4.6 Article

Comparative profiling of stress granule clearance reveals differential contributions of the ubiquitin system

Journal

LIFE SCIENCE ALLIANCE
Volume 4, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

LIFE SCIENCE ALLIANCE LLC
DOI: 10.26508/lsa.202000927

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [GRK2243/1, BU951/5-1]
  2. Open Access Publication Fund of the University of Wurzburg

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The involvement of the ubiquitin system in stress granule (SG) clearance varies depending on the stress condition, with inhibition of specific components impairing the clearance of SGs induced by certain stressors. This differential involvement is crucial for preventing the formation of disease-related aberrant SGs.
Stress granules (SGs) are cytoplasmic condensates containing untranslated mRNP complexes. They are induced by various proteotoxic conditions such as heat, oxidative, and osmotic stress. SGs are believed to protect mRNPs from degradation and to enable cells to rapidly resume translation when stress conditions subside. SG dynamics are controlled by various posttranslationalmodifications, but the role of the ubiquitin system has remained controversial. Here, we present a comparative analysis addressing the involvement of the ubiquitin system in SG clearance. Using high-resolution immuno-fluorescence microscopy, we found that ubiquitin associated to varying extent with SGs induced by heat, arsenite, H2O2, sorbitol, or combined puromycin and Hsp70 inhibitor treatment. SG-associated ubiquitin species included K48- and K63-linked conjugates, whereas free ubiquitin was not significantly enriched. Inhibition of the ubiquitin activating enzyme, deubiquitylating enzymes, the 26S proteasome and p97/VCP impaired the clearance of arsenite- and heat-induced SGs, whereas SGs induced by other stress conditions were little affected. Our data underline the differential involvement of the ubiquitin system in SG clearance, a process important to prevent the formation of disease-linked aberrant SGs.

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