Abstract
NR4A is a nuclear receptor protein family whose members act as sensors of cellular environment and regulate multiple processes such as metabolism, proliferation, migration, apoptosis, and autophagy. Since the ligand binding domains of these receptors have no cavity for ligand interaction, their function is most likely regulated by protein abundance and post-translational modifications. In particular, NR4A1 is regulated by protein abundance, phosphorylation, and subcellular distribution (nuclear-cytoplasmic translocation), and acts both as a transcription factor and as a regulator of other interacting proteins. SUMOylation is a post-translational modification that can affect protein stability, transcriptional activity, alter protein-protein interactions and modify intracellular localization of target proteins. In the present study we evaluated the role of SUMOylation as a posttranslational modification that can regulate the activity of NR4A1 to induce autophagy-dependent cell death. We focused on a model potentially relevant for neuronal cell death and demonstrated that NR4A1 needs to be SUMOylated to induce autophagic cell death. We observed that a triple mutant in SUMOylation sites has reduced SUMOylation, increased transcriptional activity, altered intracellular distribution, and more importantly, its ability to induce autophagic cell death is impaired.
Summary Statement The modification of the nuclear receptor NR4A1 by SUMO regulates its transcriptional activity, intracellular localization and is required to induce autophagic cell death.
Abbreviations list
- NR4A
- Nuclear receptor group family A
- NR4A1
- Nuclear receptor group 4 family A member 1 (Nur77, NGF1B, TR3, etc.)
- NR4A2
- Nuclear receptor group 4 family A member 2 (Nurr1, NOT1, etc)
- NR4A3
- Nuclear receptor group 4 family A member 3 (Nor1, MINOR)
- SUMO
- small ubiquitin-like modifier
- SP
- Substance P
- NK1R
- Neurokinin 1 Receptor
- TAD
- Trans-Activation Domain
- DBD
- DNA Binding Domain
- LBD
- Ligand Binding Domain
- PTM
- Post Translational Modifications