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ROS-mediated DJ-1 monomerization modulates intracellular trafficking involving Karyopherin-2

Version 2 2024-03-12, 18:13
Version 1 2023-10-19, 15:54
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 18:13 authored by Benny Bjørkblom, Jodi Maple-Grødem, Marc Rhyan Puno, Mark OdellMark Odell, Jan Petter Larsen, Simon Geir-Moller
<p>Mutations in DJ-1 are a cause of recessive, early-onset Parkinson's disease (PD). Although oxidative stress and mitochondrial integrity have been implicated in PD, it is largely unknown why neurons degenerate. DJ-1 is involved in oxidative stress-mediated responses and in mitochondrial maintenance; however, its specific function remains vague. Here we show that DJ-1 exhibits neuronal dynamic intracellular trafficking, with dimeric/monomeric cycling modulated by the oxidative environment. We demonstrate that oxidative stress enhances monomerization of wild-type cytosolic DJ-1, leading to nuclear recruitment. The pathogenic DJ-1/E163K variant is unable to homodimerize but is retained in the cytosol upon wild-type DJ-1 heterodimerization. We found that this wild-type/pathogenic heterodimer is disrupted by oxidative stress, leading to DJ-1/E163K mitochondrial translocation. We further demonstrated that endogenously expressed wild-type DJ-1 is imported into neuronal nuclei as a monomer and that nucleo-cytoplasmic transport is oxidative stress mediated. We identified a novel proline-tyrosine nuclear localization signal (PY-NLS) in DJ-1, and we found that nuclear monomeric DJ-1 import is mediated by an oxidative stress-dependent interaction with karyopherin ?2. Our study provides evidence that oxidative stress-mediated intracellular trafficking of DJ-1, mediated by dynamic DJ-1 dimeric/monomeric cycling, is implicated in PD pathogenesis.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Molecular and Cellular Biology

Volume

34

Issue

16

Pages/Article Number

3024-3040

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

ISSN

0270-7306

eISSN

1098-5549

Date Submitted

2019-12-02

Date Accepted

2014-06-01

Date of First Publication

2014-06-09

Date of Final Publication

2014-06-09

ePrints ID

39024

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