Drosophila Nedd4 regulates
endocytosis of Notch and suppresses its ligand-independent activation
Sakata T, Sakaguchi H, Tsuda L, Higashitani A, Aigaki T, Matsuno K and
Hayashi S
Curr Biol 14(24):2228-36 (2004)
SUMMARY
Background: Ligand-induced proteolytic cleavage and internalization of
the plasma membrane receptor Notch leads to its activation. Ligand-independent,
steady-state internalization of Notch, however, does not lead to activation.
The mechanism by which downstream effectors discriminate between these
bipartite modes of Notch internalization is not understood. Nedd4 is a
HECT domain-containing E3 ubiquitin ligase that targets transmembrane
receptors containing the PPSY motif for endocytosis. Deltex is a positive
Notch signaling regulator that encodes a putative ubiquitin ligase of
the ring finger type. Results: We used the Drosophila system to show that
Notch is ubiquitinated and destabilized by Nedd4 in a manner requiring
the PPSY motif in the Notch intracellular domain. Loss of Nedd4 function
dominantly suppresses the Notch and Deltex mutant phenotypes, and its
hyperactivation attenuates Notch activity. In tissue culture cells, the
dominant-negative form of Nedd4 blocks steady-state Notch internalization
and activates Notch signaling independently of ligand binding. This effect
was further potentiated by Deltex. Nedd4 destines Deltex for degradation
in a Notch-dependent manner. Conclusions: Nedd4 antagonizes Notch signaling
by promoting degradation of Notch and Deltex. This Nedd4 function may
be important for protecting unstimulated cells from sporadic activation
of Notch signaling.
LINK
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=15620649