Litcius/Paper detail

A conserved cysteine‐based redox mechanism sustains TFEB/HLH‐30 activity under persistent stress

José A. Martina, David Guerrero‐Gómez, Eva Gómez‐Orte, José Antonio Bárcena, Juan Cabello, Antonio Miranda‐Vizuete, Rosa Puertollano

2020The EMBO Journal39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mammalian TFEB and TFE3, as well as their ortholog in Caenorhabditis elegans HLH-30, play an important role in mediating cellular response to a variety of stress conditions, including nutrient deprivation, oxidative stress, and pathogen infection. In this study, we identify a novel mechanism of TFEB/HLH-30 regulation through a cysteine-mediated redox switch. Under stress conditions, TFEB-C212 undergoes oxidation, allowing the formation of intermolecular disulfide bonds that result in TFEB oligomerization. TFEB oligomers display increased resistance to mTORC1-mediated inactivation and are more stable under prolonged stress conditions. Mutation of the only cysteine residue present in HLH-30 (C284) significantly reduced its activity, resulting in developmental defects and increased pathogen susceptibility in worms. Therefore, cysteine oxidation represents a new type of TFEB post-translational modification that functions as a molecular switch to link changes in redox balance with expression of TFEB/HLH-30 target genes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMechanism (biology)CysteineOxidative stressConserved sequenceGeneticsRedoxBiochemistryCell biologyGenePeptide sequenceEnzymePhilosophyMaterials scienceEpistemologyMetallurgyAdenosine and Purinergic SignalingAdvanced Glycation End Products researchNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms