Literature DB >> 18307316

Substrate properties of ubiquitin carboxyl-terminally derived peptide probes for protein ubiquitination.

Michael M Madden1, Wenjiao Song, Paul G Martell, Yong Ren, Jian Feng, Qing Lin.   

Abstract

Protein ubiquitination is a widespread protein posttranslational modification in eukaryotes that regulates essentially every aspect of cellular processes. The attachment of ubiquitin to a protein substrate is accomplished through an enzymatic cascade involving the actions of an activating enzyme (E1), a conjugating enzyme (E2), and a ligase (E3). There are more than 600 E3 ligases estimated to exist in the human genome that regulate the targeting specificity of protein ubiquitination. To understand the dynamic role of protein ubiquitination in biological processes, robust tools need to be developed which can be employed to establish the substrate specificity of each of these E3 ligases. In this report, we show that the ubiquitin carboxyl-terminally derived peptide probes can serve as modest ubiquitin surrogates for the ubiquitination pathway. In the E1-catalyzed probe adenylation assay, peptide probe 3 with a RLRGG recognition sequence exhibited the highest activity, with the k cat/ K 1/2 determined to be 1.1 x 10 (4) M (-1) s (-1), roughly 470-fold lower than that of ubiquitin. The rate of transfer from the E1 peptide probe thioesters to E2 showed clear sequence dependency, with peptide probe 4 with an LRLRGG recognition sequence showed the fastest rate ( t 1/2 = 0.9 min), essentially identical to that of ubiquitin ( t 1/2 = 0.8 min) under our assay conditions. Furthermore, peptide probes 4 and 8 also exhibited the selective, parkin-mediated labeling of tubulins in a semipurified tubulin-parkin complex. Finally, these carboxyl-terminally derived peptide probes were shown to label the ubiquitination substrates in fraction II of the rabbit reticulocyte lysate with an efficiency parallel to their substrate properties. The selective use of these ubiquitin carboxyl-terminally derived peptide probes by the ubiquitination pathway suggests that perhaps more potent peptide ubiquitination probes based on the ubiquitin C-terminal scaffold can be developed through additional structural optimization.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18307316     DOI: 10.1021/bi702078m

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  4 in total

1.  Inhibiting the protein ubiquitination cascade by ubiquitin-mimicking short peptides.

Authors:  Bo Zhao; Chan Hee J Choi; Karan Bhuripanyo; Eric B Villhauer; Keya Zhang; Hermann Schindelin; Jun Yin
Journal:  Org Lett       Date:  2012-11-07       Impact factor: 6.005

Review 2.  Macromolecular juggling by ubiquitylation enzymes.

Authors:  Sonja Lorenz; Aaron J Cantor; Michael Rape; John Kuriyan
Journal:  BMC Biol       Date:  2013-06-25       Impact factor: 7.431

Review 3.  Protein Engineering in the Ubiquitin System: Tools for Discovery and Beyond.

Authors:  Bo Zhao; Yien Che Tsai; Bo Jin; Bufan Wang; Yiyang Wang; Han Zhou; Tomaya Carpenter; Allan M Weissman; Jun Yin
Journal:  Pharmacol Rev       Date:  2020-04       Impact factor: 25.468

Review 4.  Ubiquitin-like protein activation by E1 enzymes: the apex for downstream signalling pathways.

Authors:  Brenda A Schulman; J Wade Harper
Journal:  Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2009-04-08       Impact factor: 94.444

  4 in total

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