SUMOylation-mediated PSME3-20 S proteasomal degradation of transcription factor CP2c is crucial for cell cycle progression

Author:

Son Seung Han1ORCID,Kim Min Young1ORCID,Lim Young Su1ORCID,Jin Hyeon Cheol1ORCID,Shin June Ho1ORCID,Yi Jae Kyu1,Choi Sungwoo1ORCID,Park Mi Ae1ORCID,Chae Ji Hyung1,Kang Ho Chul1ORCID,Lee Young Jin1ORCID,Uversky Vladimir N.2ORCID,Kim Chul Geun13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Science and Research Institute for Natural Sciences, College of Natural Sciences, Hanyang University, Seoul 04763, Korea.

2. Department of Molecular Medicine and USF Health Byrd Alzheimer’s Research Institute, Morsani College of Medicine, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL 33612, USA.

3. CGK Biopharma Co. Ltd., Seoul 04763, Korea.

Abstract

Transcription factor CP2c (also known as TFCP2, α-CP2, LSF, and LBP-1c) is involved in diverse ubiquitous and tissue/stage-specific cellular processes and in human malignancies such as cancer. Despite its importance, many fundamental regulatory mechanisms of CP2c are still unclear. Here, we uncover an unprecedented mechanism of CP2c degradation via a previously unidentified SUMO1/PSME3/20 S proteasome pathway and its biological meaning. CP2c is SUMOylated in a SUMO1-dependent way, and SUMOylated CP2c is degraded through the ubiquitin-independent PSME3 (also known as REGγ or PA28)/20 S proteasome system. SUMOylated PSME3 could also interact with CP2c to degrade CP2c via the 20 S proteasomal pathway. Moreover, precisely timed degradation of CP2c via the SUMO1/PSME3/20 S proteasome axis is required for accurate progression of the cell cycle. Therefore, we reveal a unique SUMO1-mediated uncanonical 20 S proteasome degradation mechanism via the SUMO1/PSME3 axis involving mutual SUMO-SIM interaction of CP2c and PSME3, providing previously unidentified mechanistic insights into the roles of dynamic degradation of CP2c in cell cycle progression.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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