Targeted protein relocalization via protein transport coupling
Christine S. C. Ng,
Aofei Liu,
Bianxiao Cui and
Steven M. Banik ()
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Christine S. C. Ng: Stanford University
Aofei Liu: Stanford University
Bianxiao Cui: Stanford University
Steven M. Banik: Stanford University
Nature, 2024, vol. 633, issue 8031, 941-951
Abstract:
Abstract Subcellular protein localization regulates protein function and can be corrupted in cancers1 and neurodegenerative diseases2,3. The rewiring of localization to address disease-driving phenotypes would be an attractive targeted therapeutic approach. Molecules that harness the trafficking of a shuttle protein to control the subcellular localization of a target protein could enforce targeted protein relocalization and rewire the interactome. Here we identify a collection of shuttle proteins with potent ligands amenable to incorporation into targeted relocalization-activating molecules (TRAMs), and use these to relocalize endogenous proteins. Using a custom imaging analysis pipeline, we show that protein steady-state localization can be modulated through molecular coupling to shuttle proteins containing sufficiently strong localization sequences and expressed in the necessary abundance. We analyse the TRAM-induced relocalization of different proteins and then use nuclear hormone receptors as shuttles to redistribute disease-driving mutant proteins such as SMARCB1Q318X, TDP43ΔNLS and FUSR495X. TRAM-mediated relocalization of FUSR495X to the nucleus from the cytoplasm correlated with a reduction in the number of stress granules in a model of cellular stress. With methionyl aminopeptidase 2 and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 as endogenous cytoplasmic and nuclear shuttles, respectively, we demonstrate relocalization of endogenous PRMT9, SOS1 and FKBP12. Small-molecule-mediated redistribution of nicotinamide nucleotide adenylyltransferase 1 from nuclei to axons in primary neurons was able to slow axonal degeneration and pharmacologically mimic the genetic WldS gain-of-function phenotype in mice resistant to certain types of neurodegeneration4. The concept of targeted protein relocalization could therefore inspire approaches for treating disease through interactome rewiring.
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:nature:v:633:y:2024:i:8031:d:10.1038_s41586-024-07950-8
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07950-8
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