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Cleavage of the pseudoprotease iRhom2 by the signal peptidase complex reveals an ER-to-nucleus signaling pathway

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posted on 2024-01-19, 11:05 authored by Iqbal Dulloo, Michael Tellier, Clémence Levet, Anissa Chikh, Boyan Zhang, Diana C Blaydon, Catherine M Webb, David P Kelsell, Matthew Freeman

iRhoms are pseudoprotease members of the rhomboid-like superfamily and are cardinal regulators of inflammatory and growth factor signaling; they function primarily by recognizing transmembrane domains of their clients. Here, we report a mechanistically distinct nuclear function of iRhoms, showing that both human and mouse iRhom2 are non-canonical substrates of signal peptidase complex (SPC), the protease that removes signal peptides from secreted proteins. Cleavage of iRhom2 generates an N-terminal fragment that enters the nucleus and modifies the transcriptome, in part by binding C-terminal binding proteins (CtBPs). The biological significance of nuclear iRhom2 is indicated by elevated levels in skin biopsies of patients with psoriasis, tylosis with oesophageal cancer (TOC), and non-epidermolytic palmoplantar keratoderma (NEPPK); increased iRhom2 cleavage in a keratinocyte model of psoriasis; and nuclear iRhom2 promoting proliferation of keratinocytes. Overall, this work identifies an unexpected SPC-dependent ER-to-nucleus signaling pathway and demonstrates that iRhoms can mediate nuclear signaling.

Funding

The control of signalling by members of the rhomboid-like superfamily.

Wellcome Trust

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Rhomboid-like proteins: from molecular principles to pathophysiological significance

Wellcome Trust

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Medical Research Council (MR/L010402/1)

iRhom2 and the keratinocyte stress response in health and disease

Medical Research Council

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Cancer Research UK (C7570/A19107)

2016 CHANEL-CERIES research award

SBF006\1181

Academy of Medical Sciences (SBF006\1181)

History

Author affiliation

Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Molecular Cell

Volume

84

Issue

2

Pagination

277-292.e9

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

1097-2765

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-01-19

Language

en

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