AG — Prof. Heiko Rieger — Statistical Physics


Co-Chaperones of the mammalian endoplasmic reticulum

Heiko Rieger

In mammalian cells, the rough endoplasmic reticulum or ER plays a central role in the biogenesis of most extracellular plus many organellar proteins and in cellular calcium homeostasis. Therefore, this organelle comprises molecular chaperones that are involved in import, folding/assembly, export, and degradation of polypeptides in millimolar concentrations. In addition, there are calcium channels/pumps and signal transduction components present in the ER membrane that affect and are affected by these processes. The ER lumenal Hsp70, termed immunoglobulin-heavy chain binding protein or BiP, is the central player in all these activities and involves up to seven different co-chaperones, i.e. ER-membrane integrated as well as ER-lumenal Hsp40s, which are termed ERj or ERdj, and two nucleotide exchange factors.




[1] A. Melnyk, H. Rieger and R. Zimmermann
Co-Chaperones of the mammalian endoplasmic reticulum
in "Networking of Chaperones by Co-cherpones" (Blatch, G.L. and Edkins, A., eds) in Subcellular Biochemistry, 78, 179-200 (2015) [pdf]

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