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1.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 31(2): 378-389, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38326650

ABSTRACT

E3 ubiquitin ligases, in collaboration with E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes, modify proteins with poly-ubiquitin chains. Cullin-RING ligase (CRL) E3s use Cdc34/UBE2R-family E2s to build Lys48-linked poly-ubiquitin chains to control an enormous swath of eukaryotic biology. Yet the molecular mechanisms underlying this exceptional linkage specificity and millisecond kinetics of poly-ubiquitylation remain unclear. Here we obtain cryogenic-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures that provide pertinent insight into how such poly-ubiquitin chains are forged. The CRL RING domain not only activates the E2-bound ubiquitin but also shapes the conformation of a distinctive UBE2R2 loop, positioning both the ubiquitin to be transferred and the substrate-linked acceptor ubiquitin within the active site. The structures also reveal how the ubiquitin-like protein NEDD8 uniquely activates CRLs during chain formation. NEDD8 releases the RING domain from the CRL, but unlike previous CRL-E2 structures, does not contact UBE2R2. These findings suggest how poly-ubiquitylation may be accomplished by many E2s and E3s.


Subject(s)
Cullin Proteins , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes , Cullin Proteins/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Ubiquitination , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Polyubiquitin/metabolism
2.
Mol Cell ; 84(7): 1304-1320.e16, 2024 Apr 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38382526

ABSTRACT

Cullin-RING ligases (CRLs) ubiquitylate specific substrates selected from other cellular proteins. Substrate discrimination and ubiquitin transferase activity were thought to be strictly separated. Substrates are recognized by substrate receptors, such as Fbox or BCbox proteins. Meanwhile, CRLs employ assorted ubiquitin-carrying enzymes (UCEs, which are a collection of E2 and ARIH-family E3s) specialized for either initial substrate ubiquitylation (priming) or forging poly-ubiquitin chains. We discovered specific human CRL-UCE pairings governing substrate priming. The results reveal pairing of CUL2-based CRLs and UBE2R-family UCEs in cells, essential for efficient PROTAC-induced neo-substrate degradation. Despite UBE2R2's intrinsic programming to catalyze poly-ubiquitylation, CUL2 employs this UCE for geometrically precise PROTAC-dependent ubiquitylation of a neo-substrate and for rapid priming of substrates recruited to diverse receptors. Cryo-EM structures illuminate how CUL2-based CRLs engage UBE2R2 to activate substrate ubiquitylation. Thus, pairing with a specific UCE overcomes E2 catalytic limitations to drive substrate ubiquitylation and targeted protein degradation.


Subject(s)
Cullin Proteins , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases , Humans , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Cullin Proteins/genetics , Cullin Proteins/metabolism , Ubiquitination , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Polyubiquitin/metabolism , Carrier Proteins/metabolism
3.
Mol Cell ; 84(2): 293-308.e14, 2024 Jan 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38113892

ABSTRACT

Ubiquitylation is catalyzed by coordinated actions of E3 and E2 enzymes. Molecular principles governing many important E3-E2 partnerships remain unknown, including those for RING-family GID/CTLH E3 ubiquitin ligases and their dedicated E2, Ubc8/UBE2H (yeast/human nomenclature). GID/CTLH-Ubc8/UBE2H-mediated ubiquitylation regulates biological processes ranging from yeast metabolic signaling to human development. Here, cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM), biochemistry, and cell biology reveal this exquisitely specific E3-E2 pairing through an unconventional catalytic assembly and auxiliary interactions 70-100 Å away, mediated by E2 multisite phosphorylation. Rather than dynamic polyelectrostatic interactions reported for other ubiquitylation complexes, multiple Ubc8/UBE2H phosphorylation sites within acidic CK2-targeted sequences specifically anchor the E2 C termini to E3 basic patches. Positions of phospho-dependent interactions relative to the catalytic domains correlate across evolution. Overall, our data show that phosphorylation-dependent multivalency establishes a specific E3-E2 partnership, is antagonistic with dephosphorylation, rigidifies the catalytic centers within a flexing GID E3-substrate assembly, and facilitates substrate collision with ubiquitylation active sites.


Subject(s)
Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes , Humans , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Phosphorylation , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Ubiquitination
4.
Biochem J ; 480(22): 1817-1831, 2023 11 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37870100

ABSTRACT

Protein ubiquitylation typically involves isopeptide bond formation between the C-terminus of ubiquitin to the side-chain amino group on Lys residues. However, several ubiquitin ligases (E3s) have recently been identified that ubiquitylate proteins on non-Lys residues. For instance, HOIL-1 belongs to the RING-in-between RING (RBR) class of E3s and has an established role in Ser ubiquitylation. Given the homology between HOIL-1 and ARIH1, an RBR E3 that functions with the large superfamily of cullin-RING E3 ligases (CRLs), a biochemical investigation was undertaken, showing ARIH1 catalyzes Ser ubiquitylation to CRL-bound substrates. However, the efficiency of ubiquitylation was exquisitely dependent on the location and chemical environment of the Ser residue within the primary structure of the substrate. Comprehensive mutagenesis of the ARIH1 Rcat domain identified residues whose mutation severely impacted both oxyester and isopeptide bond formation at the preferred site for Ser ubiquitylation while only modestly affecting Lys ubiquitylation at the physiological site. The results reveal dual isopeptide and oxyester protein ubiquitylation activities of ARIH1 and set the stage for physiological investigations into this function of emerging importance.


Subject(s)
Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases , Ubiquitin , Ubiquitin/genetics , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Ubiquitination , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Proteins/metabolism , Catalysis
5.
Mol Cell ; 83(5): 770-786.e9, 2023 03 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36805027

ABSTRACT

E3 ligase recruitment of proteins containing terminal destabilizing motifs (degrons) is emerging as a major form of regulation. How those E3s discriminate bona fide substrates from other proteins with terminal degron-like sequences remains unclear. Here, we report that human KLHDC2, a CRL2 substrate receptor targeting C-terminal Gly-Gly degrons, is regulated through interconversion between two assemblies. In the self-inactivated homotetramer, KLHDC2's C-terminal Gly-Ser motif mimics a degron and engages the substrate-binding domain of another protomer. True substrates capture the monomeric CRL2KLHDC2, driving E3 activation by neddylation and subsequent substrate ubiquitylation. Non-substrates such as NEDD8 bind KLHDC2 with high affinity, but its slow on rate prevents productive association with CRL2KLHDC2. Without substrate, neddylated CRL2KLHDC2 assemblies are deactivated via distinct mechanisms: the monomer by deneddylation and the tetramer by auto-ubiquitylation. Thus, substrate specificity is amplified by KLHDC2 self-assembly acting like a molecular timer, where only bona fide substrates may bind before E3 ligase inactivation.


Subject(s)
Proteins , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases , Humans , Carrier Proteins , Proteins/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism
6.
Biomolecules ; 11(11)2021 11 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34827617

ABSTRACT

Cellular homeostasis depends on robust protein quality control (PQC) pathways that discern misfolded proteins from functional ones in the cell. One major branch of PQC involves the controlled degradation of misfolded proteins by the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Here ubiquitin ligases must recognize and bind to misfolded proteins with sufficient energy to form a complex and with an adequate half-life to achieve poly-ubiquitin chain formation, the signal for protein degradation, prior to its dissociation from the ligase. It is not well understood how PQC ubiquitin ligases accomplish these tasks. Employing a fully reconstituted enzyme and substrate system to perform quantitative biochemical experiments, we demonstrate that the yeast PQC ubiquitin ligase San1 contains multiple substrate binding sites along its polypeptide chain that appear to display specificity for unique misfolded proteins. The results are consistent with a model where these substrate binding sites enable San1 to bind to misfolded substrates avidly, resulting in high affinity ubiquitin ligase-substrate complexes.


Subject(s)
Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Ubiquitin , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
7.
Nature ; 590(7847): 671-676, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33536622

ABSTRACT

E3 ligases are typically classified by hallmark domains such as RING and RBR, which are thought to specify unique catalytic mechanisms of ubiquitin transfer to recruited substrates1,2. However, rather than functioning individually, many neddylated cullin-RING E3 ligases (CRLs) and RBR-type E3 ligases in the ARIH family-which together account for nearly half of all ubiquitin ligases in humans-form E3-E3 super-assemblies3-7. Here, by studying CRLs in the SKP1-CUL1-F-box (SCF) family, we show how neddylated SCF ligases and ARIH1 (an RBR-type E3 ligase) co-evolved to ubiquitylate diverse substrates presented on various F-box proteins. We developed activity-based chemical probes that enabled cryo-electron microscopy visualization of steps in E3-E3 ubiquitylation, initiating with ubiquitin linked to the E2 enzyme UBE2L3, then transferred to the catalytic cysteine of ARIH1, and culminating in ubiquitin linkage to a substrate bound to the SCF E3 ligase. The E3-E3 mechanism places the ubiquitin-linked active site of ARIH1 adjacent to substrates bound to F-box proteins (for example, substrates with folded structures or limited length) that are incompatible with previously described conventional RING E3-only mechanisms. The versatile E3-E3 super-assembly may therefore underlie widespread ubiquitylation.


Subject(s)
F-Box Proteins/metabolism , SKP Cullin F-Box Protein Ligases/metabolism , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Ubiquitination , Allosteric Regulation , Biocatalysis , Cryoelectron Microscopy , Cyclin E/metabolism , Humans , Phosphorylation , Substrate Specificity , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism
8.
Nat Chem Biol ; 17(3): 272-279, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33288957

ABSTRACT

Virtually all aspects of cell biology are regulated by a ubiquitin code where distinct ubiquitin chain architectures guide the binding events and itineraries of modified substrates. Various combinations of E2 and E3 enzymes accomplish chain formation by forging isopeptide bonds between the C terminus of their transiently linked donor ubiquitin and a specific nucleophilic amino acid on the acceptor ubiquitin, yet it is unknown whether the fundamental feature of most acceptors-the lysine side chain-affects catalysis. Here, use of synthetic ubiquitins with non-natural acceptor site replacements reveals that the aliphatic side chain specifying reactive amine geometry is a determinant of the ubiquitin code, through unanticipated and complex reliance of many distinct ubiquitin-carrying enzymes on a canonical acceptor lysine.


Subject(s)
Lysine/chemistry , NEDD8 Protein/chemistry , Polyubiquitin/chemistry , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Ubiquitin/chemistry , Binding Sites , Cloning, Molecular , Crystallography, X-Ray , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Gene Expression , Genetic Vectors/chemistry , Genetic Vectors/metabolism , Humans , Kinetics , Lysine/metabolism , Models, Molecular , NEDD8 Protein/genetics , NEDD8 Protein/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/chemistry , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Polyubiquitin/genetics , Polyubiquitin/metabolism , Protein Binding , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Protein Structure, Secondary , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Transcription Factors/chemistry , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Ubiquitin/genetics , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/chemistry , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/genetics , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Ubiquitination
10.
Nature ; 578(7795): 461-466, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32051583

ABSTRACT

Eukaryotic cell biology depends on cullin-RING E3 ligase (CRL)-catalysed protein ubiquitylation1, which is tightly controlled by the modification of cullin with the ubiquitin-like protein NEDD82-6. However, how CRLs catalyse ubiquitylation, and the basis of NEDD8 activation, remain unknown. Here we report the cryo-electron microscopy structure of a chemically trapped complex that represents the ubiquitylation intermediate, in which the neddylated CRL1ß-TRCP promotes the transfer of ubiquitin from the E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme UBE2D to its recruited substrate, phosphorylated IκBα. NEDD8 acts as a nexus that binds disparate cullin elements and the RING-activated ubiquitin-linked UBE2D. Local structural remodelling of NEDD8 and large-scale movements of CRL domains converge to juxtapose the substrate and the ubiquitylation active site. These findings explain how a distinctive ubiquitin-like protein alters the functions of its targets, and show how numerous NEDD8-dependent interprotein interactions and conformational changes synergistically configure a catalytic CRL architecture that is both robust, to enable rapid ubiquitylation of the substrate, and fragile, to enable the subsequent functions of cullin-RING proteins.


Subject(s)
Cryoelectron Microscopy , NEDD8 Protein/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Biocatalysis , Humans , Models, Molecular , NEDD8 Protein/chemistry , NEDD8 Protein/ultrastructure , NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha/chemistry , NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha/metabolism , NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha/ultrastructure , Phosphorylation , Protein Conformation , Substrate Specificity , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/chemistry , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/ultrastructure , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/chemistry , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/ultrastructure , Ubiquitination
11.
Mol Biol Cell ; 31(3): 221-233, 2020 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31825716

ABSTRACT

Protein misfolding is a recurring phenomenon that cells must manage; otherwise misfolded proteins can aggregate and become toxic should they persist. To counter this burden, cells have evolved protein quality control (PQC) mechanisms that manage misfolded proteins. Two classes of systems that function in PQC are chaperones that aid in protein folding and ubiquitin-protein ligases that ubiquitinate misfolded proteins for proteasomal degradation. How folding and degradative PQC systems interact and coordinate their respective functions is not yet fully understood. Previous studies of PQC degradation pathways in the endoplasmic reticulum and cytosol have led to the prevailing idea that these pathways require the activity of Hsp70 chaperones. Here, we find that involvement of the budding yeast Hsp70 chaperones Ssa1 and Ssa2 in nuclear PQC degradation varies with the substrate. In particular, nuclear PQC degradation mediated by the yeast ubiquitin-protein ligase San1 often involves Ssa1/Ssa2, but San1 substrate recognition and ubiquitination can proceed without these Hsp70 chaperone functions in vivo and in vitro. Our studies provide new insights into the variability of Hsp70 chaperone involvement with a nuclear PQC degradation pathway.


Subject(s)
Adenosine Triphosphatases/genetics , HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/genetics , Adenosine Triphosphatases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Cytosol/metabolism , Endoplasmic Reticulum/metabolism , HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins/genetics , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Mutation , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Protein Domains , Protein Folding , Proteolysis , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Ubiquitination
12.
Elife ; 82019 12 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31868589

ABSTRACT

The cullin-RING ligases (CRLs) form the major family of E3 ubiquitin ligases. The prototypic CRLs in yeast, called SCF enzymes, employ a single E2 enzyme, Cdc34, to build poly-ubiquitin chains required for degradation. In contrast, six different human E2 and E3 enzyme activities, including Cdc34 orthologs UBE2R1 and UBE2R2, appear to mediate SCF-catalyzed substrate polyubiquitylation in vitro. The combinatorial interplay of these enzymes raises questions about genetic buffering of SCFs in human cells and challenges the dogma that E3s alone determine substrate specificity. To enable the quantitative comparisons of SCF-dependent ubiquitylation reactions with physiological enzyme concentrations, mass spectrometry was employed to estimate E2 and E3 levels in cells. In combination with UBE2R1/2, the E2 UBE2D3 and the E3 ARIH1 both promoted SCF-mediated polyubiquitylation in a substrate-specific fashion. Unexpectedly, UBE2R2 alone had negligible ubiquitylation activity at physiological concentrations and the ablation of UBE2R1/2 had no effect on the stability of SCF substrates in cells. A genome-wide CRISPR screen revealed that an additional E2 enzyme, UBE2G1, buffers against the loss of UBE2R1/2. UBE2G1 had robust in vitro chain extension activity with SCF, and UBE2G1 knockdown in cells lacking UBE2R1/2 resulted in stabilization of the SCF substrates p27 and CYCLIN E as well as the CUL2-RING ligase substrate HIF1α. The results demonstrate the human SCF enzyme system is diversified by association with multiple catalytic enzyme partners.


Subject(s)
Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/genetics , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics , Genome, Human/genetics , Humans , Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit/genetics , Mass Spectrometry , Polyubiquitin/genetics , Signal Transduction/genetics , Ubiquitination/genetics
13.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1844: 39-58, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30242702

ABSTRACT

Ubiquitin ligases (E3s) function by binding to both a protein substrate and to ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes (E2s) bound to ubiquitin. E3s facilitate the transfer of ubiquitin from the E2 active site to an E3-bound substrate. Thus, the affinity of the interaction of an E2 with its E3 partner is of considerable interest. The purpose of this work is to (1) provide protocols for the purification of the human E2 Cdc34, as well as for some additional protein components needed for the assays described here whose purification protocols haven't been described elsewhere in detail; (2) provide the researcher with critical information regarding the proper long-term storage of these enzymes to retain maximal activity; (3) provide a protocol to benchmark Cdc34 activity with previously described activity levels in the literature; and (4) provide a simple and rapid means of measuring E2 affinity for an E3.


Subject(s)
Biological Assay , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Aspartic Acid , Biological Assay/methods , Humans , Kinetics , Protein Binding , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/isolation & purification , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Ubiquitin/chemistry , Ubiquitin/genetics , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/genetics , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics , Ubiquitination
14.
EMBO J ; 36(4): 392-393, 2017 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28087580
15.
Cell ; 166(5): 1080-1081, 2016 Aug 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27565338

ABSTRACT

Cullin-RING (CRL) and RING1-IBR-RING2 (RBR) are two distinct types of ubiquitin ligases. In this issue, Scott et al. show that CRLs activate the RBR enzyme ARIH1 to initiate ubiquitin chains on CRL substrates, thereby marking an unexpected and important advance in our understanding of both enzymes.


Subject(s)
Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases , Ubiquitin , Cullin Proteins , Humans
16.
J Biol Chem ; 291(36): 18778-90, 2016 09 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27405755

ABSTRACT

Protein quality control (PQC) is a critical process wherein misfolded or damaged proteins are cleared from the cell to maintain protein homeostasis. In eukaryotic cells, the removal of misfolded proteins is primarily accomplished by the ubiquitin-proteasome system. In the ubiquitin-proteasome system, ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes and ubiquitin ligases append polyubiquitin chains onto misfolded protein substrates signaling for their degradation. The kinetics of protein ubiquitylation are paramount as a balance must be achieved between the rapid removal of misfolded proteins versus providing sufficient time for protein chaperones to attempt refolding. To uncover the molecular basis for how PQC substrate ubiquitylation rates are controlled, the reaction catalyzed by nuclear ubiquitin ligase San1 was reconstituted in vitro Our results demonstrate that San1 can function with two ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes, Cdc34 and Ubc1. Although Cdc34 and Ubc1 are both sufficient for promoting San1 activity, San1 functions preferentially with Ubc1, including when both Ubc1 and Cdc34 are present. Notably, a homogeneous peptide that mimics a misfolded PQC substrate was developed and enabled quantification of the kinetics of San1-catalyzed ubiquitylation reactions. We discuss how these results may have broad implications for the regulation of PQC-mediated protein degradation.


Subject(s)
Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Proteolysis , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Ubiquitination/physiology , Humans , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/genetics , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/genetics , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics
17.
Mol Cell Biol ; 36(11): 1720-32, 2016 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27044868

ABSTRACT

Lysine selectivity is of critical importance during polyubiquitin chain formation because the identity of the lysine controls the biological outcome. Ubiquitins are covalently linked in polyubiquitin chains through one of seven lysine residues on its surface and the C terminus of adjacent protomers. Lys 48-linked polyubiquitin chains signal for protein degradation; however, the structural basis for Lys 48 selectivity remains largely unknown. The ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Ube2R1/2 has exquisite specificity for Lys 48, and computational docking of Ube2R1/2 and ubiquitin predicts that Lys 48 is guided to the active site through a key electrostatic interaction between Arg 54 on ubiquitin and Asp 143 on Ube2R1/2. The validity of this interaction was confirmed through biochemical experiments. Since structural examples involving Arg 54 in protein-ubiquitin complexes are exceedingly rare, these results provide additional insight into how ubiquitin-protein complexes can be stabilized. We discuss how these findings relate to how other ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes direct the lysine specificity of polyubiquitin chains.


Subject(s)
Lysine/metabolism , Polyubiquitin/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/chemistry , Arginine/metabolism , Aspartic Acid/metabolism , Catalytic Domain , Humans , Models, Molecular , Molecular Docking Simulation , Polyubiquitin/chemistry , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism
18.
J Biol Chem ; 290(2): 1106-18, 2015 Jan 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25425648

ABSTRACT

In the ubiquitin-proteasome system, protein substrates are degraded via covalent modification by a polyubiquitin chain. The polyubiquitin chain must be assembled rapidly in cells, because a chain of at least four ubiquitins is required to signal for degradation, and chain-editing enzymes in the cell may cleave premature polyubiquitin chains before achieving this critical length. The ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Cdc34 and ubiquitin ligase SCF are capable of building polyubiquitin chains onto protein substrates both rapidly and processively; this may be explained at least in part by the atypically fast rate of Cdc34 and SCF association. This rapid association has been attributed to electrostatic interactions between the acidic C-terminal tail of Cdc34 and a feature on SCF called the basic canyon. However, the structural aspects of the Cdc34-SCF interaction and how they permit rapid complex formation remain elusive. Here, we use protein cross-linking to demonstrate that the Cdc34-SCF interaction occurs in multiple conformations, where several residues from the Cdc34 acidic tail are capable of contacting a broad region of the SCF basic canyon. Similar patterns of cross-linking are also observed between Cdc34 and the Cul1 paralog Cul2, implicating the same mechanism for the Cdc34-SCF interaction in other members of the cullin-RING ubiquitin ligases. We discuss how these results can explain the rapid association of Cdc34 and SCF.


Subject(s)
Cullin Proteins/metabolism , S-Phase Kinase-Associated Proteins/metabolism , SKP Cullin F-Box Protein Ligases/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/metabolism , Ubiquitination , Amino Acid Sequence , Anaphase-Promoting Complex-Cyclosome , Cullin Proteins/chemistry , Humans , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs , Protein Structure, Tertiary , S-Phase Kinase-Associated Proteins/chemistry , SKP Cullin F-Box Protein Ligases/chemistry , SKP Cullin F-Box Protein Ligases/genetics , Ubiquitin/chemistry , Ubiquitin/genetics , Ubiquitin/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/chemistry
19.
Trends Cell Biol ; 24(6): 352-9, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24457024

ABSTRACT

Eukaryotic cells are equipped to degrade proteins via the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS). Proteins become degraded upon their conjugation to chains of ubiquitin where they are then directed to the 26S proteasome, a macromolecular protease. The transfer of ubiquitin to proteins and their subsequent degradation are highly complex processes, and new research is beginning to uncover the molecular details of how ubiquitination and degradation take place in the cell. We review some of the new data providing insights into how these processes occur. Although distinct mechanisms are often observed, some common themes are emerging for how the UPS guides protein substrates through their final journey.


Subject(s)
Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Proteolysis , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Animals , Humans , Ubiquitin/metabolism
20.
Nat Chem Biol ; 10(2): 156-163, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24316736

ABSTRACT

Weak protein interactions between ubiquitin and the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) enzymes that mediate its covalent attachment to substrates serve to position ubiquitin for optimal catalytic transfer. We show that a small-molecule inhibitor of the E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Cdc34A, called CC0651, acts by trapping a weak interaction between ubiquitin and the E2 donor ubiquitin-binding site. A structure of the ternary CC0651-Cdc34A-ubiquitin complex reveals that the inhibitor engages a composite binding pocket formed from Cdc34A and ubiquitin. CC0651 also suppresses the spontaneous hydrolysis rate of the Cdc34A-ubiquitin thioester without decreasing the interaction between Cdc34A and the RING domain subunit of the E3 enzyme. Stabilization of the numerous other weak interactions between ubiquitin and UPS enzymes by small molecules may be a feasible strategy to selectively inhibit different UPS activities.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/chemistry , Biphenyl Compounds/chemistry , Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes/antagonists & inhibitors , Ubiquitin/chemistry , Amino Acids/pharmacology , Binding Sites , Biphenyl Compounds/pharmacology , Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Enzyme Activation/drug effects , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Inhibitory Concentration 50 , Models, Molecular , Protein Binding , Protein Stability/drug effects , Small Molecule Libraries/pharmacology
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