A ubiquitin-based effector-to-inhibitor switch coordinates early brain, craniofacial, and skin development

Author:

Asmar Anthony J.ORCID,Abrams Shaun R.ORCID,Hsin JennyORCID,Collins Jason C.ORCID,Yazejian Rita M.ORCID,Wu Youmei,Cho JeanORCID,Doyle Andrew D.,Cinthala Samhitha,Simon Marleen,van Jaarsveld Richard H.ORCID,Beck David B.ORCID,Kerosuo LauraORCID,Werner AchimORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe molecular mechanisms that coordinate patterning of the embryonic ectoderm into spatially distinct lineages to form the nervous system, epidermis, and neural crest-derived craniofacial structures are unclear. Here, biochemical disease-variant profiling reveals a posttranslational pathway that drives early ectodermal differentiation in the vertebrate head. The anteriorly expressed ubiquitin ligase CRL3-KLHL4 restricts signaling of the ubiquitous cytoskeletal regulator CDC42. This regulation relies on the CDC42-activating complex GIT1-βPIX, which CRL3-KLHL4 exploits as a substrate-specific co-adaptor to recognize and monoubiquitylate PAK1. Surprisingly, we find that ubiquitylation converts the canonical CDC42 effector PAK1 into a CDC42 inhibitor. Loss of CRL3-KLHL4 or a disease-associated KLHL4 variant reduce PAK1 ubiquitylation causing overactivation of CDC42 signaling and defective ectodermal patterning and neurulation. Thus, tissue-specific restriction of CDC42 signaling by a ubiquitin-based effector-to-inhibitor is essential for early face, brain, and skin formation, revealing how cell-fate and morphometric changes are coordinated to ensure faithful organ development.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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