| Literature DB >> 28100770 |
Damian Guerra1, Sonia M Chapiro1, Réjane Pratelli2, Shi Yu2, Weitao Jia1, Julie Leary1, Guillaume Pilot2, Judy Callis3.
Abstract
Intercellular amino acid transport is essential for the growth of all multicellular organisms, and its dysregulation is implicated in developmental disorders. By an unknown mechanism, amino acid efflux is stimulated in plants by overexpression of a membrane-localized protein (GLUTAMINE DUMPER 1 (GDU1)) that requires a ubiquitin ligase (LOSS OF GDU 2 (LOG2). Here we further explore the physiological consequences of the interaction between these two proteins. LOG2 ubiquitin ligase activity is necessary for GDU1-dependent tolerance to exogenous amino acids, and LOG2 self-ubiquitination was markedly stimulated by the GDU1 cytosolic domain, suggesting that GDU1 functions as an adaptor or coactivator of amino acid exporter(s). However, other consequences more typical of a ligase-substrate relationship are observed: disruption of the LOG2 gene increased the in vivo half-life of GDU1, mass spectrometry confirmed that LOG2 ubiquitinates GDU1 at cytosolic lysines, and GDU1 protein levels decreased upon co-expression with active, but not enzymatically inactive LOG2. Altogether these data indicate LOG2 negatively regulates GDU1 protein accumulation by a mechanism dependent upon cytosolic GDU1 lysines. Although GDU1-lysine substituted protein exhibited diminished in vivo ubiquitination, overexpression of GDU1 lysine mutants still conferred amino acid tolerance in a LOG2-dependent manner, consistent with GDU1 being both a substrate and facilitator of LOG2 function. From these data, we offer a model in which GDU1 activates LOG2 to stimulate amino acid export, a process that could be negatively regulated by GDU1 ubiquitination and LOG2 self-ubiquitination.Entities:
Keywords: E3 ubiquitin ligase; Loss of GDU1 2; amino acid resistance; amino acid transport; glutamine dumper; protein degradation; ubiquitin; ubiquitin ligase; ubiquitylation (ubiquitination)
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28100770 PMCID: PMC5339764 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.766469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157