Endoplasmic reticulum retention is a common defect associated with tyrosinase-negative albinism

R Halaban, S Svedine, E Cheng… - Proceedings of the …, 2000 - National Acad Sciences
R Halaban, S Svedine, E Cheng, Y Smicun, R Aron, DN Hebert
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2000National Acad Sciences
Tyrosinase is a melanocyte-specific enzyme critical for the synthesis of melanin, a process
normally restricted to a post-Golgi compartment termed the melanosome. Loss-of-function
mutations in tyrosinase are the cause of oculocutaneous albinism, demonstrating the
importance of the enzyme in pigmentation. In the present study, we explored the possibility
that trafficking of albino tyrosinase from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi
apparatus and beyond is disrupted. Toward this end, we analyzed the common albino …
Tyrosinase is a melanocyte-specific enzyme critical for the synthesis of melanin, a process normally restricted to a post-Golgi compartment termed the melanosome. Loss-of-function mutations in tyrosinase are the cause of oculocutaneous albinism, demonstrating the importance of the enzyme in pigmentation. In the present study, we explored the possibility that trafficking of albino tyrosinase from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi apparatus and beyond is disrupted. Toward this end, we analyzed the common albino mouse mutation Tyr(C85S), the frequent human albino substitution TYR(T373K), and the temperature-sensitive tyrosinase TYR(R402Q)/Tyr(H402A) found in humans and mice, respectively. Intracellular localization was monitored in albino melanocytes carrying the native mutation, as well as in melanocytes ectopically expressing green fluorescent protein-tagged tyrosinase. Enzymatic characterization of complex glycans and immunofluorescence colocalization with organelle-specific resident proteins established that all four mutations produced defective proteins that were retained in the ER. TYR(R402Q)/Tyr(H402A) Golgi processing and transport to melanosomes were promoted at the permissive temperature of 32°C, but not at the nonpermissive 37°C temperature. Furthermore, evidence of protein misfolding was demonstrated by the prolonged association of tyrosinase mutants with calnexin and calreticulin, known ER chaperones that play a key role in the quality-control processes of the secretory pathway. From these results we concluded that albinism, at least in part, is an ER retention disease.
National Acad Sciences