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Z-α 1 -antitrypsin polymers impose molecular filtration in the endoplasmic reticulum after undergoing phase transition to a solid state.

Joseph E ChambersNikita ZubkovMarkéta KubánkováJonathon Nixon-AbellIoanna MelaSusana AbreuMax SchwieningGiulia LavardaIsmael López-DuarteJennifer A DickensTomás TorresClemens F KaminskiLiam J HoltEdward AvezovJames A HuntingtonPeter St George-HyslopMarina K KuimovaStefan John Marciniak
Published in: Science advances (2022)
Misfolding of secretory proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) features in many human diseases. In α 1 -antitrypsin deficiency, the pathogenic Z variant aberrantly assembles into polymers in the hepatocyte ER, leading to cirrhosis. We show that α 1 -antitrypsin polymers undergo a liquid:solid phase transition, forming a protein matrix that retards mobility of ER proteins by size-dependent molecular filtration. The Z-α 1 -antitrypsin phase transition is promoted during ER stress by an ATF6-mediated unfolded protein response. Furthermore, the ER chaperone calreticulin promotes Z-α 1 -antitrypsin solidification and increases protein matrix stiffness. Single-particle tracking reveals that solidification initiates in cells with normal ER morphology, previously assumed to represent a healthy pool. We show that Z-α 1 -antitrypsin-induced hypersensitivity to ER stress can be explained by immobilization of ER chaperones within the polymer matrix. This previously unidentified mechanism of ER dysfunction provides a template for understanding a diverse group of related proteinopathies and identifies ER chaperones as potential therapeutic targets.
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