The retention factor p11 confers an endoplasmic reticulum-localization signal to the potassium channel TASK-1

  • Vijay Renigunta
  • Hebao Yuan
  • Marylou Zuzarte
  • Susanne Rinné
  • Annett Koch
  • Erhard Wischmeyer
  • Günter Schlichthörl
  • Yadong Gao
  • Andreas Karschin
  • Ralf Jacob
  • Blanche Schwappach
  • Jürgen Daut (Shared last author)
  • Regina Preisig-Müller (Shared last author)

Abstract

The interaction of the adaptor protein p11, also denoted S100A10, with the C-terminus of the two-pore-domain K+ channel TASK-1 was studied using yeast two-hybrid analysis, glutathione S-transferase pull-down, and co-immunoprecipitation. We found that p11 interacts with a 40 amino-acid region in the proximal C-terminus of the channel. In heterologous expression systems, deletion of the p11-interacting domain enhanced surface expression of TASK-1. Attachment of the p11-interacting domain to the cytosolic tail of the reporter protein CD8 caused retention/retrieval of the construct in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Attachment of the last 36 amino acids of p11 to CD8 also caused ER localization, which was abolished by removal or mutation of a putative retention motif (H/K)xKxxx, at the C-terminal end of p11. Imaging of EGFP-tagged TASK-1 channels in COS cells suggested that wild-type TASK-1 was largely retained in the ER. Knockdown of p11 with siRNA enhanced trafficking of TASK-1 to the surface membrane. Our results suggest that binding of p11 to TASK-1 retards the surface expression of the channel, most likely by virtue of a di-lysine retention signal at the C-terminus of p11. Thus, the cytosolic protein p11 may represent a 'retention factor' that causes localization of the channel to the ER.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1398-9219
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 02.2006
Externally publishedYes
PubMed 16420525