The PINK1, synphilin-1 and SIAH-1 complex constitutes a novel mitophagy pathway.

Hum Mol Genet

Department of Biochemistry, The B. Rappaport Faculty of Medicine and Institute of Medical Research, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 31096, Israel

Published: August 2016

PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1) and parkin are mutated in familial forms of Parkinson's disease and are important in promoting the mitophagy of damaged mitochondria. In this study, we showed that synphilin-1 interacted with PINK1 and was recruited to the mitochondria. Once in the mitochondria, it promoted PINK1-dependent mitophagy, as revealed by Atg5 knockdown experiments and the recruitment of LC3 and Lamp1 to the mitochondria. PINK1-synphilin-1 mitophagy did not depend on PINK1-mediated phosphorylation of synphilin-1 and occurred in the absence of parkin. Synphilin-1 itself caused depolarization of the mitochondria and increased the amount of uncleaved PINK1 at the organelle. Furthermore, synphilin-1 recruited seven in absentia homolog (SIAH)-1 to the mitochondria where it promoted mitochondrial protein ubiquitination and subsequent mitophagy. Mitophagy via this pathway was impaired by synphilin-1 knockdown or by the use of a synphilin-1 mutant that is unable to recruit SIAH-1 to the mitochondria. Likewise, knockdown of SIAH-1 or the use of a catalytically inactive SIAH-1 mutant abrogated mitophagy. PINK1 disease mutants failed to recruit synphilin-1 and did not activate mitophagy, indicating that PINK1-synphilin-1-SIAH-1 represents a new parkin-independent mitophagy pathway. Drugs that activate this pathway will provide a novel strategy to promote the clearance of damaged mitochondria in Parkinson's disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddw189DOI Listing

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