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      Transcriptional induction of genes encoding endoplasmic reticulum resident proteins requires a transmembrane protein kinase

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      Cell
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          The transcription of genes encoding soluble proteins that reside in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is induced when unfolded proteins accumulate in the ER. Thus, an intracellular signal transduction pathway must exist that mediates communication between the ER lumen and the nucleus. We have identified a gene in S. cerevisiae, IRE1, that is required for this pathway: ire1- mutants cannot activate transcription of KAR2 and PDI1, which encode the ER resident proteins BiP and protein disulfide isomerase. Moreover, IRE1 is essential for cell viability under stress conditions that cause unfolded proteins to accumulate in the ER. IRE1 encodes a transmembrane serine/threonine kinase that we propose transmits the unfolded protein signal across the ER or inner nuclear membrane. IRE1 is also required for inositol prototrophy, suggesting that the induction of ER resident proteins is coupled to the biogenesis of new ER membrane.

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          Most cited references38

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          Signal transduction by receptors with tyrosine kinase activity.

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            Protein folding in the cell.

            In the cell, as in vitro, the final conformation of a protein is determined by its amino-acid sequence. But whereas some isolated proteins can be denatured and refolded in vitro in the absence of other macromolecular cellular components, folding and assembly of polypeptides in vivo involves other proteins, many of which belong to families that have been highly conserved during evolution.
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              The protein kinase family: conserved features and deduced phylogeny of the catalytic domains.

              In recent years, members of the protein kinase family have been discovered at an accelerated pace. Most were first described, not through the traditional biochemical approach of protein purification and enzyme assay, but as putative protein kinase amino acid sequences deduced from the nucleotide sequences of molecularly cloned genes or complementary DNAs. Phylogenetic mapping of the conserved protein kinase catalytic domains can serve as a useful first step in the functional characterization of these newly identified family members.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cell
                Cell
                Elsevier BV
                00928674
                June 1993
                June 1993
                : 73
                : 6
                : 1197-1206
                Article
                10.1016/0092-8674(93)90648-A
                8513503
                b0a7369c-f47c-4795-8e03-6c439dd7671f
                © 1993

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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