1. Academic Validation
  2. Crucial step in cholesterol homeostasis: sterols promote binding of SCAP to INSIG-1, a membrane protein that facilitates retention of SREBPs in ER

Crucial step in cholesterol homeostasis: sterols promote binding of SCAP to INSIG-1, a membrane protein that facilitates retention of SREBPs in ER

  • Cell. 2002 Aug 23;110(4):489-500. doi: 10.1016/s0092-8674(02)00872-3.
Tong Yang 1 Peter J Espenshade Michael E Wright Daisuke Yabe Yi Gong Ruedi Aebersold Joseph L Goldstein Michael S Brown
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75390, USA.
Abstract

Using coimmunoprecipitation and tandem mass spectrometry, we identify INSIG-1 as an ER protein that binds the sterol-sensing domain of SREBP cleavage-activating protein (SCAP) and facilitates retention of the SCAP/SREBP complex in the ER. In sterol-depleted cells, SCAP escorts SREBPs from ER to Golgi for proteolytic processing, thereby allowing SREBPs to stimulate Cholesterol synthesis. Sterols induce binding of SCAP to INSIG-1, as determined by blue native-PAGE, and this is correlated with the inhibition of SCAP exit from the ER. Overexpression of INSIG-1 increases the sensitivity of cells to sterol-mediated inhibition of SREBP processing. Mutant SCAP(Y298C) fails to bind INSIG-1 and is resistant to sterol-mediated inhibition of ER exit. By facilitating sterol-dependent ER retention of SCAP, INSIG-1 plays a central role in Cholesterol homeostasis.

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