TMEM127 suppresses tumor development by promoting RET ubiquitination, positioning, and degradation.

Qianjin Guo,Zi-Ming Cheng,Hector Gonzalez-Cantú, Matthew Rotondi, Gabriela Huelgas-Morales,Purushoth Ethiraj,Zhijun Qiu, Jonathan Lefkowitz, Wan Song,Bethany N Landry, Hector Lopez,Cynthia M Estrada-Zuniga, Shivi Goyal, Mohammad Aasif Khan,Timothy J Walker,Exing Wang, Faqian Li,Yanli Ding,Lois M Mulligan,Ricardo C T Aguiar,Patricia L M Dahia

Cell reports(2023)

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摘要
The TMEM127 gene encodes a transmembrane protein of poorly known function that is mutated in pheochromocytomas, neural crest-derived tumors of adrenomedullary cells. Here, we report that, at single-nucleus resolution, TMEM127-mutant tumors share precursor cells and transcription regulatory elements with pheochromocytomas carrying mutations of the tyrosine kinase receptor RET. Additionally, TMEM127-mutant pheochromocytomas, human cells, and mouse knockout models of TMEM127 accumulate RET and increase its signaling. TMEM127 contributes to RET cellular positioning, trafficking, and lysosome-mediated degradation. Mechanistically, TMEM127 binds to RET and recruits the NEDD4 E3 ubiquitin ligase for RET ubiquitination and degradation via TMEM127 C-terminal PxxY motifs. Lastly, increased cell proliferation and tumor burden after TMEM127 loss can be reversed by selective RET inhibitors in vitro and in vivo. Our results define TMEM127 as a component of the ubiquitin system and identify aberrant RET stabilization as a likely mechanism through which TMEM127 loss-of-function mutations cause pheochromocytoma.
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