Advanced Science (Sep 2024)

Furin Egress from the TGN is Regulated by Membrane‐Associated RING‐CH Finger (MARCHF) Proteins and Ubiquitin‐Specific Protease 32 (USP32) via Nondegradable K33‐Polyubiquitination

  • Wenqiang Su,
  • Iqbal Ahmad,
  • You Wu,
  • Lijie Tang,
  • Ilyas Khan,
  • Bowei Ye,
  • Jie Liang,
  • Sunan Li,
  • Yong‐Hui Zheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202403732
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 35
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Furin primarily localizes to the trans‐Golgi network (TGN), where it cleaves and activates a broad range of immature proproteins that play critical roles in cellular homeostasis, disease progression, and infection. Furin is retrieved from endosomes to the TGN after being phosphorylated, but it is still unclear how furin exits the TGN to initiate the post‐Golgi trafficking and how its activity is regulated in the TGN. Here three membrane‐associated RING‐CH finger (MARCHF) proteins (2, 8, 9) are identified as furin E3 ubiquitin ligases, which catalyze furin K33‐polyubiquitination. Polyubiquitination prevents furin from maturation by blocking its ectodomain cleavage inside cells but promotes its egress from the TGN and shedding. Further ubiquitin‐specific protease 32 (USP32) is identified as the furin deubiquitinase in the TGN that counteracts the MARCHF inhibitory activity on furin. Thus, the furin post‐Golgi trafficking is regulated by an interplay between polyubiquitination and phosphorylation. Polyubiquitination is required for furin anterograde transport but inhibits its proprotein convertase activity, and phosphorylation is required for furin retrograde transport to produce fully active furin inside cells.

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