4.8 Article

Loss of peptide:N-glycanase causes proteasome dysfunction mediated by a sugar-recognizing ubiquitin ligase

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2102902118

Keywords

ERAD; FBXO6/FBS2; NGLY1; proteasome; ubiquitination

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT)/Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) KAKENHI [JP19H02926, JP18H02443, JP19H05712, JP19H00997, JP18H03990]
  2. RIKEN Pioneering Research Project Glycolipidologue Initiative
  3. Japan Science and Technology Agency-Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (JST-CREST) [JPMJCR16H3]
  4. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development-Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (AMED-CREST) [JP20gm1410003]
  5. Takeda Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Mutation in the NGLY1 gene leads to a recessive disorder in humans. Findings in this study suggest that dysfunction of the proteasome caused by accumulation of N-glycoproteins, particularly NRF1 ubiquitinated by SCFFBS2, contributes to the pathogenesis resulting from NGLY1 deficiency.
Mutations in the human peptide:N-glycanase gene (NGLY1), which encodes a cytosolic de-N-glycosylating enzyme, cause a congenital autosomal recessive disorder. In rodents, the loss of Ngly1 results in severe developmental delay or lethality, but the underlying mechanism remains unknown. In this study, we found that deletion of Fbxo6 (also known as Fbs2), which encodes a ubiquitin ligase subunit that recognizes glycoproteins, rescued the lethality-related defects in Ngly1-KO mice. In NGLY1-KO cells, FBS2 overexpression resulted in the substantial inhibition of proteasome activity, causing cytotoxicity. Nuclear factor, erythroid 2-like 1 (NFE2L1, also known as NRF1), an endoplasmic reticulum-associated transcriptional factor involved in expression of proteasome subunits, was also abnormally ubiquitinated by SCFFBS2 in NGLY1-KO cells, resulting in its retention in the cytosol. However, the cytotoxicity caused by FBS2 was restored by the overexpression of glycan-less NRF1 mutants, regardless of their transcriptional activity, or by the deletion of NRF1 in NGLY1-KO cells. We conclude that the proteasome dysfunction caused by the accumulation of N-glycoproteins, primarily NRF1, ubiquitinated by SCFFBS2 accounts for the pathogenesis resulting from NGLY1 deficiency.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available