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Peroxisomes are essential eukaryotic organelles that mediate various metabolic processes. Peroxisome import depends on a group of peroxisome biogenesis factors called peroxins, many of which are evolutionarily conserved. PEX2, PEX10, and PEX12 are three RING-finger-domain-containing integral membrane peroxins crucial for protein import. In yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisae), RING peroxins act as E3 ligases, facilitating the recycling of the peroxisome import receptor protein PEX5 through ubiquitination. In plants, RING peroxins are essential to plant vitality. To elucidate the mode of action of the plant RING peroxins, we employed in vitro assays to show that the Arabidopsis RING peroxins also have E3 ligase activities. We also identified a PEX2-interacting protein, DSK2b, which is a member of the ubiquitin receptor family known to function as shuttle factors ferrying polyubiquitinated substrates to the proteasome for degradation. DSK2b and its tandem duplicate DSK2a are localized in the cytosol and the nucleus, and both interact with the RING domain of PEX2 and PEX12. DSK2 artificial microRNA lines did not display obvious defects in plant growth or peroxisomal processes, indicating functional redundancies among Arabidopsis ubiquitin receptor proteins. Our results suggest that Arabidopsis RING peroxins can function as E3 ligases and act together with the ubiquitin receptor protein DSK2 in the peroxisomal membrane-associated protein degradation system. 相似文献
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Peter Canning Christopher D. O. Cooper Tobias Krojer James W. Murray Ashley C. W. Pike Apirat Chaikuad Tracy Keates Chancievan Thangaratnarajah Viktorija Hojzan Brian D. Marsden Opher Gileadi Stefan Knapp Frank von Delft Alex N. Bullock 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2013,288(11):7803-7814
Cullin-RING ligases are multisubunit E3 ubiquitin ligases that recruit substrate-specific adaptors to catalyze protein ubiquitylation. Cul3-based Cullin-RING ligases are uniquely associated with BTB adaptors that incorporate homodimerization, Cul3 assembly, and substrate recognition into a single multidomain protein, of which the best known are BTB-BACK-Kelch domain proteins, including KEAP1. Cul3 assembly requires a BTB protein “3-box” motif, analogous to the F-box and SOCS box motifs of other Cullin-based E3s. To define the molecular basis for this assembly and the overall architecture of the E3, we determined the crystal structures of the BTB-BACK domains of KLHL11 both alone and in complex with Cul3, along with the Kelch domain structures of KLHL2 (Mayven), KLHL7, KLHL12, and KBTBD5. We show that Cul3 interaction is dependent on a unique N-terminal extension sequence that packs against the 3-box in a hydrophobic groove centrally located between the BTB and BACK domains. Deletion of this N-terminal region results in a 30-fold loss in affinity. The presented data offer a model for the quaternary assembly of this E3 class that supports the bivalent capture of Nrf2 and reveals potential new sites for E3 inhibitor design. 相似文献
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Francis Edwin Kimberly Anderson Tarun B. Patel 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2010,285(1):255-264
Sprouty (Spry) proteins are important regulators of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling in development and disease. Alterations in cellular Spry content have been associated with certain forms of cancers and also in cardiovascular diseases. Thus, understanding the mechanisms that regulate cellular Spry levels are important. Herein, we demonstrate that Spry1 and Spry2, but not Spry3 or Spry4, associate with the HECT domain family E3 ubiquitin ligase, Nedd4. The Spry2/Nedd4 association involves the WW domains of Nedd4 and requires phosphorylation of the Mnk2 kinase sites, Ser112 and Ser121, on Spry2. The phospho-Ser112/121 region on Spry2 that binds WW domains of Nedd4 is a novel non-canonical WW domain binding region that does not contain Pro residues after phospho-Ser. Endogenous and overexpressed Nedd4 polyubiquitinate Spry2 via Lys48 on ubiquitin and decrease its stability. Silencing of endogenous Nedd4 increased the cellular Spry2 content and attenuated fibroblast growth factor-elicited ERK1/2 activation that was reversed when elevations in Spry2 levels were prevented by Spry2-specific small interfering RNA. Mnk2 silencing decreased Spry2-Nedd4 interactions and also augmented the ability of Spry2 to inhibit fibroblast growth factor signaling. This is the first report demonstrating the regulation of cellular Spry content and its ability to modulate receptor tyrosine kinase signaling by a HECT domain-containing E3 ubiquitin ligase. 相似文献
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Adam Kotorashvili Scott J. Russo Surafel Mulugeta Susan Guttentag Michael F. Beers 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2009,284(24):16667-16678
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Kaleena M. Bernardi Jeffrey M. Williams Marjolein Kikkert Sjaak van Voorden Emmanuel J. Wiertz Yihong Ye Billy Tsai 《Molecular biology of the cell》2010,21(1):140-151
To cause disease, cholera toxin (CT) is transported from the cell surface to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lumen where the catalytic CTA1 subunit retro-translocates to the cytosol to induce pathological water secretion. Two retro-translocon components are the Derlins and ER-associated multi-spanning E3 ubiquitin ligases including Hrd1 and gp78. We demonstrated previously that Derlin-1 facilitates CTA1 retro-translocation. However, as CTA1 is neither ubiquitinated on lysines nor at its N-terminus, the role of E3 ligases in toxin retro-translocation is unclear. Here, we show that expression of mutant Hrd1 and gp78 and a mutant E2-conjugating enzyme dedicated to retro-translocation (Ube2g2) decrease CTA1 retro-translocation. Hrd1 knockdown also attenuated toxin retro-translocation. Binding studies demonstrate that Hrd1 and gp78 interact with CT and protein disulfide isomerase, an ER chaperone that unfolds CTA1 to initiate translocation. Moreover, we find that the toxin''s association with Hrd1 and gp78 is blocked by dominant-negative Derlin-1, suggesting that CT is targeted initially to Derlin-1 and then transferred to Hrd1 and gp78. These data demonstrate a role of the E3 ubiquitin ligases in CTA1 retro-translocation, implicate a sequence of events experienced by the toxin on the ER membrane, and raise the possibility that ubiquitination is involved in the transport process. 相似文献
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It has been known for some time that the human adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5) E4orf6 and E1B55K proteins work in concert to degrade p53 and to regulate selective export of late viral mRNAs during productive infection. Both of these functions rely on the formation by the Ad5 E4orf6 protein of a cullin 5-based E3 ubiquitin ligase complex containing elongins B and C. E1B55K is believed to function as the substrate recognition module for the complex and, in addition to p53, Mre11 and DNA ligase IV have also been identified as substrates. To discover additional substrates we have taken a proteomic approach by using two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis to detect cellular proteins that decrease significantly in amount in p53-null H1299 human lung carcinoma cells after expression of E1B55K and E4orf6 using adenovirus vectors. Several species were detected and identified by mass spectroscopy, and for one of these, integrin α3, we went on in a parallel study to confirm it as a bone fide substrate of the complex (F. Dallaire et al., J. Virol. 83:5329-5338, 2009). Although the system has some limitations, it may still be of some general use in identifying candidate substrates of any viral cullin-based E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, and we suggest a series of criteria for substrate validation.During the past decade protein degradation has become increasingly recognized as a critical mechanism by which cells regulate a number of fundamental processes (reviewed in references 37, 57, and 59). Degradation frequently involves one of a variety of E3 ubiquitin ligase complexes in which a substrate recognition component introduces the target protein for ubiquitination and subsequent degradation by proteasomes (reviewed in reference 59). Several types of these complexes involve a member of the cullin family (reviewed in reference 59), and a considerable amount of information is known about those containing Cul2 or Cul5. In these cases the substrate recognition module is linked via elongins B and C to a subcomplex containing Cul2 or Cul5 and the RING protein Rbx1 (34, 58). This complex interacts with an E2 conjugating enzyme, often either Cdc34 or Ubc5, to conjugate ubiquitin chains to the substrate (44). With both Cul2- and Cul5-based complexes interaction with elongins B and C occurs via a single BC box sequence (42). The presence of either Cul2 or Cul5 is generally determined through the presence in the substrate recognition protein of specific Cul2- or Cul5-box sequences (35).Many viruses have evolved to encode products that inhibit cellular E3 ligases to protect important viral or cellular species or, in some cases, that highjack these cellular complexes to target key substrates for degradation, including components of cellular host defenses, to facilitate the infectious cycle (reviewed in reference 4). These strategies are quite common among the small DNA tumor viruses (7), and one of the most studied examples is the complex formed by the human adenovirus E4orf6 and E1B55K proteins. These proteins have been known for some time to interact (69) and to reduce the levels of the p53 tumor suppressor in infected cells (14, 47, 48, 62, 72, 73). In addition, they were shown to function in concert to block nuclear export of cellular mRNAs late in infection (2, 6, 29, 60) and to enhance the selective export of late viral mRNAs (2, 26, 29, 60, 78). Our group showed that the human adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5) E4orf6 product interacts with several proteins (13), including components of what was at the time a unique Cul5-based E3 ubiquitin ligase containing elongins B and C and Rbx1 that degrades p53 (61). Curiously, Ad5 E4orf6 contains three BC boxes that we believe make it highly efficient in highjacking cellular elongin B/C complexes (8, 17, 41). The mechanism of selective recruitment of Cul5 by the Ad5 complex remains unknown as E4orf6 lacks a Cul5-box (17, 41). E1B55K seems to function as the substrate recognition module and, of considerable interest, both its association with E4orf6 and induction of selective late viral mRNA transport was found to depend on formation of the E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, suggesting that additional degradation substrates must exist (8, 9). This idea is not surprising since viruses, especially the small DNA tumor viruses, often evolve gene products that target multiple critical cellular pathways (32). In fact two additional E1B55K-binding substrates have now been identified, Mre11 from the MRN DNA repair complex (8, 75), and DNA ligase IV (3), the degradation of which prevent formation of viral genome concatemers, thus enhancing packaging of progeny DNA. Degradation of p53 has been suggested to promote enhanced progeny virus production by preventing the early apoptotic death of infected cells due to the stabilization of p53 by the viral E1A products (reviewed in reference 66). Nevertheless, degradation of these substrates seems unlikely to explain the observed effects on mRNA transport, suggesting that still more substrates remain to be identified. Although the studies described in the present report were in part launched to identify such substrates, as will become clear below, these targets remain to be identified.In an attempt to identify new substrates of the Ad5 E4orf6/E1B55K E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, a proteomics-based approach was initiated involving two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) analysis and subsequent mass spectrometry. As is well known, this technique has the advantage of improved sensitivity and accuracy provided by its ability to separate samples under two different conditions on a single gel together with a reference sample, thus reducing significantly the analytical coefficient of variation. It allows the quantification of differentially abundant proteins in complex biological samples, providing a tool to detect decreases in the levels of proteins in the cell due to targeted proteolytic degradation. We report here our attempts to identify substrates of the Ad5 E4orf6/E1B55K complex by comparing the proteomes of human non-small cell lung carcinoma H1299 cells expressing, by means of adenovirus vectors, both E1B55K and E4orf6 proteins or E4orf6 protein alone. Ten candidate proteins were identified, most having functions seemingly unrelated to our current understanding of the roles of the E4orf6/E1B55K complex. At least three showed promising features characteristic of substrates, and one has now been confirmed in a parallel study to be a bone fide E4orf6/E1B55K substrate (20). We suggest that this approach could be utilized to identify candidate substrates, among relatively high abundance proteins, that are degraded by other viral cullin-based E3 ubiquitin ligase complexes. 相似文献
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Qiong Lin Jian Wang Chandra Childress Marius Sudol David J. Carey Wannian Yang 《Molecular and cellular biology》2010,30(6):1541-1554
ACK (activated Cdc42-associated tyrosine kinase) (also Tnk2) is an ubiquitin-binding protein and plays an important role in ligand-induced and ubiquitination-mediated degradation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). Here we report that ACK is ubiquitinated by HECT E3 ubiquitin ligase Nedd4-1 and degraded along with EGFR in response to EGF stimulation. ACK interacts with Nedd4-1 through a conserved PPXY WW-binding motif. The WW3 domain in Nedd4-1 is critical for binding to ACK. Although ACK binds to both Nedd4-1 and Nedd4-2 (also Nedd4L), Nedd4-1 is the E3 ubiquitin ligase for ubiquitination of ACK in cells. Interestingly, deletion of the sterile alpha motif (SAM) domain at the N terminus dramatically reduced the ubiquitination of ACK by Nedd4-1, while deletion of the Uba domain dramatically enhanced the ubiquitination. Use of proteasomal and lysosomal inhibitors demonstrated that EGF-induced ACK degradation is processed by lysosomes, not proteasomes. RNA interference (RNAi) knockdown of Nedd4-1, not Nedd4-2, inhibited degradation of both EGFR and ACK, and overexpression of ACK mutants that are deficient in either binding to or ubiquitination by Nedd4-1 blocked EGF-induced degradation of EGFR. Our findings suggest an essential role of Nedd4-1 in regulation of EGFR degradation through interaction with and ubiquitination of ACK.Activated Cdc42-associated tyrosine kinase (ACK) (also Tnk2) is a member of the type VIII tyrosine kinase family. Activation of ACK, including both ACK1 and ACK2, occurs in response to signaling of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor, insulin receptor, Gas-6 receptor (Mer), M3 muscarinic receptor, integrins, or proteoglycan (3, 7, 11, 23, 26, 30, 44, 47). In Drosophila, D-ACK mediates the function of Cdc42 in dorsal closure during embryonic development (31). The ACK homologue, Ark-1, in Caenorhabditis elegans negatively regulates EGF signaling (15).A number of studies suggest a role for ACK in EGFR degradation. ACK1 and ACK2, two alternatively spliced isoforms, possess a highly conserved clathrin-binding motif and interact with clathrin (37, 45). Overexpression of ACK2 severely impairs transferrin receptor endocytosis, causes aberrant localization of AP-2, and induces changes in clathrin assembly. Furthermore, ACK2 interacts with sorting nexin 9 (SNX9, also named SH3PX1), a member of the sorting nexin family, via its proline-rich domain 1 and phosphorylates SNX9 to facilitate the degradation of EGF receptors (22). In C. elegans, Ark-1 genetically interacts with UNC101, the homologue of mammalian clathrin-associated protein AP47, and SLI-1, the homologue of mammalian Cbl that is an E3 ubiquitin ligase for ubiquitination of EGFR, and negatively regulates EGFR signaling (15).Our previous studies showed that ACK1 interacts with EGFR upon EGF stimulation via a region at the carboxyl terminus, designated the EGFR-binding domain (EBD), which is highly homologous to the EGFR/ErbB2-binding domain of Gene-33/Mig-6/RALT (32, 43). The interaction of ACK1 with EGFR is dependent on kinase activity and tyrosine phosphorylation of EGFR. Immunofluorescent staining using anti-EGFR and GFP-ACK1 indicates that ACK1 is colocalized with EGFR on large vacuolar structures upon EGF stimulation. Suppression of the expression of ACK1 by ACK-RNA interference (RNAi) inhibits ligand-induced degradation of EGFR, suggesting that ACK1 plays an important role in the regulation of EGFR degradation in cells. Furthermore, we identified ACK1 as an ubiquitin-binding protein. Through an ubiquitin association (Uba) domain at the carboxyl terminus, ACK1 is capable of interacting with both poly- and monoubiquitin. Overexpression of an Uba domain deletion mutant of ACK1 blocked the ligand-dependent degradation of EGFR, suggesting that ACK1 regulates EGFR degradation via its Uba domain. Thus, ACK1 senses EGF signaling and regulates degradation of EGFR.EGF-induced degradation of EGFR is mediated by ubiquitination (16). The ubiquitination of EGFR is activated upon EGF stimulation by recruiting the RING family E3 ubiquitin ligase Cbl to pY1045 (20, 21). This ubiquitination functions as a sorting signal for transporting EGFR to lysosomes for degradation (14). Nedd4, the HECT domain-containing E3 ubiquitin ligase, is also involved in the regulation of EGFR trafficking by ubiquitination of endocytic or vesicle sorting proteins (28). For example, it has been observed that Nedd4 ubiquitinates Cbl, Eps15, Tsg101, Hrs, and secretory carrier membrane proteins (SCAMPs) and participates in the processes of EGFR endocytosis and degradation (1, 18, 25, 42). However, exactly how Nedd4 engages in the EGFR degradation process in response to EGF stimulation is not known.In this report, we show that EGF stimulation induces ACK degradation. This degradation is associated with ubiquitination of ACK. Nedd4-1, but not Nedd4-2, is identified as the E3 ubiquitin ligase for ubiquitination of ACK. Furthermore, EGF-induced degradation of ACK is EGFR activation dependent and processed by lysosomes. RNAi knockdown and mutational analysis demonstrated that Nedd4-1 and Nedd4-1-catalyzed ubiquitination of ACK are required for EGF-induced degradation of EGFR and ACK. Our findings suggest a new mechanism in regulation of EGFR degradation. 相似文献
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The Ubiquitin Receptor DA1 Interacts with the E3 Ubiquitin Ligase DA2 to Regulate Seed and Organ Size in Arabidopsis 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Tian Xia Na Li Jack Dumenil Jie Li Andrei Kamenski Michael W. Bevan Fan Gao Yunhai Li 《The Plant cell》2013,25(9):3347-3359
Seed size in higher plants is determined by the coordinated growth of the embryo, endosperm, and maternal tissue. Several factors that act maternally to regulate seed size have been identified, such as AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR2, APETALA2, KLUH, and DA1, but the genetic and molecular mechanisms of these factors in seed size control are almost totally unknown. We previously demonstrated that the ubiquitin receptor DA1 acts synergistically with the E3 ubiquitin ligase ENHANCER1 OF DA1 (EOD1)/BIG BROTHER to regulate the final size of seeds in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we describe another RING-type protein with E3 ubiquitin ligase activity, encoded by DA2, which regulates seed size by restricting cell proliferation in the maternal integuments of developing seeds. The da2-1 mutant forms large seeds, while overexpression of DA2 decreases seed size of wild-type plants. Overexpression of rice (Oryza sativa) GRAIN WIDTH AND WEIGHT2, a homolog of DA2, restricts seed growth in Arabidopsis. Genetic analyses show that DA2 functions synergistically with DA1 to regulate seed size, but does so independently of EOD1. Further results reveal that DA2 interacts physically with DA1 in vitro and in vivo. Therefore, our findings define the genetic and molecular mechanisms of three ubiquitin-related proteins DA1, DA2, and EOD1 in seed size control and indicate that they are promising targets for crop improvement. 相似文献
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LeNoue-Newton M Watkins GR Zou P Germane KL McCorvey LR Wadzinski BE Spiller BW 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2011,286(20):17665-17671
Protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) is regulated through a variety of mechanisms, including post-translational modifications and association with regulatory proteins. Alpha4 is one such regulatory protein that binds the PP2A catalytic subunit (PP2Ac) and protects it from polyubiquitination and degradation. Alpha4 is a multidomain protein with a C-terminal domain that binds Mid1, a putative E3 ubiquitin ligase, and an N-terminal domain containing the PP2Ac-binding site. In this work, we present the structure of the N-terminal domain of mammalian Alpha4 determined by x-ray crystallography and use double electron-electron resonance spectroscopy to show that it is a flexible tetratricopeptide repeat-like protein. Structurally, Alpha4 differs from its yeast homolog, Tap42, in two important ways: 1) the position of the helix containing the PP2Ac-binding residues is in a more open conformation, showing flexibility in this region; and 2) Alpha4 contains a ubiquitin-interacting motif. The effects of wild-type and mutant Alpha4 on PP2Ac ubiquitination and stability were examined in mammalian cells by performing tandem ubiquitin-binding entity precipitations and cycloheximide chase experiments. Our results reveal that both the C-terminal Mid1-binding domain and the PP2Ac-binding determinants are required for Alpha4-mediated protection of PP2Ac from polyubiquitination and degradation. 相似文献
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Nicole St-Denis Gagan D. Gupta Zhen Yuan Lin Beatriz Gonzalez-Badillo Laurence Pelletier Anne-Claude Gingras 《Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP》2015,14(4):946-960
The myotubularins are a family of phosphatases that dephosphorylate the phosphatidylinositols phosphatidylinositol-3-phosphate and phosphatidylinositol-3,5-phosphate. Several family members are mutated in disease, yet the biological functions of the majority of myotubularins remain unknown. To gain insight into the roles of the individual enzymes, we have used affinity purification coupled to mass spectrometry to identify protein–protein interactions for the myotubularins. The myotubularin interactome comprises 66 high confidence (false discovery rate ≤1%) interactions, including 18 pairwise interactions between individual myotubularins. The results reveal a number of potential signaling contexts for this family of enzymes, including an intriguing, novel role for myotubularin-related protein 3 and myotubularin-related protein 4 in the regulation of abscission, the final step of mitosis in which the membrane bridge remaining between two daughter cells is cleaved. Both depletion and overexpression of either myotubularin-related protein 3 or myotubularin-related protein 4 result in abnormal midbody morphology and cytokinesis failure. Interestingly, myotubularin-related protein 3 and myotubularin-related protein 4 do not exert their effects through lipid regulation at the midbody, but regulate abscission during early mitosis, by interacting with the mitotic kinase polo-like kinase 1, and with centrosomal protein of 55 kDa (CEP55), an important regulator of abscission. Structure-function analysis reveals that, consistent with known intramyotubularin interactions, myotubularin-related protein 3 and myotubularin-related protein 4 interact through their respective coiled coil domains. The interaction between myotubularin-related protein 3 and polo-like kinase 1 relies on the divergent, nonlipid binding Fab1, YOTB, Vac1, and EEA1 domain of myotubularin-related protein 3, and myotubularin-related protein 4 interacts with CEP55 through a short GPPXXXY motif, analogous to endosomal sorting complex required for transport-I components. Disruption of any of these interactions results in abscission failure, by disrupting the proper recruitment of CEP55, and subsequently, of endosomal sorting complex required for transport-I, to the midbody. Our data suggest that myotubularin-related protein 3 and myotubularin-related protein 4 may act as a bridge between CEP55 and polo-like kinase 1, ensuring proper CEP55 phosphorylation and regulating CEP55 recruitment to the midbody. This work provides a novel role for myotubularin-related protein 3/4 heterodimers, and highlights the temporal and spatial complexity of the regulation of cytokinesis.The myotubularins are a subfamily of protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs)1, consisting of sixteen conserved proteins. Despite containing the conserved C(X)5R catalytic motif found in all protein tyrosine phosphatases, myotubularins harbor active sites that do not dephosphorylate tyrosine, but instead catalyze the conversion of the phosphatidylinositol-type lipids phosphatylinositol 3 phosphate (PI3P) and phosphatylinositol 3,5 phosphate (PI3,5P) to phosphatidylinositol (PI) and phosphatylinositol 5 phosphate (PI5P), respectively (1). Phosphatidylinositols are important molecules in a variety of processes, and as enzymatic regulators, myotubularins may function in cell proliferation, differentiation, survival, and cytoskeletal and junctional dynamics (1, 2). Of the sixteen myotubularins, only nine are active enzymes (supplemental Fig. S1A), as several lack catalytic cysteine residues (3). Myotubularins interact extensively with each other, and interactions between active and inactive pairs are frequent (4). It is thought that inactive myotubularins regulate the activity, substrate binding, and/or localization of their active binding partners (2).Several myotubularins are linked to human disease. Myotubularin (MTM1), the first reported family member, is mutated in X-linked centronuclear myopathy (5), and Myotubularin related protein 14 (MTMR14) is mutated in autosomal centronuclear myopathy (6). Mutations in the active MTMR2 or its inactive binding partner, SET binding factor (SBF)2 (MTMR13), cause Charcot-Marie-Tooth diseases CMT4A and CMT4B, respectively (7–9). MTMR7 and MTMR9 have been associated with metabolic syndrome and obesity (MTMR9) (10, 11), epilepsy (MTMR7/9) (12), and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (MTMR7) (13). In addition, misregulation of the active phosphatase MTMR3 contributes to susceptibility to gastric and colon carcinomas (14), oral cancer (15), and lung cancer (16), and contributes to metastasis (15, 17). Aberrant expression of the inactive MTMR11 has been observed in acute myeloid leukemia (18), acute lymphocytic leukemia (19), and Her2-positive breast cancer (20). Generally, myotubularins are thought to integrate different cellular pathways, through both phosphatidylinositol regulation and protein–protein interactions (2). Despite their proposed involvement in a variety of cellular processes as well as disease states, many myotubularins remain poorly characterized, with their precise cellular functions not yet elucidated, and the pathological significance of those functions still unknown.To gain insight on the biological functions of myotubularin family phosphatases, we have used affinity purification coupled to mass spectrometry (AP-MS) to identify protein–protein interactions for each myotubularin. The results expand upon the known repertoire of intra-myotubularin interactions, and, critically, identify specific novel interactions for individual myotubularins, providing valuable clues toward their respective functions. Further investigation revealed an unexpected role for MTMR3 and MTMR4 in abscission (21), the fission event at the end of cytokinesis that severs the final membrane link between divided daughter cells. Future studies of additional identified protein–protein interactions will undoubtedly illuminate the cellular roles of myotubularin family phosphatases. 相似文献
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Jelena Djokic Christine Fagotto-Kaufmann Rainer Bartels Valentin Nelea Dieter P. Reinhardt 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2013,288(31):22821-22835
Extracellular short fibulins, fibulin-3, -4, and -5, are components of the elastic fiber/microfibril system and are implicated in the formation and homeostasis of elastic tissues. In this study, we report new structural and functional properties of the short fibulins. Full-length human short fibulins were recombinantly expressed in human embryonic kidney cells and purified by immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography. All three fibulins showed various levels of degradation after the purification procedure. N-terminal sequencing revealed that all three fibulins are highly susceptible to proteolysis within the N-terminal linker region of the first calcium-binding epidermal growth factor domain. Proteolytic susceptibility of the linker correlated with its length. Exposure of these fibulins to matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-1, -2, -3, -7, -9, and -12 resulted in similar proteolytic fragments with MMP-7 and -12 being the most potent proteases. Fibulin-3 proteolysis was almost completely inhibited in cell culture by the addition of 25 μm doxycycline (a broad spectrum MMP inhibitor). Reducible fibulin-4 dimerization and multimerization were consistently observed by SDS-PAGE, Western blotting, and mass spectrometry. Atomic force microscopy identified monomers, dimers, and multimers in purified fibulin-4 preparations with sizes of ∼10–15, ∼20–25, and ∼30–50 nm, respectively. All short fibulins strongly adhered to human fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells. Although only fibulin-5 has an RGD integrin binding site, all short fibulins adhere at a similar level to the respective cells. Solid phase binding assays detected strong calcium-dependent binding of the short fibulins to immobilized heparin, suggesting that these fibulins may bind cell surface-located heparan sulfate. 相似文献
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Barbara Czub Amna Z. Shah Giovanna Alfano Przemys?aw M. Kruczek Christina F. Chakarova Shomi S. Bhattacharya 《PloS one》2016,11(2)
The significance of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) for protein degradation has been highlighted in the context of neurodegenerative diseases, including retinal dystrophies. TOPORS, a dual E3 ubiquitin and SUMO1 ligase, forms a component of the UPS and selected substrates for its enzymatic activities, such as DJ-1/PARK7 and APOBEC2, are important for neuronal as well as retinal homeostasis, respectively. TOPORS is ubiquitously expressed, yet its mutations are only known to result in autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa. We performed a yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) screen of a human retinal cDNA library in order to identify interacting protein partners of TOPORS from the retina, and thus begin delineating the putative disease mechanism(s) associated with the retina-specific phenotype resulting from mutations in TOPORS. The screen led to isolation of the 26 S protease regulatory subunit 4 (P26s4/ PSMC1), an ATPase indispensable for correct functioning of UPS-mediated proteostasis. The interaction between endogenous TOPORS and P26s4 proteins was validated by co-immuno-precipitation from mammalian cell extracts and further characterised by immunofluorescent co-localisation studies in cell lines and retinal sections. Findings from hTERT-RPE1 and 661W cells demonstrated that TOPORS and P26s4 co-localise at the centrosome in cultured cells. Immunofluorescent staining of mouse retinae revealed a strong P26s4 reactivity at the interface between retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) layer and the photoreceptors outer segments (OS). This finding leads us to speculate that P26s4, along with TOPORS, may have a role(s) in RPE phagocytosis, in addition to contributing to the overall photoreceptor and retinal homeostasis via the UPS. 相似文献