4.8 Article

Cell-fate determination by ubiquitin-dependent regulation of translation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 525, Issue 7570, Pages 523-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature14978

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Funding

  1. California Institute of Regenerative Medicine
  2. Human Frontier Science Fellowship
  3. NSF graduate student fellowship
  4. UC Mexus-Conacyt fellowship
  5. NIH [GM42341, S10RR029668, S10RR027303, S10RR025622]
  6. Basic Biology Award from the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine [RB-02222]

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Metazoan development depends on the accurate execution of differentiation programs that allow pluripotent stem cells to adopt specific fates1. Differentiation requires changes to chromatin architecture and transcriptional networks, yet whether other regulatory events support cell-fate determination is less well understood. Here we identify the ubiquitin ligase CUL3 in complex with its vertebrate- specific substrate adaptor KBTBD8 (CUL3(KBTBD8)) as an essential regulator of human and Xenopus tropicalis neural crest specification. CUL3(KBTBD8) monoubiquitylates NOLC1 and its paralogue TCOF1, the mutation of which underlies the neurocristopathy Treacher Collins syndrome(2,3). Ubiquitylation drives formation of aTCOF1-NOLC1 platform that connects RNA polymerase I with ribosome modification enzymes and remodels the translational program of differentiating cells in favour of neural crest specification. We conclude that ubiquitin-dependent regulation of translation is an important feature of cell-fate determination.

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