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Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism

Ubiquitin receptors decode ubiquitin signals into many cellular responses. Ubiquitin receptors also undergo coupled monoubiquitylation, and rapid deubiquitylation has hampered the characterization of the ubiquitylated state. Using bacteria that express a ubiquitylation apparatus, we purified and det...

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Autores principales: Keren-Kaplan, Tal, Zeev Peters, Lee, Levin-Kravets, Olga, Attali, Ilan, Kleifeld, Oded, Shohat, Noa, Artzi, Shay, Zucker, Ori, Pilzer, Inbar, Reis, Noa, Glickman, Michael H., Ben-Aroya, Shay, Prag, Gali
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5059453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27698474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12960
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author Keren-Kaplan, Tal
Zeev Peters, Lee
Levin-Kravets, Olga
Attali, Ilan
Kleifeld, Oded
Shohat, Noa
Artzi, Shay
Zucker, Ori
Pilzer, Inbar
Reis, Noa
Glickman, Michael H.
Ben-Aroya, Shay
Prag, Gali
author_facet Keren-Kaplan, Tal
Zeev Peters, Lee
Levin-Kravets, Olga
Attali, Ilan
Kleifeld, Oded
Shohat, Noa
Artzi, Shay
Zucker, Ori
Pilzer, Inbar
Reis, Noa
Glickman, Michael H.
Ben-Aroya, Shay
Prag, Gali
author_sort Keren-Kaplan, Tal
collection PubMed
description Ubiquitin receptors decode ubiquitin signals into many cellular responses. Ubiquitin receptors also undergo coupled monoubiquitylation, and rapid deubiquitylation has hampered the characterization of the ubiquitylated state. Using bacteria that express a ubiquitylation apparatus, we purified and determined the crystal structure of the proteasomal ubiquitin-receptor Rpn10 in its ubiquitylated state. The structure shows a novel ubiquitin-binding patch that directs K84 ubiquitylation. Superimposition of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 onto electron-microscopy models of proteasomes indicates that the Rpn10-conjugated ubiquitin clashes with Rpn9, suggesting that ubiquitylation might be involved in releasing Rpn10 from the proteasome. Indeed, ubiquitylation on immobilized proteasomes dissociates the modified Rpn10 from the complex, while unmodified Rpn10 mainly remains associated. In vivo experiments indicate that contrary to wild type, Rpn10-K84R is stably associated with the proteasomal subunit Rpn9. Similarly Rpn10, but not ubiquitylated-Rpn10, binds Rpn9 in vitro. Thus we suggest that ubiquitylation functions to dissociate modified ubiquitin receptors from their targets, a function that promotes cyclic activity of ubiquitin receptors.
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spelling pubmed-50594532016-10-26 Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism Keren-Kaplan, Tal Zeev Peters, Lee Levin-Kravets, Olga Attali, Ilan Kleifeld, Oded Shohat, Noa Artzi, Shay Zucker, Ori Pilzer, Inbar Reis, Noa Glickman, Michael H. Ben-Aroya, Shay Prag, Gali Nat Commun Article Ubiquitin receptors decode ubiquitin signals into many cellular responses. Ubiquitin receptors also undergo coupled monoubiquitylation, and rapid deubiquitylation has hampered the characterization of the ubiquitylated state. Using bacteria that express a ubiquitylation apparatus, we purified and determined the crystal structure of the proteasomal ubiquitin-receptor Rpn10 in its ubiquitylated state. The structure shows a novel ubiquitin-binding patch that directs K84 ubiquitylation. Superimposition of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 onto electron-microscopy models of proteasomes indicates that the Rpn10-conjugated ubiquitin clashes with Rpn9, suggesting that ubiquitylation might be involved in releasing Rpn10 from the proteasome. Indeed, ubiquitylation on immobilized proteasomes dissociates the modified Rpn10 from the complex, while unmodified Rpn10 mainly remains associated. In vivo experiments indicate that contrary to wild type, Rpn10-K84R is stably associated with the proteasomal subunit Rpn9. Similarly Rpn10, but not ubiquitylated-Rpn10, binds Rpn9 in vitro. Thus we suggest that ubiquitylation functions to dissociate modified ubiquitin receptors from their targets, a function that promotes cyclic activity of ubiquitin receptors. Nature Publishing Group 2016-10-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5059453/ /pubmed/27698474 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12960 Text en Copyright © 2016, The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Article
Keren-Kaplan, Tal
Zeev Peters, Lee
Levin-Kravets, Olga
Attali, Ilan
Kleifeld, Oded
Shohat, Noa
Artzi, Shay
Zucker, Ori
Pilzer, Inbar
Reis, Noa
Glickman, Michael H.
Ben-Aroya, Shay
Prag, Gali
Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism
title Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism
title_full Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism
title_fullStr Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism
title_full_unstemmed Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism
title_short Structure of ubiquitylated-Rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism
title_sort structure of ubiquitylated-rpn10 provides insight into its autoregulation mechanism
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5059453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27698474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12960
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