BIOSS
Centre for Biological Signalling Studies

The ubiquitin ligase Ubr4 controls stability of podocin/MEC-2 supercomplexes

Rinschen MM, Bharill P, Wu X, Kohli P, Reinert MJ, Kretz O, Martinez IS, Schermer B, Höhne M, Bartram MP, Aravamudhan S, Brooks BR, Vilchez D, Huber TB, Müller RU, Krüger M, Benzing T.

Hum Mol Genet. 2016;25(7):1328-44.

19.01.2016

Rinschen MM, Bharill P, Wu X, Kohli P, Reinert MJ, Kretz O, Martinez IS, Schermer B, Höhne M, Bartram MP, Aravamudhan S, Brooks BR, Vilchez D, Huber TB, Müller RU, Krüger M, Benzing T.

Hum Mol Genet. 2016;25(7):1328-44.

Hum Mol Genet.           online article

The PHB-domain protein podocin maintains the renal filtration barrier and its mutation is an important cause of hereditary nephrotic syndrome. Podocin and its C. elegans orthologue MEC-2 have emerged as key components of mechanosensitive membrane protein signaling complexes. Whereas podocin resides at a specialized cell junction at the podocyte slit diaphragm, MEC-2 is found in neurons required for touch sensitivity. Here we show that the ubiquitin ligase Ubr4 is a key component of the podocin interactome purified both from cultured podocytes and native glomeruli. It colocalizes with podocin and regulates its stability. In C. elegans, this process is conserved. Here, Ubr4 is responsible for the degradation of mislocalized MEC-2 multimers. Ubiquitylomic analysis of mouse glomeruli revealed that podocin is ubiquitylated at two lysine residues. These sites were Ubr4-dependent and were conserved across species. Molecular dynamics simulations revealed that ubiquitylation of one site, K301, does not only target podocin/MEC-2 for proteasomal degradation but may also affect stability and disassembly of the multimeric complex. We suggest that Ubr4 is a key regulator of podocyte foot process proteostasis.