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LRRK2-phosphorylated Rab10 sequesters Myosin Va with RILPL2 during ciliogenesis blockade

Herschel S. Dhekne, Izumi Yanatori, Edmundo G. Vides, Yuriko Sobu, Federico Diez, Francesca Tonelli, Suzanne R. Pfeffer

2021Life Science Alliance54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Activating mutations in LRRK2 kinase causes Parkinson's disease. Pathogenic LRRK2 phosphorylates a subset of Rab GTPases and blocks ciliogenesis. Thus, defining novel phospho-Rab interacting partners is critical to our understanding of the molecular basis of LRRK2 pathogenesis. RILPL2 binds with strong preference to LRRK2-phosphorylated Rab8A and Rab10. RILPL2 is a binding partner of the motor protein and Rab effector, Myosin Va. We show here that the globular tail domain of Myosin Va also contains a high affinity binding site for LRRK2-phosphorylated Rab10. In the presence of pathogenic LRRK2, RILPL2 and MyoVa relocalize to the peri-centriolar region in a phosphoRab10-dependent manner. PhosphoRab10 retains Myosin Va over pericentriolar membranes as determined by fluorescence loss in photobleaching microscopy. Without pathogenic LRRK2, RILPL2 is not essential for ciliogenesis but RILPL2 over-expression blocks ciliogenesis in RPE cells independent of tau tubulin kinase recruitment to the mother centriole. These experiments show that LRRK2 generated-phosphoRab10 dramatically redistributes a significant fraction of Myosin Va and RILPL2 to the mother centriole in a manner that likely interferes with Myosin Va's role in ciliogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

CiliogenesisBlockadePhosphorylationCell biologyChemistryBiologyBiochemistryCiliumReceptorGenetic and Kidney Cyst DiseasesCellular transport and secretionMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics
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