PINK1 is degraded through the N-end rule pathway
National Institutes of Health · National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Abstract
PINK1, a mitochondrial serine/threonine kinase, is the product of a gene mutated in an autosomal recessive form of Parkinson disease. PINK1 is constitutively degraded by an unknown mechanism and stabilized selectively on damaged mitochondria where it can recruit the E3 ligase PARK2/PARKIN to induce mitophagy. Here, we show that, under steady-state conditions, endogenous PINK1 is constitutively and rapidly degraded by E3 ubiquitin ligases UBR1, UBR2 and UBR4 through the N-end rule pathway. Following precursor import into mitochondria, PINK1 is cleaved in the transmembrane segment by a mitochondrial intramembrane protease PARL generating an N-terminal destabilizing amino acid and then retrotranslocates from…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.03
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- PINK1
- Parkin
- Biology
- Ubiquitin ligase
- Mitochondrion
- Cell biology
- Mitophagy
- Ubiquitin