Abstract
Proper brain development and function requires finely controlled mechanisms for protein turnover, and disruption of genes involved in proteostasis is a common cause of neurodevelopmental disorders. Kelch-like 15 (KLHL15) is a substrate adaptor for cullin3-containing E3 ubiquitin ligases, and KLHL15 gene mutations were recently described as a cause of severe X-linked intellectual disability. Here, we used a bioinformatics approach to identify a family of neuronal microtubule-associated proteins as KLHL15 substrates, which are themselves critical for early brain development. We biochemically validated doublecortin (DCX), also an X-linked disease protein, and doublecortin-like kinase 1 and 2 as bona fide KLHL15 interactors and mapped KLHL15 interaction regions to their tandem DCX domains. Shared with two previously identified KLHL15 substrates, a FRY tripeptide at the C-terminal edge of the second DCX domain is necessary for KLHL15-mediated ubiquitination of DCX and doublecortin-like kinase 1 and 2 and subsequent proteasomal degradation. Conversely, silencing endogenous KLHL15 markedly stabilizes these DCX domain-containing proteins and prolongs their half-life. Functionally, overexpression of KLHL15 in the presence of WT DCX reduces dendritic complexity of cultured hippocampal neurons, whereas neurons expressing FRY-mutant DCX are resistant to KLHL15. Collectively, our findings highlight the critical importance of the E3 ubiquitin ligase adaptor KLHL15 in proteostasis of neuronal microtubule-associated proteins and identify a regulatory network important for development of the mammalian nervous system.
Highlights
Proper brain development and function requires finely controlled mechanisms for protein turnover, and disruption of genes involved in proteostasis is a common cause of neurodevelopmental disorders
Two Kelch-like 15 (KLHL15) substrates have been identified to date, the neuron-enriched phosphatase 2A (PP2A) regulatory subunit B’β [15] and CtIP/ RBBP8, a widely expressed endonuclease involved in DNA repair by homologous recombination [23]
To determine whether KLHL15 possesses functions in neurons independent of PP2A/B’β, we investigated the effect of KLHL15 on activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERKs, Fig. 1A)
Summary
Proper brain development and function requires finely controlled mechanisms for protein turnover, and disruption of genes involved in proteostasis is a common cause of neurodevelopmental disorders. To uncover additional neuronal KLHL15 substrates, we searched the human UniProt database for proteins that contain the FRY sequence, which is necessary for the interaction of KLHL15 with its two previously identified targets, PP2A/B’β [15] and the DNA endonuclease CtIP/RBBP8 [23].
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