Molecular basis of TMED9 oligomerization and entrapment of misfolded protein cargo in the early secretory pathway

Publication information:

Xiao, Le, Xiong Pi, Alissa Goss, Tarick El-Baba, Julian Ehrmann, Elizabeth Grinkevich, Silvana Bazua-Valenti, Valeria Padovano, Seth Alper, Dominique Carey, Namrata Udeshi, Steven Carr, Juan Lorenzo Pablo, Carol Robinson, Anna Greka, and Hao Wu. [2024] 2024. “Molecular Basis of TMED9 Oligomerization and Entrapment of Misfolded Protein Cargo in the Early Secretory Pathway”. Sci Adv 10(38):eadp2221. doi:10.1126/sciadv.adp2221.

Abstract

Intracellular accumulation of misfolded proteins causes serious human proteinopathies. The transmembrane emp24 domain 9 (TMED9) cargo receptor promotes a general mechanism of cytotoxicity by entrapping misfolded protein cargos in the early secretory pathway. However, the molecular basis for this TMED9-mediated cargo retention remains elusive. Here, we report cryo-electron microscopy structures of TMED9, which reveal its unexpected self-oligomerization into octamers, dodecamers, and, by extension, even higher-order oligomers. The TMED9 oligomerization is driven by an intrinsic symmetry mismatch between the trimeric coiled coil domain and the tetrameric transmembrane domain. Using frameshifted Mucin 1 as an example of aggregated disease-related protein cargo, we implicate a mode of direct interaction with the TMED9 luminal Golgi-dynamics domain. The structures suggest and we confirm that TMED9 oligomerization favors the recruitment of coat protein I (COPI), but not COPII coatomers, facilitating retrograde transport and explaining the observed cargo entrapment. Our work thus reveals a molecular basis for TMED9-mediated misfolded protein retention in the early secretory pathway.