PLoS ONE (Jan 2009)

Tollip is a mediator of protein sumoylation.

  • Alessia Ciarrocchi,
  • Romina D'Angelo,
  • Chiara Cordiglieri,
  • Ada Rispoli,
  • Spartaco Santi,
  • Massimo Riccio,
  • Simona Carone,
  • Anna Laura Mancia,
  • Simone Paci,
  • Elena Cipollini,
  • Davide Ambrosetti,
  • Marialuisa Melli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004404
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
p. e4404

Abstract

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Tollip is an interactor of the interleukin-1 receptor involved in its activation. The endosomal turnover of ubiquitylated IL-1RI is also controlled by Tollip. Furthermore, together with Tom1, Tollip has a general role in endosomal protein traffic. This work shows that Tollip is involved in the sumoylation process. Using the yeast two-hybrid technique, we have isolated new Tollip partners including two sumoylation enzymes, SUMO-1 and the transcriptional repressor Daxx. The interactions were confirmed by GST-pull down experiments and immunoprecipitation of the co-expressed recombinants. More specifically, we show that the TIR domain of the cytoplasmic region of IL-1RI is a sumoylation target of Tollip. The sumoylated and unsumoylated RanGAP-1 protein also interacts with Tollip, suggesting a possible role in RanGAP-1 modification and nuclear-cytoplasmic protein translocation. In fact, Tollip is found in the nuclear bodies of SAOS-2/IL-1RI cells where it colocalizes with SUMO-1 and the Daxx repressor. We conclude that Tollip is involved in the control of both nuclear and cytoplasmic protein traffic, through two different and often contrasting processes: ubiquitylation and sumoylation.