Citation

  • Authors: Tamiya, H., Kim, H., Klymenko, O., Feng, Y., Zhang, T., Han, J. Y., Murao, A., Snipas, S. J., Jilaveanu, L., Brown, K., Kluger, H., Zhang, H., Iwai, K., Ronai, Z. A.
  • Year: 2018
  • Journal: J Clin Invest 128 517-530
  • Applications: in vitro / DNA, siRNA / jetPRIME
  • Cell types:
    1. Name: HEK-293T
      Description: Human embryonic kidney Fibroblast
      Known as: HEK293T, 293T
    2. Name: WM35
      Description: Human skin melanoma
    3. Name: WM793
      Description: Human melanoma cell line

Abstract

SHARPIN, an adaptor for the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC), plays important roles in NF-kappaB signaling and inflammation. Here, we have demonstrated a LUBAC-independent role for SHARPIN in regulating melanoma growth. We observed that SHARPIN interacted with PRMT5, a type II protein arginine methyltransferase, and increased its multiprotein complex and methyltransferase activity. Activated PRMT5 controlled the expression of the transcription factors SOX10 and MITF by SHARPIN-dependent arginine dimethylation and inhibition of the transcriptional corepressor SKI. Activation of PRMT5 by SHARPIN counteracted PRMT5 inhibition by methylthioadenosine, a substrate of methylthioadenosine phosphorylase, which is codeleted with cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2A (CDKN2A) in approximately 15% of human cancers. Collectively, we identified a LUBAC-independent role for SHARPIN in enhancing PRMT5 activity that contributes to melanomagenesis through the SKI/SOX10 regulatory axis.

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