PTEN-L is a novel protein phosphatase for ubiquitin dephosphorylation to inhibit PINK1–Parkin-mediated mitophagy

Liming Wang(National University of Singapore), Yik-Lam Cho(National University of Singapore), Yancheng Tang(Hong Kong Baptist University), Jigang Wang(National University of Singapore), Jung‐Eun Park(Nanyang Technological University), Yajun Wu(National University of Singapore), Chunxin Wang(National Institutes of Health), Yan Tong(National University of Singapore), Ritu Chawla(National University of Singapore), Jianbin Zhang(National University of Singapore), Yin Shi(National University of Singapore), Shuo Deng(National University of Singapore), Guang Lu(National University of Singapore), Yihua Wu(National University of Singapore), Hayden Weng Siong Tan(National University of Singapore), Pornteera Pawijit(National University of Singapore), Grace Gui-Yin Lim(National Neuroscience Institute), Hui-Ying Chan(National University of Singapore), Jingzi Zhang(National University of Singapore), Lei Fang(Model Animal Research Center), Hanry Yu(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Yih‐Cherng Liou(National University of Singapore), Karthik Mallilankaraman(National University of Singapore), Boon-Huat Bay(National University of Singapore), Kah‐Leong Lim(National University of Singapore), Siu Kwan Sze(Nanyang Technological University), Celestial T. Yap(National University of Singapore), Han‐Ming Shen(National University of Singapore)
Cell Research
June 22, 2018
Cited by 179Open Access
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Abstract

Mitophagy is an important type of selective autophagy for specific elimination of damaged mitochondria. PTEN-induced putative kinase protein 1 (PINK1)-catalyzed phosphorylation of ubiquitin (Ub) plays a critical role in the onset of PINK1-Parkin-mediated mitophagy. Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN)-long (PTEN-L) is a newly identified isoform of PTEN, with addition of 173 amino acids to its N-terminus. Here we report that PTEN-L is a novel negative regulator of mitophagy via its protein phosphatase activity against phosphorylated ubiquitin. We found that PTEN-L localizes at the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) and overexpression of PTEN-L inhibits, whereas deletion of PTEN-L promotes, mitophagy induced by various mitochondria-damaging agents. Mechanistically, PTEN-L is capable of effectively preventing Parkin mitochondrial translocation, reducing Parkin phosphorylation, maintaining its closed inactive conformation, and inhibiting its E3 ligase activity. More importantly, PTEN-L reduces the level of phosphorylated ubiquitin (pSer65-Ub) in vivo, and in vitro phosphatase assay confirms that PTEN-L dephosphorylates pSer65-Ub via its protein phosphatase activity, independently of its lipid phosphatase function. Taken together, our findings demonstrate a novel function of PTEN-L as a protein phosphatase for ubiquitin, which counteracts PINK1-mediated ubiquitin phosphorylation leading to blockage of the feedforward mechanisms in mitophagy induction and eventual suppression of mitophagy. Thus, understanding this novel function of PTEN-L provides a key missing piece in the molecular puzzle controlling mitophagy, a critical process in many important human diseases including neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's disease.


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