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Heteromeric clusters of ubiquitinated ER-shaping proteins drive ER-phagy.

Hector ForondaYangxue FuAdriana Covarrubias-PintoHartmut T BockerAlexis GonzálezEric SeemannPatricia FranzkaAndrea BockRamachandra M BhaskaraLutz LiebmannMarina E HoffmannIstvan KatonaNicole KochJoachim WeisIngo KurthJoseph G GleesonFulvio M ReggioriGerhard HummerMichael Manfred KesselsBritta QualmannMuriel C MariIvan ĐikićChristian A Hübner
Published in: Nature (2023)
Membrane-shaping proteins characterized by reticulon homology domains play an important part in the dynamic remodelling of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). An example of such a protein is FAM134B, which can bind LC3 proteins and mediate the degradation of ER sheets through selective autophagy (ER-phagy) 1 . Mutations in FAM134B result in a neurodegenerative disorder in humans that mainly affects sensory and autonomic neurons 2 . Here we report that ARL6IP1, another ER-shaping protein that contains a reticulon homology domain and is associated with sensory loss 3 , interacts with FAM134B and participates in the formation of heteromeric multi-protein clusters required for ER-phagy. Moreover, ubiquitination of ARL6IP1 promotes this process. Accordingly, disruption of Arl6ip1 in mice causes an expansion of ER sheets in sensory neurons that degenerate over time. Primary cells obtained from Arl6ip1-deficient mice or from patients display incomplete budding of ER membranes and severe impairment of ER-phagy flux. Therefore, we propose that the clustering of ubiquitinated ER-shaping proteins facilitates the dynamic remodelling of the ER during ER-phagy and is important for neuronal maintenance.
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