Cell Reports
Volume 17, Issue 4, 18 October 2016, Pages 1071-1086
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Article
Endophilin-A Deficiency Induces the Foxo3a-Fbxo32 Network in the Brain and Causes Dysregulation of Autophagy and the Ubiquitin-Proteasome System

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.09.058Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Endophilin-A is needed for autophagosome formation in mammalian neurons and brain

  • Absence of endophilin-A upregulates the E3-ubiquitin ligase FBXO32

  • FBXO32-endophilin-A interaction maintains neuronal health and protein homeostasis

  • Endophilin-A KO mice show age-dependent ataxia, motor impairments, and neurodegeneration

Summary

Endophilin-A, a well-characterized endocytic adaptor essential for synaptic vesicle recycling, has recently been linked to neurodegeneration. We report here that endophilin-A deficiency results in impaired movement, age-dependent ataxia, and neurodegeneration in mice. Transcriptional analysis of endophilin-A mutant mice, complemented by proteomics, highlighted ataxia- and protein-homeostasis-related genes and revealed upregulation of the E3-ubiquitin ligase FBXO32/atrogin-1 and its transcription factor FOXO3A. FBXO32 overexpression triggers apoptosis in cultured cells and neurons but, remarkably, coexpression of endophilin-A rescues it. FBXO32 interacts with all three endophilin-A proteins. Similarly to endophilin-A, FBXO32 tubulates membranes and localizes on clathrin-coated structures. Additionally, FBXO32 and endophilin-A are necessary for autophagosome formation, and both colocalize transiently with autophagosomes. Our results point to a role for endophilin-A proteins in autophagy and protein degradation, processes that are impaired in their absence, potentially contributing to neurodegeneration and ataxia.

Keywords

endophilin
FBXO32
endocytosis
autophagy
ubiquitin-proteasome system
neurodegeneration
ataxia
Parkinson’s disease
next-generation sequencing
protein homeostasis

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