1. Academic Validation
  2. The architecture of EMC reveals a path for membrane protein insertion

The architecture of EMC reveals a path for membrane protein insertion

  • Elife. 2020 May 27;9:e57887. doi: 10.7554/eLife.57887.
John P O'Donnell # 1 Ben P Phillips # 1 Yuichi Yagita # 1 Szymon Juszkiewicz 1 Armin Wagner 2 Duccio Malinverni 1 Robert J Keenan 3 Elizabeth A Miller 1 Ramanujan S Hegde 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
  • 2 Diamond Light Source, Didcot, United Kingdom.
  • 3 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The University of Chicago, Chicago, United States.
  • # Contributed equally.
Abstract

Approximately 25% of eukaryotic genes code for integral membrane proteins that are assembled at the endoplasmic reticulum. An abundant and widely conserved multi-protein complex termed EMC has been implicated in membrane protein biogenesis, but its mechanism of action is poorly understood. Here, we define the composition and architecture of human EMC using biochemical assays, crystallography of individual subunits, site-specific photocrosslinking, and cryo-EM reconstruction. Our results suggest that EMC's cytosolic domain contains a large, moderately hydrophobic vestibule that can bind a substrate's transmembrane domain (TMD). The cytosolic vestibule leads into a lumenally-sealed, lipid-exposed intramembrane groove large enough to accommodate a single substrate TMD. A gap between the cytosolic vestibule and intramembrane groove provides a potential path for substrate egress from EMC. These findings suggest how EMC facilitates energy-independent membrane insertion of TMDs, explain why only short lumenal domains are translocated by EMC, and constrain models of EMC's proposed chaperone function.

Keywords

biochemistry; chaperone; chemical biology; endoplasmic reticulum; membrane proteins; molecular biophysics; none; organelle biogenesis; structural biology.

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