Structural plasticity of D3-D14 ubiquitin ligase in strigolactone signalling.
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Authors
Shabek, Nitzan
Ticchiarelli, Fabrizio
Mao, Haibin
Hinds, Thomas R
Zheng, Ning
Publication Date
2018-11Journal Title
Nature
ISSN
0028-0836
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Volume
563
Issue
7733
Pages
652-656
Language
eng
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Physical Medium
Print-Electronic
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Shabek, N., Ticchiarelli, F., Mao, H., Hinds, T. R., Leyser, O., & Zheng, N. (2018). Structural plasticity of D3-D14 ubiquitin ligase in strigolactone signalling.. Nature, 563 (7733), 652-656. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0743-5
Abstract
The strigolactones, a class of plant hormones, regulate many aspects of plant physiology. In the inhibition of shoot branching, the α/β hydrolase D14-which metabolizes strigolactone-interacts with the F-box protein D3 to ubiquitinate and degrade the transcription repressor D53. Despite the fact that multiple modes of interaction between D14 and strigolactone have recently been determined, how the hydrolase functions with D3 to mediate hormone-dependent D53 ubiquitination remains unknown. Here we show that D3 has a C-terminal α-helix that can switch between two conformational states. The engaged form of this α-helix facilitates the binding of D3 and D14 with a hydrolysed strigolactone intermediate, whereas the dislodged form can recognize unmodified D14 in an open conformation and inhibits its enzymatic activity. The D3 C-terminal α-helix enables D14 to recruit D53 in a strigolactone-dependent manner, which in turn activates the hydrolase. By revealing the structural plasticity of the SCFD3-D14 ubiquitin ligase, our results suggest a mechanism by which the E3 coordinates strigolactone signalling and metabolism.
Keywords
Heterocyclic Compounds, 3-Ring, Lactones, Models, Molecular, Multienzyme Complexes, Oryza, Plant Growth Regulators, Plant Proteins, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Secondary, SKP Cullin F-Box Protein Ligases, Signal Transduction, Structure-Activity Relationship, Ubiquitin, Ubiquitination
Sponsorship
Gatsby Charitable Foundation
Funder references
Gatsby Charitable Foundation (GAT3395/GL)
European Research Council (294514)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0743-5
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/286713
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