Cbl-mediated Ubiquitinylation Is Required for Lysosomal Sorting of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor but Is Dispensable for Endocytosis

Lei Duan, Yuko Miura(Tufts University), Manjari Dimri(Harvard University), Biswanath Majumder(National Institutes of Health), Ingrid Dodge(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Alagarsamy Lakku Reddi(National Institutes of Health), Amiya K. Ghosh(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Norvin D. Fernandes(National Institutes of Health), Pengcheng Zhou(Harvard University), Karen P. Mullane-Robinson(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Navin Rao(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Stephen Donoghue(National Institutes of Health), Rick A. Rogers(Harvard University), David D.L. Bowtell(National Institutes of Health), Mayumi Naramura(National Institutes of Health), Hua Gu(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Vimla Band(Tufts Medical Center), Hamid Band(Harvard University)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
July 25, 2003
Cited by 219Open Access
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Abstract

Ligand-induced down-regulation controls the signaling potency of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR/ErbB1). Overexpression studies have identified Cbl-mediated ubiquitinylation of EGFR as a mechanism of ligand-induced EGFR down-regulation. However, the role of endogenous Cbl in EGFR down-regulation and the precise step in the endocytic pathway regulated by Cbl remain unclear. Using Cbl-/- mouse embryonic fibroblast cell lines, we demonstrate that endogenous Cbl is essential for ligand-induced ubiquitinylation and efficient degradation of EGFR. Further analyses using Chinese hamster ovary cells with a temperature-sensitive defect in ubiquitinylation confirm a crucial role of the ubiquitin machinery in Cbl-mediated EGFR degradation. However, internalization into early endosomes did not require Cbl function or an intact ubiquitin pathway. Confocal immunolocalization studies indicated that Cbl-dependent ubiquitinylation plays a critical role at the early endosome to late endosome/lysosome sorting step of EGFR down-regulation. These findings establish Cbl as the major endogenous ubiquitin ligase responsible for EGFR degradation, and show that the critical role of Cbl-mediated ubiquitinylation is at the level of endosomal sorting, rather than at the level of internalization.


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