Publications | An RNF12-USP26 amplification loop drives germ cell specification and is disrupted by disease-associated mutations

The E3 ubiquitin ligase RNF12 plays essential roles during development, and the gene encoding it, RLIM, is mutated in the X-linked human developmental disorder Tonne-Kalscheuer syndrome (TOKAS). Substrates of RNF12 include transcriptional regulators such as the pluripotency-associated transcriptional repressor REX1. Using global quantitative proteomics in male mouse embryonic stem cells, we identified the deubiquitylase USP26 as a putative downstream target of RNF12 activity. RNF12 relieved REX1-mediated repression of Usp26, leading to an increase in USP26 abundance and the formation of RNF12-USP26 complexes. Interaction with USP26 prevented RNF12 autoubiquitylation and proteasomal degradation, thereby establishing a transcriptional feed-forward loop that amplified RNF12-dependent derepression of REX1 targets. We showed that the RNF12-USP26 axis operated specifically in mouse testes and was required for the expression of gametogenesis genes and for germ cell differentiation in vitro. Furthermore, this RNF12-USP26 axis was disrupted by RLIM and USP26 variants found in TOKAS and infertility patients, respectively. This work reveals synergy within the ubiquitylation cycle that controls a key developmental process in gametogenesis and that is disrupted in human genetic disorders.

Principal Investigator(s):

Author(s):
Segarra Fas, A., Espejo Serrano, C., Bustos, F., Zhou, H., Wang, F., Toth, R., Macartney, T., Bach, I., Nardocci, G., & Findlay, G

PubMed:
35857630
Citation:
Segarra Fas, A., Espejo Serrano, C., Bustos, F., Zhou, H., Wang, F., Toth, R., Macartney, T., Bach, I., Nardocci, G., & Findlay, G
Science Signalling
2022
Jul
15
doi:
10.1126/scisignal.abm5995
PMID: 35857630