
CaMKII Mediates Recruitment and Activation of the Deubiquitinase CYLD at the Postsynaptic Density
Author(s) -
Soe Thein,
Jung-Hwa Tao-Cheng,
Yan Li,
K. Ulrich Bayer,
Thomas S. Reese,
Ayṡe Döṡemeci
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0091312
Subject(s) - deubiquitinating enzyme , microbiology and biotechnology , phosphorylation , postsynaptic potential , ubiquitin , postsynaptic density , chemistry , immunoelectron microscopy , biochemistry , biology , receptor , antibody , gene , immunology
NMDA treatment of cultured hippocampal neurons causes recruitment of CYLD, as well as CaMKII, to the postsynaptic density (PSD), as shown by immunoelectron microscopy. Recruitment of CYLD, a deubiquitinase specific for K63-linked polyubiquitins, is blocked by pre-treatment with tatCN21, a CaMKII inhibitor, at a concentration that inhibits the translocation of CaMKII to the PSD. Furthermore, CaMKII co-immunoprecipitates with CYLD from solubilized PSD fractions, indicating an association between the proteins. Purified CaMKII phosphorylates CYLD on at least three residues (S-362, S-418, and S-772 on the human CYLD protein Q9NQC7-1) and promotes its deubiquitinase activity. Activation of CaMKII in isolated PSDs promotes phosphorylation of CYLD on the same residues and also enhances endogenous deubiquitinase activity specific for K63-linked polyubiquitins. Since K63-linked polyubiquitin conjugation to proteins inhibits their interaction with proteasomes, CaMKII-mediated recruitment and upregulation of CYLD is expected to remove K63-linked polyubiquitins and facilitate proteasomal degradation at the PSD.