학술논문

Stress response silencing by an E3 ligase mutated in neurodegeneration.
Document Type
article
Source
Nature: New biology. 626(8000)
Subject
Apoptosis
Ataxia
Cell Survival
Dementia
Mitochondria
Mitochondrial Proteins
Multiprotein Complexes
Mutation
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Protein Stability
Protein Transport
Proteolysis
Stress
Physiological
Ubiquitin
Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
Ubiquitination
Language
Abstract
Stress response pathways detect and alleviate adverse conditions to safeguard cell and tissue homeostasis, yet their prolonged activation induces apoptosis and disrupts organismal health1-3. How stress responses are turned off at the right time and place remains poorly understood. Here we report a ubiquitin-dependent mechanism that silences the cellular response to mitochondrial protein import stress. Crucial to this process is the silencing factor of the integrated stress response (SIFI), a large E3 ligase complex mutated in ataxia and in early-onset dementia that degrades both unimported mitochondrial precursors and stress response components. By recognizing bifunctional substrate motifs that equally encode protein localization and stability, the SIFI complex turns off a general stress response after a specific stress event has been resolved. Pharmacological stress response silencing sustains cell survival even if stress resolution failed, which underscores the importance of signal termination and provides a roadmap for treating neurodegenerative diseases caused by mitochondrial import defects.