4.8 Article

A Cellular Mechanism to Detect and Alleviate Reductive Stress

Journal

CELL
Volume 183, Issue 1, Pages 46-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.08.034

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [S10 OD018174, S10OD021828]
  2. American Cancer Society [PF-15-215-01-DCC]
  3. Gilliam Fellowship of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  4. [1S10OD020062-01]

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Metazoan organisms rely on conserved stress response pathways to alleviate adverse conditions and preserve cellular integrity. Stress responses are particularly important in stem cells that provide lifetime support for tissue formation and repair, but how these protective systems are integrated into developmental programs is poorly understood. Here we used myoblast differentiation to identify the E3 ligase CUL2(FEm1B) and its substrate FNIP1 as core components of the reductive stress response. Reductive stress, as caused by prolonged antioxidant signaling or mitochondria! inactivity, reverts the oxidation of invariant Cys residues in FNIP1 and allows CUL2(FEm1B) to recognize its target. The ensuing proteasomal degradation of FNIP1 restores mitochondrial activity to preserve redox homeostasis and stem cell integrity. The reductive stress response is therefore built around a ubiquitin-dependent rheostat that tunes mitochondrial activity to redox needs and implicates metabolic control in coordination of stress and developmental signaling.

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