TY - JOUR
T1 - USP42 drives nuclear speckle mRNA splicing via directing dynamic phase separation to promote tumorigenesis
AU - Liu, Shuyan
AU - Wang, Taishu
AU - Shi, Yulin
AU - Bai, Lu
AU - Wang, Shanshan
AU - Guo, Dong
AU - Zhang, Yang
AU - Qi, Yangfan
AU - Chen, Chaoqun
AU - Zhang, Jinrui
AU - Zhang, Yingqiu
AU - Liu, Quentin
AU - Yang, Qingkai
AU - Wang, Yang
AU - Liu, Han
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/8
Y1 - 2021/8
N2 - Liquid–liquid phase separation is considered a generic approach to organize membrane-less compartments, enabling the dynamic regulation of phase-separated assemblies to be investigated and pivotal roles of protein posttranslational modifications to be demonstrated. By surveying the subcellular localizations of human deubiquitylases, USP42 was identified to form nuclear punctate structures that are associated with phase separation properties. Bioinformatic analysis demonstrated that the USP42 C-terminal sequence was intrinsically disordered, which was further experimentally confirmed to confer phase separation features. USP42 is distributed to SC35-positive nuclear speckles in a positively charged C-terminal residue- and enzymatic activity-dependent manner. Notably, USP42 directs the integration of the spliceosome component PLRG1 into nuclear speckles, and its depletion interferes with the conformation of SC35 foci. Functionally, USP42 downregulation deregulates multiple mRNA splicing events and leads to deterred cancer cell growth, which is consistent with the impact of PLRG1 repression. Finally, USP42 expression is strongly correlated with that of PLRG1 in non-small-cell lung cancer samples and predicts adverse prognosis in overall survival. As a deubiquitylase capable of dynamically guiding nuclear speckle phase separation and mRNA splicing, USP42 inhibition presents a novel anticancer strategy by targeting phase separation.
AB - Liquid–liquid phase separation is considered a generic approach to organize membrane-less compartments, enabling the dynamic regulation of phase-separated assemblies to be investigated and pivotal roles of protein posttranslational modifications to be demonstrated. By surveying the subcellular localizations of human deubiquitylases, USP42 was identified to form nuclear punctate structures that are associated with phase separation properties. Bioinformatic analysis demonstrated that the USP42 C-terminal sequence was intrinsically disordered, which was further experimentally confirmed to confer phase separation features. USP42 is distributed to SC35-positive nuclear speckles in a positively charged C-terminal residue- and enzymatic activity-dependent manner. Notably, USP42 directs the integration of the spliceosome component PLRG1 into nuclear speckles, and its depletion interferes with the conformation of SC35 foci. Functionally, USP42 downregulation deregulates multiple mRNA splicing events and leads to deterred cancer cell growth, which is consistent with the impact of PLRG1 repression. Finally, USP42 expression is strongly correlated with that of PLRG1 in non-small-cell lung cancer samples and predicts adverse prognosis in overall survival. As a deubiquitylase capable of dynamically guiding nuclear speckle phase separation and mRNA splicing, USP42 inhibition presents a novel anticancer strategy by targeting phase separation.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85103070144&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41418-021-00763-6
DO - 10.1038/s41418-021-00763-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 33731873
AN - SCOPUS:85103070144
SN - 1350-9047
VL - 28
SP - 2482
EP - 2498
JO - Cell Death and Differentiation
JF - Cell Death and Differentiation
IS - 8
ER -