Nature Communications (Jan 2025)

Pupylation-based proximity labeling reveals regulatory factors in cellulose biosynthesis in Arabidopsis

  • Shuai Zheng,
  • Lise C. Noack,
  • Ouda Khammy,
  • Andreas De Meyer,
  • Ghazanfar Abbas Khan,
  • Nancy De Winne,
  • Dominique Eeckhout,
  • Daniël Van Damme,
  • Staffan Persson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56192-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Knowledge about how and where proteins interact provides a pillar for cell biology. Protein proximity-labeling has emerged as an important tool to detect protein interactions. Biotin-related proximity labeling approaches are by far the most commonly used but may have labeling-related drawbacks. Here, we use pupylation-based proximity labeling (PUP-IT) as a tool for protein interaction detection in plants. We show that PUP-IT readily confirmed protein interactions for several known protein complexes across different types of plant hosts and that the approach increased detection of specific interactions as compared to biotin-based proximity labeling systems. To further demonstrate the power of PUP-IT, we used the system to identify protein interactions of the protein complex that underpin cellulose synthesis in plants. Apart from known complex components, we identified the ARF-GEF BEN1 (BFA-VISUALIZED ENDOCYTIC TRAFFICKING DEFECTIVE1). We show that BEN1 contributes to cellulose synthesis by regulating both clathrin-dependent and -independent endocytosis of the cellulose synthesis protein complex from the plasma membrane. Our results highlight PUP-IT as a powerful proximity labeling system to identify protein interactions in plant cells.