Phosphoproteomics reveals that Parkinson's disease kinase LRRK2 regulates a subset of Rab GTPases

Martin Steger(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Francesca Tonelli(University of Dundee), Genta Ito(University of Dundee), Paul Davies(University of Dundee), Matthias Trost(University of Dundee), Melanie Vetter(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Stefanie Wachter(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Esben Lorentzen(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry), Graham Duddy(GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom)), Stephen Wilson(GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom)), Marco A. S. Baptista(Michael J. Fox Foundation), Brian Fiske(Michael J. Fox Foundation), Matthew Fell(Boston University), John A. Morrow(United States Military Academy), Alastair D. Reith(GlaxoSmithKline (United Kingdom)), Dario R. Alessi(University of Dundee), Matthias Mann(Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry)
eLife
January 28, 2016
Cited by 1,070Open Access
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Abstract

Mutations in Park8, encoding for the multidomain Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) protein, comprise the predominant genetic cause of Parkinson's disease (PD). G2019S, the most common amino acid substitution activates the kinase two- to threefold. This has motivated the development of LRRK2 kinase inhibitors; however, poor consensus on physiological LRRK2 substrates has hampered clinical development of such therapeutics. We employ a combination of phosphoproteomics, genetics, and pharmacology to unambiguously identify a subset of Rab GTPases as key LRRK2 substrates. LRRK2 directly phosphorylates these both in vivo and in vitro on an evolutionary conserved residue in the switch II domain. Pathogenic LRRK2 variants mapping to different functional domains increase phosphorylation of Rabs and this strongly decreases their affinity to regulatory proteins including Rab GDP dissociation inhibitors (GDIs). Our findings uncover a key class of bona-fide LRRK2 substrates and a novel regulatory mechanism of Rabs that connects them to PD.


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