| Literature DB >> 22811915 |
Elisa Da Silva-Ferrada1, Fernando Lopitz-Otsoa, Valérie Lang, Manuel S Rodríguez, Rune Matthiesen.
Abstract
SUMOylation contributes to the regulation of many essential cellular factors. Diverse techniques have been used to explore the functional consequences of protein SUMOylation. Most approaches consider the identification of sequences on substrates, adaptors, or receptors regulating the SUMO conjugation, recognition, or deconjugation. The large majority of the studied SUMOylated proteins contain the sequence [IVL]KxE. SUMOylated proteins are recognized by at least 3 types of hydrophobic SUMO-interacting motifs (SIMs) that contribute to coordinate SUMO-dependent functions. Typically, SIMs are constituted by a hydrophobic core flanked by one or two clusters of negatively charged amino acid residues. Multiple SIMs can integrate SUMO binding domains (SBDs), optimizing binding, and control over SUMO-dependent processes. Here, we present a survey of the methodologies used to study SUMO-regulated functions and provide guidelines for the identification of cis and trans sequences controlling SUMOylation. Furthermore, an integrative analysis of known and putative SUMO substrates illustrates an updated landscape of several SUMO-regulated events. The strategies and analysis presented here should contribute to the understanding of SUMO-controlled functions and provide rational approach to identify biomarkers or choose possible targets for intervention in processes where SUMOylation plays a critical role.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22811915 PMCID: PMC3395311 DOI: 10.1155/2012/875148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Res Int
Figure 1Sequence alignment of Homo sapiens SUMO-1 to SUMO-4. UNIPROT sequences shown are SUMO1 (P63165), SUMO2 (P61956), SUMO3 (P55854), and SUMO4 (Q6EEV6). The alignment is CLUSTAL colored using the software Geneious v4.8.5 (available from http://www.geneious.com/).
Figure 2The SUMO conjugation pathway. The immature form of the Small Ubiquitin MOdifier (SUMO) undergoes processing by Ubiquitin-like protein-specific protease (Ulp) and SUMO/Sentrin-specific proteases (/SENPs) to generate its mature form (step 1), revealing a carboxy-terminal Gly-Gly motif. SUMO is then adenylated by the Aos1/Uba2 also named SAE1/SAE2 complex in an ATP·Mg2+-dependent reaction (step 2). Following activation, SUMO is transferred to the catalytic Cys of the E2 conjugating enzyme (UBC9) (step 3), which can then catalyze SUMO conjugation to a substrate containing the SUMO consensus motifs (ΨK x E) in an E3 ligase-independent (step 4). SUMO E3 ligases can also facilitate SUMO transfer to the substrate proteins (step 5). Substrates modified by SUMO can interact with SUMO-binding proteins through their SUMO-interacting motifs (SIMs) (step 6). SUMO-deconjugation is promoted by Ulp and SUSP/SENP proteases. Free SUMO can be recycled for another round of protein conjugation (step 7).
SUMO/Sentrin specific proteases. SUSPs/SENPs implications and functions. Adapted from Wilkinson and Henley, 2010 [3].
| Species | Name | Tissue expression | Localization | Preference | Processing | Deconjugation | Chain editing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Upl1 | NA | Nuclear periphery | NA | Yes | Yes | No |
| Upl2 | NA | Nucleoplasm | NA | No | No | Yes | |
| Mammals | SENP1 | Testes (high), pancreas, spleen, liver, ovaries, small intestine, thymus (low). | Nuclear pore and Nucleoplastic speckles | S1 > S2/3 | Yes | Yes | No |
| SENP2 | ND | Nuclear pore | S2/3 > S1 | Yes | Yes | No | |
| SENP3 | ND | Nucleolus | S2/3 | ND | Yes | No | |
| SENP5 | ND | Nucleolus | S2/3 | Yes | Yes | No | |
| SENP6 | ND | Nucleoplasm | S2/3 | No | No | Yes | |
| SENP7 | Testes (high), pancreas, ovaries, colon, peripheral blood. | Nucleoplasm | S2/3 | No | No | Yes |
Figure 3Sequence alignment SUMO consensus motifs. (a) Amino acid sequence alignment of the canonical SUMO consensus motif (Ψ represents a hydrophobic amino acid, K is the Lys modified by SUMO and x represents any amino acid). CM: canonical consensus motif. ICM: inverted consensus motif. PDSM: phosphorylation-dependent SUMO motif, NDSM: negatively charged amino-acid-dependent SUMO motif, HCSM: hydrophobic cluster SUMO motif. Amino acids in blue: basic, red: acid, green: hydrophobic, gray: phospho serine. (b) WebLogo [64] representation of the consensus motif of SUMOylated proteins reported in the phosphosite database on Fri Feb 03 08:31:18 EST 2012 (PhosphoSitePlus [65], http://www.phosphosite.org/). (c) The same SUMO motif aligned using Sequence Logo. Amino acid sequences are represented by frequency on the identified consensus.
Figure 4Comparative analysis of SUMO-modified proteins. (a) All proteins reported to be SUMOylated in the literature and at PhosphoSitePlus database (http://www.phosphosite.org/) were manually extracted and compared to those found by MS in 3 recent studies [39, 75, 76]. The protein list in the PhosphoSitePlus includes proteins for which the site of SUMO modification was not determined by MS. All protein names and accession numbers were first mapped to Uniprot accession numbers by using mapping data downloaded from ENSEMBL. Next, all Uniprot accession numbers were mapped to HGNC symbols and HGNC symbols for each study were uploaded to MySQL database. This means that all protein accessions that mapped to the same HGNC symbol were considered as redundant for the comparative analysis provided here. Finally, the necessary MySQL queries were made to define overlapping HGNC symbols between the different resources and the output used for creating the presented SUMO protein Venn diagram. List of proteins identified by other authors and confirmed by Matic et al.: PSMD12, TRIM24, CD3EAP, SART1, MYO1B, BRD4, SF3B1, LMNA, HNRNPC, PARP1, TOP1, KRT5, FOSL2, FLNA, MAP4, CANX, PML, STAT1, MKI67, RANGAP1, YLPM1, RBM25, RANBP2, VASP, HNRNPM, ADAR, ACTB, SUMO2, SUMO1, GTF2I, KHDRBS1, RLF, TRIM28, TCOF1, NAB1, SAFB2, NUMA1, IFI16, ZNF800, ARID4B, ZMYM1, ZMYM4, PTRF, PBRM1, CCAR1, RBM12B, FNBP4, ZBTB38, ZNF280C, KDM2B, GEMIN5, RREB1, SYMPK, ZBTB9, THOC1, ERBB2IP, RSF1, HNRNPUL1, PNN, BCLAF1, ACIN1, ZNF295, ZMYND8, TRIM33, ZBTB1, ZNF451, ACTG1, ACTB. Proteins considered in this analysis are included in the Supplementary Table 1. (b) Comparative analysis of SUMOylation sites. All peptide sequence reported with annotated SUMOylation sites based on mass spectrometry data from Matic et al. [39], Galisson et al. [76], Hsiao et al. [77], and Blomster et al. [78] were manually extracted. For each SUMO-modified site, six flanking amino acid residues on both sides were extracted. The resulting 13 amino acid residue sequences from each of the above mentioned studies were uploaded to an MySQL database and the necessary queries for comparing the peptides between studies were performed and used as input for the creation of the SUMO peptide Venn diagram.
Figure 5Integrated view of the role of SUMO in the Ran Signalling pathway. Ingenuity analysis of proteins that have been identified (in gray) in recent studies: KPNB1, CSE1L, TNPO1, RANBP2, RAN, XPO1, and RANGAP1 (Figure 4 and Supplementary Table 1) by mass spectrometry using His-6-SUMO-tagged.
Figure 6Integrated view of the role of SUMO in the p53 Signalling pathway. Ingenuity analysis of proteins that have been identified (in gray) in recent studies: TP53, WT1, PRKDC, TP63, PIK3C2A, TP73, HDAC1, MDM2, BAX, EP300, RB1, PCNA, MDM4, JUN, GSK3B, HIPK2, PML, BRCA1, CDK2, and SIRT1 (Figure 4 and Supplementary Table 1) by mass spectrometry using His-6-SUMO-tagged.
Figure 7Molecular functions and canonical pathways regulated by SUMOylation. Ingenuity (IPA) analysis of proteins reported to be SUMO-modified in the PhosphoSitePlus (http://www.phosphosite.org/) and 3 recent MS studies [39, 75, 76]. (a) The top molecular functions are indicated. A dominant link to gene expression has been found. All functions are superior to the threshold (yellow line). (b) The top canonical pathways are indicated. All shown pathways are superior to the threshold. The Canonical Pathways that are involved in this analysis are displayed along the x-axis. The right y-axis displays the ratio up to 0.6. The ratio is calculated as follows: number of genes in a given pathway that meet cut-off criteria, divided by total number of genes that make up that pathway. Therefore y-axis displays the results importance. For the ratio, taller bars have more genes associated with the Canonical Pathway than shorter bars. The graph displaying the various pathways is presented from largest ratio to smallest ratio.