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  • A central role for regulated protein stability in the control of TFE3 and MITF by nutrients.

A central role for regulated protein stability in the control of TFE3 and MITF by nutrients.

Molecular cell (2023-01-08)
Christopher Nardone, Brad A Palanski, Daniel C Scott, Richard T Timms, Karl W Barber, Xin Gu, Aoyue Mao, Yumei Leng, Emma V Watson, Brenda A Schulman, Philip A Cole, Stephen J Elledge
ABSTRACT

The TFE3 and MITF master transcription factors maintain metabolic homeostasis by regulating lysosomal, melanocytic, and autophagy genes. Previous studies posited that their cytosolic retention by 14-3-3, mediated by the Rag GTPases-mTORC1, was key for suppressing transcriptional activity in the presence of nutrients. Here, we demonstrate using mammalian cells that regulated protein stability plays a fundamental role in their control. Amino acids promote the recruitment of TFE3 and MITF to the lysosomal surface via the Rag GTPases, activating an evolutionarily conserved phospho-degron and leading to ubiquitination by CUL1β-TrCP and degradation. Elucidation of the minimal functional degron revealed a conserved alpha-helix required for interaction with RagA, illuminating the molecular basis for a severe neurodevelopmental syndrome caused by missense mutations in TFE3 within the RagA-TFE3 interface. Additionally, the phospho-degron is recurrently lost in TFE3 genomic translocations that cause kidney cancer. Therefore, two divergent pathologies converge on the loss of protein stability regulation by nutrients.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Millipore
Anti-FLAG® M2 Magnetic Beads, affinity isolated antibody
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Raptor Antibody, Upstate®, from rabbit
Sigma-Aldrich
ANTI-FLAG® M2 antibody, Mouse monoclonal, 1 mg/mL, clone M2, affinity isolated antibody, buffered aqueous solution (50% glycerol, 10 mM sodium phosphate, and 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.4)