posted on 2019-05-06, 00:00authored byXiangling Chen, Dayun Lu, Jing Gao, Hongwen Zhu, Yanting Zhou, Daming Gao, Hu Zhou
The deubiquitinase USP9X is involved
in multiple diseases including
neurodegeneration, epilepsy, and various types of tumors by targeting
different substrates. In the present study, we aimed to explore the
potential substrates of USP9X and performed SILAC-based quantitative
proteomics to compare these substrates in USP9X-knockdown and wild-type
HeLa cells. We consequently carried out Flag-NFX1-123 tag affinity-based
mass spectrometry and confirmed that the X-box binding nuclear factor
NFX1-123 interacted with USP9X. Moreover, immunoprecipitation assays
verified a direct interaction between USP9X and NFX1-123. Further
experiments confirmed that NFX1-123 could be modified by ubiquitination
and that USP9X stabilized NFX1-123 via efficient deubiquitination
of NFX1-123. Knockdown of USP9X resulted in decreased NFX1-123 protein
levels compared with their unchanged corresponding mRNA levels in
different cell lines. In summary, we found that NFX1-123 was a bona fide substrate of the deubiquitinase USP9X and that
it could be degraded by the ubiquitin-proteasome system. The present
study provided new insight into understanding the biological function
of USP9X by targeting its substrate NFX1-123.