6alpha, and the domains mediating activation of the ER stress response. Functionally, Thbs4 localized to the ER and post-ER vesicles and was actively secreted from cardiomyocytes, as were the type III repeat (T3R) and TSP-C domains, while the LamG domain localized to the Golgi apparatus. We also mutated the major calcium-binding motifs within the T3R domain of full-length Thbs4, causing ER retention and secretion blockade. The T3R and TSP-C domains as well as wild-type Thbs4 and the calcium-binding mutant interacted with Atf6alpha, induced an adaptive ER stress response, and caused expansion of intracellular vesicles. In contrast, overexpression of a related secreted oligomeric glycoprotein, Nell2, which lacks only the T3R and TSP-C domains, did not cause these effects. Finally, deletion of Atf6alpha abrogated Thbs4-induced vesicular expansion. Taken together, these data identify the critical intracellular functional domains of Thbs4, which was formerly thought to have only extracellular functions.
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