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Robust cullin-RING ligase function is established by a multiplicity of poly-ubiquitylation pathways.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Reichermeier, Kurt 
Scott, Daniel C 
Samentar, Lorena 
Coulombe-Huntington, Jasmin 

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.

Description

Funder: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft; FundRef: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004189


Funder: Canada Research Chairs; FundRef: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001804

Keywords

biochemistry, cell biology, chemical biology, cullin-RING ligase, human, protein degradation, ubiquitin, ubiquitin ligases, ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, Genome, Human, Humans, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit, Mass Spectrometry, Polyubiquitin, Signal Transduction, Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases, Ubiquitination

Journal Title

Elife

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2050-084X
2050-084X

Volume Title

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Sponsorship
National Institutes of Health (2 R15 GM117555-02)
National Institutes of Health (R37GM069530)
National Institutes of Health (P30CA021765)
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital (ALSAC)
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (FDN 143277)
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (FDN-167277)
Institute for Data Valorisation (IVADO) (Postdoctoral Fellowship)
Genome Canada (Genomics Technology Platform)