P4HB UFMylation regulates mitochondrial function and oxidative stress
Jing Zhu, Xirui Ma, Yu Jing, Guangya Zhang, Dandan Zhang, Ziming Mao, Xiaowen Ma, Huifang Liu, Fengling Chen
Journal:FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
IF:8.1
DOI:10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2022.06.237
PMID:35753586
Published:2022-06-23
research field:肿瘤学分子影像学核医学靶向药物递送放射治疗
Abstract
UFMylation is a ubiquitin-like modification which attaches the ubiquitin-fold modifier 1 to target proteins. To date, only a few UFMylation targets have been identified. In the current study, we demonstrated that P4HB is a new target protein for UFMylation and it can be UFMylated at three lysine residues in the form of mono-UFMylation. P4HB has oxidoreductase, chaperone and isomerase effects. It presents in the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria and cytosol. Next, we generated a stable HepG2 cell line, the hepatocellular cells, with defective P4HB UFMylation. Our data show that P4HB UFMylation defect promotes P4HB protein degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. Defective P4HB UFMylation causes mitochondrial function damage, oxidative stress, and endoplasmic reticulum stress in HepG2 cells. These effects are more obvious when treating HepG2 cells with palmitic acid, which is frequently used as one of the cell models of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Our results identify UFMylation as a key post-translational modification for the maintenance of P4HB stability and biological functions in HepG2 cells, and point to P4HB UFMylation as a potential direction in the study of NAFLD.
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