Published January 11, 2024 | Version v1
Publication

Nucleus-translocated mitochondrial cytochrome c liberates nucleophosmin-sequestered ARF tumor suppressor by changing nucleolar liquid-liquid phase separation.

Description

The regular functioning of the nucleolus and nucleus-mitochondria crosstalk are considered unrelated processes, yet cytochrome c (Cc) migrates to the nucleus and even the nucleolus under stress conditions. Nucleolar liquid–liquid phase separation usually serves the cell as a fast, smart mechanism to control the spatial localization and trafcking of nuclear proteins. Actually, the alternative reading frame (ARF), a tumor suppressor protein sequestered by nucleophosmin (NPM) in the nucleoli, is shifted out from NPM upon DNA damage. DNA damage also triggers early translocation of respiratory Cc to nucleus before cytoplasmic caspase activation. Here, we show that Cc can bind to nucleolar NPM by triggering an extended-to-compact conformational change, driving ARF release. Such a NPM–Cc nucleolar interaction can be extended to a general mechanism for DNA damage in which the lysine-rich regions of Cc—rather than the canonical, arginine-rich stretches of membrane-less organelle components—controls the trafcking and availability of nucleolar proteins.

Abstract

Gobierno español - PID2021-126663NB-I00, PGC2018-096049-B-I00/FEDER, BIO2015-70092-R, BFU2015-71017/BMC, BFU2016-75984/BMC, PID2019-105872GB y BFU2017-90030-P

Abstract

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación y Agencia Estatal de Investigación, de España, Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) y Junta de Andalucía. - BIO-198; US-1254317, US-1257019, P18- FR-3487 y P18-HO-4091, US/JUNTA/FEDER, UE

Additional details

Created:
January 13, 2024
Modified:
January 13, 2024