4.8 Article

Cytosolic PINK1 promotes the targeting of ubiquitinated proteins to the aggresome-autophagy pathway during proteasomal stress

期刊

AUTOPHAGY
卷 12, 期 4, 页码 632-647

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2016.1147667

关键词

Aggresome; autophagy; PINK1; proteasomal inhibition; SQSTM1

资金

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of China (973 Basic Research Program grant) [2009CB941404, 2011CB510002]
  2. Shenzhen Key Laboratory for Molecular Biology of Neural Development [ZDSY20120617112838879]
  3. Shenzhen Peacock Plan [KQCX20130628112914292]
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30871032, 81330016]
  5. Ministry of Education of China (Program for New Century Excellent Talents in University grant) [NCET-08-0372]
  6. Ministry of Education of China (Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Teams in University grant) [IRT0935]
  7. Chinese Academy of Sciences (The Hundred Talent Program)
  8. Department of Science and Technology of Sichuan Province (Young Scientific Innovation Team in Neurological Disorders grant) [2011JTD0005]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

During proteasomal stress, cells can alleviate the accumulation of polyubiquitinated proteins by targeting them to perinuclear aggresomes for autophagic degradation, but the mechanism underlying the activation of this compensatory pathway remains unclear. Here we report that PINK1-s, a short form of Parkinson disease (PD)-related protein kinase PINK1 (PTEN induced putative kinase 1), is a major regulator of aggresome formation. PINK1-s is extremely unstable due to its recognition by the N-end rule pathway, and tends to accumulate in the cytosol during proteasomal stress. Overexpression of PINK1-s induces aggresome formation in cells with normal proteasomal activities, while loss of PINK1-s function leads to a significant decrease in the efficiency of aggresome formation induced by proteasomal inhibition. PINK1-s exerts its effect through phosphorylation of the ubiquitin-binding protein SQSTM1 (sequestosome 1) and increasing its ability to sequester polyubiquitinated proteins into aggresomes. These findings pinpoint PINK1-s as a sensor of proteasomal activities that transduces the proteasomal impairment signal to the aggresome formation machinery.

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