Nature Communications (Oct 2023)

The USP46 deubiquitylase complex increases Wingless/Wnt signaling strength by stabilizing Arrow/LRP6

  • Zachary T. Spencer,
  • Victoria H. Ng,
  • Hassina Benchabane,
  • Ghalia Saad Siddiqui,
  • Deepesh Duwadi,
  • Ben Maines,
  • Jamal M. Bryant,
  • Anna Schwarzkopf,
  • Kai Yuan,
  • Sara N. Kassel,
  • Anant Mishra,
  • Ashley Pimentel,
  • Andres M. Lebensohn,
  • Rajat Rohatgi,
  • Scott A. Gerber,
  • David J. Robbins,
  • Ethan Lee,
  • Yashi Ahmed

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41843-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract The control of Wnt receptor abundance is critical for animal development and to prevent tumorigenesis, but the mechanisms that mediate receptor stabilization remain uncertain. We demonstrate that stabilization of the essential Wingless/Wnt receptor Arrow/LRP6 by the evolutionarily conserved Usp46-Uaf1-Wdr20 deubiquitylase complex controls signaling strength in Drosophila. By reducing Arrow ubiquitylation and turnover, the Usp46 complex increases cell surface levels of Arrow and enhances the sensitivity of target cells to stimulation by the Wingless morphogen, thereby increasing the amplitude and spatial range of signaling responses. Usp46 inactivation in Wingless-responding cells destabilizes Arrow, reduces cytoplasmic accumulation of the transcriptional coactivator Armadillo/β-catenin, and attenuates or abolishes Wingless target gene activation, which prevents the concentration-dependent regulation of signaling strength. Consequently, Wingless-dependent developmental patterning and tissue homeostasis are disrupted. These results reveal an evolutionarily conserved mechanism that mediates Wnt/Wingless receptor stabilization and underlies the precise activation of signaling throughout the spatial range of the morphogen gradient.