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1.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1843(1): 114-28, 2014 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23845989

RESUMEN

The post-translational attachment of one or several ubiquitin molecules to a protein generates a variety of targeting signals that are used in many different ways in the cell. Ubiquitination can alter the activity, localization, protein-protein interactions or stability of the targeted protein. Further, a very large number of proteins are subject to regulation by ubiquitin-dependent processes, meaning that virtually all cellular functions are impacted by these pathways. Nearly a hundred enzymes from five different gene families (the deubiquitinating enzymes or DUBs), reverse this modification by hydrolyzing the (iso)peptide bond tethering ubiquitin to itself or the target protein. Four of these families are thiol proteases and one is a metalloprotease. DUBs of the Ubiquitin C-terminal Hydrolase (UCH) family act on small molecule adducts of ubiquitin, process the ubiquitin proprotein, and trim ubiquitin from the distal end of a polyubiquitin chain. Ubiquitin Specific Proteases (USPs) tend to recognize and encounter their substrates by interaction of the variable regions of their sequence with the substrate protein directly, or with scaffolds or substrate adapters in multiprotein complexes. Ovarian Tumor (OTU) domain DUBs show remarkable specificity for different Ub chain linkages and may have evolved to recognize substrates on the basis of those linkages. The Josephin family of DUBs may specialize in distinguishing between polyubiquitin chains of different lengths. Finally, the JAB1/MPN+/MOV34 (JAMM) domain metalloproteases cleave the isopeptide bond near the attachment point of polyubiquitin and substrate, as well as being highly specific for the K63 poly-Ub linkage. These DUBs regulate proteolysis by: directly interacting with and co-regulating E3 ligases; altering the level of substrate ubiquitination; hydrolyzing or remodeling ubiquitinated and poly-ubiquitinated substrates; acting in specific locations in the cell and altering the localization of the target protein; and acting on proteasome bound substrates to facilitate or inhibit proteolysis. Thus, the scope and regulation of the ubiquitin pathway is very similar to that of phosphorylation, with the DUBs serving the same functions as the phosphatase. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Ubiquitin-Proteasome System. Guest Editors: Thomas Sommer and Dieter H. Wolf.


Asunto(s)
Proteolisis , Proteasas Ubiquitina-Específicas/fisiología , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína/fisiología , Especificidad por Sustrato , Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligasas/metabolismo , Proteasas Ubiquitina-Específicas/química , Proteasas Ubiquitina-Específicas/clasificación , Ubiquitinación/fisiología
2.
Biochemistry ; 49(7): 1361-3, 2010 Feb 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20039703

RESUMEN

Prior to substrate ubiquitination by HECT-E3 ligases, ubiquitin must first be activated by E1 and then transferred via a series of transthiolation reactions from E1 to E2 and from E2 to E3. We have measured the rate constants and binding affinities underlying the transfer of ubiquitin from E2 UbcH7 to the HECT domain of E3 E6AP. We show that charged UbcH7 and free UbcH7 bind E6AP with similar affinities and that at 37 degrees C the second-order rate constant for the reaction (k(cat)/K(m)) equals approximately 2.3 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1). The measured parameters place limits on substrate-E6AP binding lifetimes required for processive polyubiquitination.


Asunto(s)
Enzimas Ubiquitina-Conjugadoras/química , Enzimas Ubiquitina-Conjugadoras/metabolismo , Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligasas/química , Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligasas/metabolismo , Ubiquitina/química , Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Unión Competitiva , Humanos , Cinética , Unión Proteica , Transporte de Proteínas , Electricidad Estática , Ubiquitinación
3.
Proteins ; 78(4): 1055-65, 2010 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19899154

RESUMEN

The importance of a protein-protein interaction to a signaling pathway can be established by showing that amino acid mutations that weaken the interaction disrupt signaling, and that additional mutations that rescue the interaction recover signaling. Identifying rescue mutations, often referred to as second-site suppressor mutations, controls against scenarios in which the initial deleterious mutation inactivates the protein or disrupts alternative protein-protein interactions. Here, we test a structure-based protocol for identifying second-site suppressor mutations that is based on a strategy previously described by Kortemme and Baker. The molecular modeling software Rosetta is used to scan an interface for point mutations that are predicted to weaken binding but can be rescued by mutations on the partner protein. The protocol typically identifies three types of specificity switches: knob-in-to-hole redesigns, switching hydrophobic interactions to hydrogen bond interactions, and replacing polar interactions with nonpolar interactions. Computational predictions were tested with two separate protein complexes; the G-protein Galpha(i1) bound to the RGS14 GoLoco motif, and UbcH7 bound to the ubiquitin ligase E6AP. Eight designs were experimentally tested. Swapping a buried hydrophobic residue with a polar residue dramatically weakened binding affinities. In none of these cases were we able to identify compensating mutations that returned binding to wild-type affinity, highlighting the challenges inherent in designing buried hydrogen bond networks. The strongest specificity switches were a knob-in-to-hole design (20-fold) and the replacement of a charge-charge interaction with nonpolar interactions (55-fold). In two cases, specificity was further tuned by including mutations distant from the initial design. Proteins 2010. (c) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas/química , Proteínas/genética , Supresión Genética/fisiología , Biología Computacional , Enlace de Hidrógeno , Interacciones Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Modelos Moleculares , Unión Proteica/genética , Unión Proteica/fisiología , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Proteínas/metabolismo , Supresión Genética/genética
4.
Nat Struct Mol Biol ; 12(10): 933-4, 2005 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16142244

RESUMEN

During ubiquitin ligation, an E2 conjugating enzyme receives ubiquitin from an E1 enzyme and then interacts with an E3 ligase to modify substrates. Competitive binding experiments with three human E2-E3 protein pairs show that the binding of E1s and of E3s to E2s are mutually exclusive. These results imply that polyubiquitination requires recycling of E2 for addition of successive ubiquitins to substrate.


Asunto(s)
Enzimas Activadoras de Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Enzimas Ubiquitina-Conjugadoras/metabolismo , Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligasas/metabolismo , Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Unión Competitiva , Humanos , Procesamiento Proteico-Postraduccional , Transporte de Proteínas
5.
J Mol Biol ; 369(2): 419-28, 2007 Jun 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17433363

RESUMEN

The conjugation of ubiquitin to substrates requires a series of enzymatic reactions consisting of an activating enzyme (E1), conjugating enzymes (E2) and ligases (E3). Tagging the appropriate substrate with ubiquitin is achieved by specific E2-E3 and E3-substrate interactions. E6AP, a member of the HECT family of E3s, has been previously shown to bind and function with the E2s UbcH7 and UbcH8. To decipher the sequence determinants of this specificity we have developed a quantitative E2-E3 binding assay based on fluorescence polarization and used this assay to measure the affinity of wild-type and mutant E2-E6AP interactions. Alanine scanning of the E6AP-UbcH7 binding interface identified four side-chains on UbcH7 and six side-chains on E6AP that contribute more than 1 kcal/mol to the binding free energy. Two of the hot spot residues from UbcH7 (K96 and K100) are conserved in UbcH8 but vary across other E2s. To determine if these are key specificity determining residues, we attempted to induce a tighter association between the E2 UbcH5b and E6AP by mutating the corresponding positions in UbcH5b to lysine residues. Surprisingly, the mutations had little effect, but rather a mutation at UbcH7 position 4, which is not at a hot spot on the UbcH7-E6AP interface, significantly strengthened UbcH5bs affinity for E6AP. This result indicates that E2-E3 binding specificities are a function of both favorable interactions that promote binding, and unfavorable interactions that prevent binding with unwanted partners.


Asunto(s)
Enzimas Ubiquitina-Conjugadoras/metabolismo , Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligasas/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Mutación , Unión Proteica , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/química , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genética , Proteínas de Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolismo , Alineación de Secuencia , Especificidad por Sustrato , Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Enzimas Ubiquitina-Conjugadoras/química , Enzimas Ubiquitina-Conjugadoras/genética , Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligasas/química , Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligasas/genética
6.
J Mol Biol ; 371(5): 1392-404, 2007 Aug 31.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17603074

RESUMEN

The ability to manipulate protein binding affinities is important for the development of proteins as biosensors, industrial reagents, and therapeutics. We have developed a structure-based method to rationally predict single mutations at protein-protein interfaces that enhance binding affinities. The protocol is based on the premise that increasing buried hydrophobic surface area and/or reducing buried hydrophilic surface area will generally lead to enhanced affinity if large steric clashes are not introduced and buried polar groups are not left without a hydrogen bond partner. The procedure selects affinity enhancing point mutations at the protein-protein interface using three criteria: (1) the mutation must be from a polar amino acid to a non-polar amino acid or from a non-polar amino acid to a larger non-polar amino acid, (2) the free energy of binding as calculated with the Rosetta protein modeling program should be more favorable than the free energy of binding calculated for the wild-type complex and (3) the mutation should not be predicted to significantly destabilize the monomers. The performance of the computational protocol was experimentally tested on two separate protein complexes; Galpha(i1) from the heterotrimeric G-protein system bound to the RGS14 GoLoco motif, and the E2, UbcH7, bound to the E3, E6AP from the ubiquitin pathway. Twelve single-site mutations that were predicted to be stabilizing were synthesized and characterized in the laboratory. Nine of the 12 mutations successfully increased binding affinity with five of these increasing binding by over 1.0 kcal/mol. To further assess our approach we searched the literature for point mutations that pass our criteria and have experimentally determined binding affinities. Of the eight mutations identified, five were accurately predicted to increase binding affinity, further validating the method as a useful tool to increase protein-protein binding affinities.


Asunto(s)
Mutación , Secuencias de Aminoácidos , Química Física/métodos , Cristalización , Subunidades alfa de la Proteína de Unión al GTP Gi-Go/química , Microscopía Fluorescente , Modelos Moleculares , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica , Mapeo de Interacción de Proteínas , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Proteínas/química , Programas Informáticos , Termodinámica
7.
J Mol Biol ; 366(4): 1209-21, 2007 Mar 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17196978

RESUMEN

Recent efforts to design de novo or redesign the sequence and structure of proteins using computational techniques have met with significant success. Most, if not all, of these computational methodologies attempt to model atomic-level interactions, and hence high-resolution structural characterization of the designed proteins is critical for evaluating the atomic-level accuracy of the underlying design force-fields. We previously used our computational protein design protocol RosettaDesign to completely redesign the sequence of the activation domain of human procarboxypeptidase A2. With 68% of the wild-type sequence changed, the designed protein, AYEdesign, is over 10 kcal/mol more stable than the wild-type protein. Here, we describe the high-resolution crystal structure and solution NMR structure of AYEdesign, which show that the experimentally determined backbone and side-chains conformations are effectively superimposable with the computational model at atomic resolution. To isolate the origins of the remarkable stabilization, we have designed and characterized a new series of procarboxypeptidase mutants that gain significant thermodynamic stability with a minimal number of mutations; one mutant gains more than 5 kcal/mol of stability over the wild-type protein with only four amino acid changes. We explore the relationship between force-field smoothing and conformational sampling by comparing the experimentally determined free energies of the overall design and these focused subsets of mutations to those predicted using modified force-fields, and both fixed and flexible backbone sampling protocols.


Asunto(s)
Carboxipeptidasas A/química , Simulación por Computador , Cristalización , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Humanos , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Modelos Moleculares , Ingeniería de Proteínas , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Relación Estructura-Actividad , Termodinámica
8.
J Mol Biol ; 362(5): 1004-24, 2006 Oct 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16949611

RESUMEN

We recently used computational protein design to create an extremely stable, globular protein, Top7, with a sequence and fold not observed previously in nature. Since Top7 was created in the absence of genetic selection, it provides a rare opportunity to investigate aspects of the cellular protein production and surveillance machinery that are subject to natural selection. Here we show that a portion of the Top7 protein corresponding to the final 49 C-terminal residues is efficiently mis-translated and accumulates at high levels in Escherichia coli. We used circular dichroism, size-exclusion chromatography, small-angle X-ray scattering, analytical ultra-centrifugation, and NMR spectroscopy to show that the resulting C-terminal fragment (CFr) protein adopts a compact, extremely stable, homo-dimeric structure. Based on the solution structure, we engineered an even more stable variant of CFr by disulfide-induced covalent circularisation that should be an excellent platform for design of novel functions. The accumulation of high levels of CFr exposes the high error rate of the protein translation machinery. The rarity of correspondingly stable fragments in natural proteins coupled with the observation that high quality ribosome binding sites are found to occur within E. coli protein-coding regions significantly less often than expected by random chance implies a stringent evolutionary pressure against protein sub-fragments that can independently fold into stable structures. The symmetric self-association between two identical mis-translated CFr sub-domains to generate an extremely stable structure parallels a mechanism for natural protein-fold evolution by modular recombination of protein sub-structures.


Asunto(s)
Evolución Molecular , Ingeniería de Proteínas , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Cromatografía en Gel , Dicroismo Circular , Biología Computacional , Cristalografía/métodos , Dimerización , Disulfuros/química , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Modelos Moleculares , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Peso Molecular , Resonancia Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Biosíntesis de Proteínas , Conformación Proteica , Desnaturalización Proteica , Pliegue de Proteína , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Ultracentrifugación
9.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1278: 23-37, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25859941

RESUMEN

Numerous authors, including contributors to this volume, have described methods to detect protein-protein interactions. Many of these approaches are now accessible to the inexperienced investigator thanks to core facilities and/or affordable instrumentation. This chapter discusses some common design considerations that are necessary to obtain valid measurements, as well as the assumptions and analytical methods that are relevant to the quantitation of these interactions.


Asunto(s)
Ligandos , Biología Molecular/métodos , Mapas de Interacción de Proteínas , Proteínas/química , Sitios de Unión , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Unión Proteica , Proteínas/metabolismo
10.
FEBS Lett ; 587(24): 3906-11, 2013 Dec 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24211834

RESUMEN

The human BAP1 deubiquitinating enzyme is a chromatin-bound transcriptional regulator and tumor suppressor. BAP1 functions in suppressing cell proliferation, yet its role in the DNA damage response pathway is less understood. In this study we characterized DNA damage-induced phosphorylation of BAP1 at serine 592 (pS592) and the cellular outcomes of this modification. In contrast to the majority of BAP1, pS592-BAP1 is predominantly dissociated from chromatin. Our findings support a model whereby stress induced phosphorylation functions to displace BAP1 from specific promoters. We hypothesize that this regulates the transcription of a subset of genes involved in the response to DNA damage.


Asunto(s)
Daño del ADN/fisiología , Proteínas Serina-Treonina Quinasas/metabolismo , Fase S , Serina/metabolismo , Proteínas Supresoras de Tumor/metabolismo , Ubiquitina Tiolesterasa/metabolismo , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Células HeLa , Humanos , Fosforilación/efectos de la radiación , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas , Unión Proteica , Dominios y Motivos de Interacción de Proteínas/genética , Fase S/genética , Fase S/efectos de la radiación , Células Tumorales Cultivadas , Proteínas Supresoras de Tumor/química , Proteínas Supresoras de Tumor/genética , Ubiquitina Tiolesterasa/química , Ubiquitina Tiolesterasa/genética , Rayos Ultravioleta
11.
Cell Biochem Biophys ; 60(1-2): 3-11, 2011 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21484256

RESUMEN

BRCA1-associated protein-1 (BAP1) is a 729 residue, nuclear-localized deubiquitinating enzyme (DUB) that displays tumor suppressor properties in the BAP1-null NCI-H226 lung carcinoma cell line. Studies that have altered BAP1 cellular levels or enzymatic activity have reported defects in cell cycle progression, notably at the G1/S transition. Recently BAP1 was shown to associate with the transcriptional regulator host cell factor 1 (HCF-1). The BAP1/HCF-1 interaction is mediated by the HCF-1 Kelch domain and an HCF-1 binding motif (HBM) within BAP1. HCF-1 is modified with ubiquitin in vivo, and ectopic studies suggest BAP1 deubiquitinates HCF-1. HCF-1 is a chromatin-associated protein thought to both activate and repress transcription by linking appropriate histone-modifying enzymes to a subset of transcription factors. One known role of HCF-1 is to promote cell cycle progression at the G1/S boundary by recruiting H3K4 histone methyltransferases to the E2F1 transcription factor so that genes required for S-phase can be transcribed. Given the robust associations between BAP1/HCF-1 and HCF-1/E2Fs, it is reasonable to speculate that BAP1 influences cell proliferation at G1/S by co-regulating transcription from HCF-1/E2F-governed promoters.


Asunto(s)
Ciclo Celular/fisiología , Factor de Transcripción E2F1/metabolismo , Factor C1 de la Célula Huésped/metabolismo , Proteínas Supresoras de Tumor/metabolismo , Ubiquitina Tiolesterasa/metabolismo , Ciclo Celular/genética , Línea Celular Tumoral , Proliferación Celular , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Humanos , Regiones Promotoras Genéticas/genética , Unión Proteica , Proteínas Supresoras de Tumor/genética , Ubiquitina Tiolesterasa/genética
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