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Query: EC:6.3.2.19 (ubiquitin-protein ligase)
799 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Covalent ligation of multiubiquitin chains targets eukaryotic proteins for degradation. Ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2(25K) utilizes isolated ubiquitin as the substrate for synthesis of such chains, in which successive ubiquitin units are linked by isopeptide bonds involving the side chain of Lys-48 of one ubiquitin and the COOH group of Gly-76 of the next. During continuous synthesis of multiubiquitin chains in the presence of purified ubiquitin-activating enzyme and E2(25K), there was a slight discrimination against radioiodinated ubiquitin (2.3-fold reduction in specific radioactivity of diubiquitin relative to value expected for no discrimination). Single-turnover experiments employing stoichiometrically iodinated ubiquitin derivatives indicated that E2(25K) discriminates extremely strongly (greater than 20-fold reduction in kcat/Km for diubiquitin synthesis) against ubiquitin that is monoiodinated at Tyr-59. The modest overall selection effect observed in continuous reactions is in part due to the occurrence of discrimination only when iodotyrosylubiquitin is the acceptor (Lys-48 donor) in diubiquitin synthesis; iodotyrosylubiquitin is kinetically competent when it is the species being transferred to native ubiquitin. The competence as acceptor of a site-directed mutant form of ubiquitin bearing a Tyr to Phe substitution at position 59 indicated that discrimination against iodotyrosylubiquitin by E2(25K) is not due to loss of the hydrogen-bonding interactions of Tyr-59. Rather, iodotyrosylubiquitin may be unable to react with the ubiquitin adduct of E2(25K) for steric reasons. Discrimination against iodotyrosylubiquitin as acceptor is unique to E2(25K) among three enzymes surveyed: iodotyrosylubiquitin is a fully competent acceptor in diubiquitin synthesis catalyzed by E2(25K) and is also utilized for multiubiquitin chain synthesis by E2(14K) and ubiquitin-protein ligase. These findings should assist in the design of future studies concerning E2(25K) structure and function.
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PMID:Iodination of tyrosine 59 of ubiquitin selectively blocks ubiquitin's acceptor activity in diubiquitin synthesis catalyzed by E2(25K). 132 Nov 47

Ubiquitin, a 76 residue protein, occurs in eukaryotic cells either free or covalently joined via its carboxyl terminus to epsilon-amino groups of lysine residues in a wide variety of protein species. Previous work has shown that ubiquitin-protein conjugates are preferred substrates in vitro for a non-lysosomal ATP-dependent proteolytic pathway, suggesting that ubiquitin may function as a signal for attack by proteinases specific for ubiquitin-protein conjugates. One strategy to define the potential significance of the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic pathway is to identify conditional mutants in the pathway. ts85 is a mouse derived cell-cycle mutant which has been shown to lose uH2A, a specific ubiquitin-histone H2A conjugate, at the nonpermissive temperature. We show that the loss of uH2A from ts85 cells is due to reduced ubiquitin-protein conjugation. We further show that the reduced conjugation is due to the specific thermolability of ubiquitin activating enzyme, E1, one of the three enzymic components of the ubiquitin-protein ligase system. We therefore proceeded to test whether the degradation of short-lived proteins is also temperature-sensitive in ts85 cells. Indeed, while more than 70% of the prelabeled abnormal (amino acid analog-containing) proteins or puromycyl peptides are degraded within 4 hours at the permissive temperature in the mutant (ts85), wild type (FM3A), and revertant (ts85R-MN3) cells, less than 15% of these proteins are degraded in ts85 cells at the nonpermissive temperature. In contrast, the rate of degradation of these proteins does not change significantly in either wild-type or revertant cells between permissive and nonpermissive temperatures. Degradation of normal short-lived proteins is also specifically temperature-sensitive in ts85 cells. Immunochemical analysis shows a strong and specific reduction in ubiquitin-protein conjugate levels in vivo at the nonpermissive temperature in ts85 cells. Taken together, our in vitro and in vivo findings with ts85 cells demonstrate that the degradation of the bulk of short-lived proteins in this higher eukaryotic cell is accomplished through a ubiquitin-mediated pathway.
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PMID:Mammalian cell cycle mutant defective in intracellular protein degradation and ubiquitin-protein conjugation. 299 83

Previous studies have indicated that at least part of the selection of proteins for degradation takes place at a binding site on ubiquitin-protein ligase, to which the protein substrate is bound prior to ligation to ubiquitin. It was also shown that proteins with free NH2-terminal alpha-NH2 groups bind better to this site than proteins with blocked NH2 termini (Hershko, A., Heller, H., Eytan, E., and Reiss, Y. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 11992-11999). In the present study, we used simple derivatives of amino acids, such as methyl esters, hydroxamates, or dipeptides, to examine the question of whether the protein binding site of the ligase is able to distinguish between different NH2-terminal residues of proteins. Based on specific patterns of inhibition of the binding to ligase by these derivatives, three types of protein substrates could be distinguished. Type I substrates are proteins that have a basic NH2-terminal residue (such as ribonuclease and lysozyme); these are specifically inhibited by derivatives of the 3 basic amino acids (His, Arg, and Lys) with respect to degradation, ligation to ubiquitin, and binding to ligase. Type II substrates (such as beta-lactoglobulin or pepsinogen, that have a Leu residue at the NH2 terminus) are not affected by the above compounds, but are specifically inhibited by derivatives of bulky hydrophobic amino acids (Leu, Trp, Phe, and Tyr). In these cases, the amino acid derivatives apparently act as specific inhibitors of the binding of the NH2-terminal residue of proteins, as indicated by the following observations: (a) derivatives in which the alpha-NH2 group is blocked were inactive and (b) in dipeptides, the inhibitory amino acid residue had to be at the NH2-terminal position. An additional class (Type III) of substrates comprises proteins that have neither basic nor bulky hydrophobic NH2-terminal amino acid residues; the binding of these proteins is not inhibited by homologous amino acid derivatives that have NH2-terminal residues similar to that of the protein. It is concluded that Type I and Type II proteins bind to distinct and separate subsites of the ligase, specific for basic or bulky hydrophobic NH2-terminal residues, respectively. On the other hand, Type III proteins apparently predominantly interact with the ligase at regions of the protein molecule other than the NH2-terminal residue.
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PMID:Specificity of binding of NH2-terminal residue of proteins to ubiquitin-protein ligase. Use of amino acid derivatives to characterize specific binding sites. 334 27

A prerequisite for the selective degradation of intracellular proteins by the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic pathway is the attachment of a chain of ubiquitin monomers to the targeted protein. In these multiubiquitin chains, the carboxyl-terminal glycine 76 of ubiquitin is linked via an isopeptide bond to the epsilon-amino group of lysine 48 in the adjacent ubiquitin. It remains to be determined whether these chains are preassembled and attached en masse to the target, are made by sequential conjugation of ubiquitin monomers to ubiquitins already linked to the protein, or both. Using the 20-kDa ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme TaUBC7 from wheat, we have generated free, glycine 76-->lysine 48-linked multiubiquitin chains (Ubqn), and have individually purified Ubqn species (n < or = 6) by anion-exchange, high pressure liquid chromatography. The migration of these chains during SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was indistinguishable from those of major ubiquitin immunoreactive proteins in cell lysates from a variety of eukaryotes suggesting that free, multiubiquitin chains are abundant in vivo. One of these chain members (Ubq2) was purified from wheat and was demonstrated via amino acid sequence analysis of tryptic fragments to consist of two ubiquitin monomers joined via a glycine 76-->lysine 48 linkage. We also show in vitro that purified Ubq2 and Ubq4 are competent in activation by ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1), in transfer to E2s, and in ubiquitin-protein ligase (E3)-independent conjugation to other Ubqn species and to histones H2A/B. These data demonstrate that multiubiquitin chains exist as free, functional structures in vivo and support the possibility that at least a portion of free ubiquitin is preassembled into multiubiquitin chains prior to its attachment to proteolytic substrates.
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PMID:Multiubiquitin chains linked through lysine 48 are abundant in vivo and are competent intermediates in the ubiquitin proteolytic pathway. 822 36

Covalent attachment of ubiquitin marks substrates for proteolysis, but features that identify ubiquitination targets such as chicken egg white lysozyme are poorly understood. Recognition of lysozyme first requires reduction of Cys-6 Cys-127, one of its four native disulfide bonds, and Cys-6,Cys-127-carboxymethylated (6,127-rcm) lysozyme can mimic this three-disulfide intermediate. The 6,127-rcm form of lysozyme is known to retain a substantially native-like conformation in solution, and we demonstrate that it is this folded structure that is recognized for ubiquitination. Because native lysozyme is not a substrate, differences between the native and three-disulfide structures must include features responsible for selective ubiquitination. The 1.9-A resolution crystal structure of 6,127-rcm-lysozyme, reported here, affords a view of this ubiquitin-dependent degradation substrate. Two conformers of 6,127-rcm-lysozyme were obtained in the crystal. These differ uniquely from crystal forms of native lysozyme by displacement of the C-terminal residues. The structures suggest that localized unfolding at the C terminus of three-disulfide lysozyme allows the complex of E3 alpha (ubiquitin-protein ligase) and E2 (ubiquitin-carrier protein) to bind to a surface that includes Lys-1 and the putative ubiquitination site Lys-13. From this we infer that the N-terminal and internal substrate recognition sites on the E3 alpha.E2 complex are separated by approximately 20 A.
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PMID:Crystal structure of a ubiquitin-dependent degradation substrate: a three-disulfide form of lysozyme. 838 11

The general amino acid permease, Gap1, of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is very active in cells grown on proline as the sole nitrogen source. Adding NH4+ to the medium triggers inactivation and degradation of the permease via a regulatory process involving Npi1p/Rsp5p, a ubiquitin-protein ligase. In this study, we describe several mutations affecting the C-terminal region of Gap1p that render the permease resistant to NH4(+)-induced inactivation. An in vivo isolated mutation (gap1pgr) causes a single Glu-->Lys substitution in an amino acid context similar to the DXKSS sequence involved in ubiquitination and endocytosis of the yeast alpha-factor receptor, Ste2p. Another replacement, substitution of two alanines for a di-leucine motif, likewise protects the Gap1 permease against NH4(+)-induced inactivation. In mammalian cells, such a motif is involved in the internalization of several cell-surface proteins. These data provide the first indication that a di-leucine motif influences the function of a plasma membrane protein in yeast. Mutagenesis of a putative phosphorylation site upstream from the di-leucine motif altered neither the activity nor the regulation of the permease. In contrast, deletion of the last eleven amino acids of Gap1p, a region conserved in other amino acid permeases, conferred resistance to NH4+ inactivation. Although the C-terminal region of Gap1p plays an important role in nitrogen control of activity, it was not sufficient to confer this regulation to two NH4(+)-insensitive permeases, namely the arginine (Can1p) and uracil (Fur4p) permeases.
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PMID:A C-terminal di-leucine motif and nearby sequences are required for NH4(+)-induced inactivation and degradation of the general amino acid permease, Gap1p, of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 917 53

We have recently reported that the yeast plasma membrane uracil permease undergoes cell-surface ubiquitination, which is dependent on the Npi1/Rsp5 ubiquitin-protein ligase. Ubiquitination of this permease, like that of some other transporters and receptors, signals endocytosis of the protein, leading to its subsequent vacuolar degradation. This process does not involve the proteasome, which binds and degrades ubiquitin-protein conjugates carrying Lys48-linked ubiquitin chains. The data presented here show that ubiquitination and endocytosis of uracil permease are impaired in yeast cells lacking the Doa4p ubiquitin-isopeptidase. Both processes were rescued by overexpression of wild-type ubiquitin. Mutant ubiquitins carrying Lys-->Arg mutations at Lys29 and Lys48 restored normal permease ubiquitination. In contrast, a ubiquitin mutated at Lys63 did not restore permease polyubiquitination. Ubiquitin-permease conjugates are therefore extended through the Lys63 of ubiquitin. When polyubiquitination through Lys63 is blocked, the permease still undergoes endocytosis, but at a reduced rate. We have thus identified a natural target of Lys63-linked ubiquitin chains. We have also shown that monoubiquitination is sufficient to induce permease endocytosis, but that Lys63-linked ubiquitin chains appear to stimulate this process.
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PMID:Ubiquitin lys63 is involved in ubiquitination of a yeast plasma membrane protein. 931 43

The epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC), composed of three subunits (alpha beta gamma), plays a critical role in salt and fluid homeostasis. Abnormalities in channel opening and numbers have been linked to several genetic disorders, including cystic fibrosis, pseudohypoaldosteronism type I and Liddle syndrome. We have recently identified the ubiquitin-protein ligase Nedd4 as an interacting protein of ENaC. Here we show that ENaC is a short-lived protein (t1/2 approximately 1 h) that is ubiquitinated in vivo on the alpha and gamma (but not beta) subunits. Mutation of a cluster of Lys residues (to Arg) at the N-terminus of gamma ENaC leads to both inhibition of ubiquitination and increased channel activity, an effect augmented by N-terminal Lys to Arg mutations in alpha ENaC, but not in beta ENaC. This elevated channel activity is caused by an increase in the number of channels present at the plasma membrane; it represents increases in both cell-surface retention or recycling of ENaC and incorporation of new channels at the plasma membrane, as determined by Brefeldin A treatment. In addition, we find that the rapid turnover of the total pool of cellular ENaC is attenuated by inhibitors of both the proteasome and the lysosomal/endosomal degradation systems, and propose that whereas the unassembled subunits are degraded by the proteasome, the assembled alpha beta gamma ENaC complex is targeted for lysosomal degradation. Our results suggest that ENaC function is regulated by ubiquitination, and propose a paradigm for ubiquitination-mediated regulation of ion channels.
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PMID:Regulation of stability and function of the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC) by ubiquitination. 935 15

The smm1 mutation suppresses defects in mitochondrial distribution and morphology caused by the mdm1-252 mutation in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cells harboring only the smm1 mutation themselves display temperature-sensitive growth and aberrant mitochondrial inheritance and morphology at the nonpermissive temperature. smm1 maps to RSP5, a gene encoding an essential ubiquitin-protein ligase. The smm1 defects are suppressed by overexpression of wild-type ubiquitin but not by overexpression of mutant ubiquitin in which lysine-63 is replaced by arginine. Furthermore, overexpression of this mutant ubiquitin perturbs mitochondrial distribution and morphology in wild-type cells. Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that the ubiquitin ligase activity of Rsp5p is essential for its function in mitochondrial inheritance. A second mutation, smm2, which also suppressed mdm1-252 defects, but did not cause aberrant mitochondrial distribution and morphology, mapped to BUL1, encoding a protein interacting with Rsp5p. These results indicate that protein ubiquitination mediated by Rsp5p plays an essential role in mitochondrial inheritance, and reveal a novel function for protein ubiquitination.
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PMID:A role for ubiquitination in mitochondrial inheritance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1036 93

Polyubiquitin (Ub) chains linked through Lys-48-Gly-76 isopeptide bonds represent the principal signal by which substrates of the Ub-dependent protein degradation pathway are targeted to the 26 S proteasome, but the mechanism(s) whereby these chains are assembled on substrate proteins is poorly understood. Nor have assembly mechanisms or definitive functions been assigned to polyubiquitin chains linked through several other lysine residues of ubiquitin. We show that rabbit reticulocyte lysate harbors enzymatic components that catalyze the assembly of unanchored Lys-29-linked polyubiquitin chains. This reaction can be reconstituted using the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2) known as UbcH5A, a 120-kDa protein(s) that behaves as a ubiquitin-protein ligase (E3), and ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1). The same partially purified E3 preparation also catalyzes the assembly of unanchored chains linked through Lys-48. Kinetic studies revealed a K(m) of approximately 9 microM for the acceptor ubiquitin in the synthesis of diubiquitin; this value is similar to the concentration of free ubiquitin in most cells. Similar kinetic behavior was observed for conjugation to Lys-48 versus Lys-29 and for conjugation to tetraubiquitin versus monoubiquitin. The properties of these enzymes suggest that there may be distinct pathways for ubiquitin-ubiquitin ligation versus substrate-ubiquitin ligation in vivo.
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PMID:E2/E3-mediated assembly of lysine 29-linked polyubiquitin chains. 1048 Sep 50


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