ID | 115489 |
Title Alternative | MITOL assists Parkin in mitochondrial localization
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Author |
Koyano, Fumika
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science
Yamano, Koji
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science
Kosako, Hidetaka
Tokushima University
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Tanaka, Keiji
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science
Matsuda, Noriyuki
Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | PINK1 (PARK6) and PARKIN (PARK2) are causal genes of recessive familial Parkinson's disease. Parkin is a ubiquitin ligase E3 that conjugates ubiquitin to impaired mitochondrial proteins for organelle degradation. PINK1, a Ser/Thr kinase that accumulates only on impaired mitochondria, phosphorylates two authentic substrates, the ubiquitin-like domain of Parkin and ubiquitin. Our group and others have revealed that both the subcellular localization and ligase activity of Parkin are regulated through interactions with phosphorylated ubiquitin. Once PINK1 localizes on impaired mitochondria, PINK1-catalyzed phosphoubiquitin recruits and activates Parkin. Parkin then supplies a ubiquitin chain to PINK1 for phosphorylation. The amplified ubiquitin functions as a signal for the sequestration and degradation of the damaged mitochondria. Although a bewildering variety of Parkin substrates have been reported, the basis for Parkin substrate specificity remains poorly understood. Moreover, the mechanism underlying initial activation and translocation of Parkin onto mitochondria remains unclear, because the presence of ubiquitin on impaired mitochondria is thought to be a prerequisite for the initial PINK1 phosphorylation process. Here, we show that artificial mitochondria-targeted proteins are ubiquitylated by Parkin, suggesting that substrate specificity of Parkin is not determined by its amino acid sequence. Moreover, recruitment and activation of Parkin are delayed following depletion of the mitochondrial E3, MITOL/March5. We propose a model in which the initial step in Parkin recruitment and activation requires protein ubiquitylation by MITOL/March5 with subsequent PINK1-mediated phosphorylation. Because PINK1 and Parkin amplify the ubiquitin signal via a positive feedback loop, the low substrate specificity of Parkin might facilitate this amplification process.
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Journal Title |
Journal of Biological Chemistry
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ISSN | 00219258
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NCID | AA1202441X
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Publisher | The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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Volume | 294
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Issue | 26
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Start Page | 10300
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End Page | 10314
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Published Date | 2019-05-20
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Rights | This is an open access article under the CC BY license(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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DOI (Published Version) | |
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language |
eng
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TextVersion |
Publisher
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departments |
Institute of Advanced Medical Sciences
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