Phosphorylated ubiquitin chain is the genuine Parkin receptor

Kei Okatsu(Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science), Fumika Koyano(Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science), Mayumi Kimura(Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science), Hidetaka Kosako(Tokushima University), Yasushi Saeki(Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science), Keiji Tanaka(Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science), Noriyuki Matsuda(Japan Science and Technology Agency)
The Journal of Cell Biology
April 6, 2015
Cited by 260Open Access
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Abstract

PINK1 selectively recruits Parkin to depolarized mitochondria for quarantine and removal of damaged mitochondria via ubiquitylation. Dysfunction of this process predisposes development of familial recessive Parkinson's disease. Although various models for the recruitment process have been proposed, none of them adequately explain the accumulated data, and thus the molecular basis for PINK1 recruitment of Parkin remains to be fully elucidated. In this study, we show that a linear ubiquitin chain of phosphomimetic tetra-ubiquitin(S65D) recruits Parkin to energized mitochondria in the absence of PINK1, whereas a wild-type tetra-ubiquitin chain does not. Under more physiologically relevant conditions, a lysosomal phosphorylated polyubiquitin chain recruited phosphomimetic Parkin to the lysosome. A cellular ubiquitin replacement system confirmed that ubiquitin phosphorylation is indeed essential for Parkin translocation. Furthermore, physical interactions between phosphomimetic Parkin and phosphorylated polyubiquitin chain were detected by immunoprecipitation from cells and in vitro reconstitution using recombinant proteins. We thus propose that the phosphorylated ubiquitin chain functions as the genuine Parkin receptor for recruitment to depolarized mitochondria.


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