| Literature DB >> 33290695 |
Di Chen1, Zheng Wang2, Yan G Zhao3, Hui Zheng2, Hongyu Zhao2, Nan Liu2, Hong Zhang4.
Abstract
Liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) compartmentalizes transcriptional condensates for gene expression, but little is known about how this process is controlled. Here, we showed that depletion of IPMK, encoding inositol polyphosphate multikinase, promotes autophagy and lysosomal function and biogenesis in a TFEB-dependent manner. Cytoplasmic-nuclear trafficking of TFEB, a well-characterized mechanism by which diverse signaling pathways regulate TFEB activity, is not evidently altered by IPMK depletion. We demonstrated that nuclear TFEB forms distinct puncta that colocalize with the Mediator complex and with mRNAs of target lysosomal genes. TFEB undergoes LLPS in vitro. IPMK directly interacts with and inhibits LLPS of TFEB and also dissolves TFEB condensates. Depletion of IPMK increases the number of nuclear TFEB puncta and the co-localization of TFEB with Mediator and mRNAs of target genes. Our study reveals that nuclear-localized IPMK acts as a chaperone to inhibit LLPS of TFEB to negatively control its transcriptional activity.Entities:
Keywords: IPMK; TFEB; autophagy; lysosome; phase separation
Year: 2020 PMID: 33290695 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2020.10.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270