Xiuxiu Lu1, Urszula Nowicka1, Vinidhra Sridharan1, Fen Liu1, Leah Randles1, David Hymel2, Marzena Dyba3,4, Sergey G Tarasov4, Nadya I Tarasova5, Xue Zhi Zhao2, Jun Hamazaki6, Shigeo Murata6, Terrence R Burke2, Kylie J Walters1. 1. Protein Processing Section, Structural Biophysics Laboratory, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland 21702, USA. 2. Chemical Biology Laboratory, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland 21702, USA. 3. Basic Science Program, Leidos Biomedical Research, Inc., Structural Biophysics Laboratory, Frederick National Lab, Frederick, Maryland 21702, USA. 4. Biophysics Resource, Structural Biophysics Laboratory, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland 21702, USA. 5. Cancer and Inflammation Program, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Frederick, Maryland 21702, USA. 6. Laboratory of Protein Metabolism, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.
Abstract
Proteasome-ubiquitin receptor hRpn13/Adrm1 binds and activates deubiquitinating enzyme Uch37/UCHL5 and is targeted by bis-benzylidine piperidone RA190, which restricts cancer growth in mice xenografts. Here, we solve the structure of hRpn13 with a segment of hRpn2 that serves as its proteasome docking site; a proline-rich C-terminal hRpn2 extension stretches across a narrow canyon of the ubiquitin-binding hRpn13 Pru domain blocking an RA190-binding surface. Biophysical analyses in combination with cell-based assays indicate that hRpn13 binds preferentially to hRpn2 and proteasomes over RA190. hRpn13 also exists outside of proteasomes where it may be RA190 sensitive. RA190 does not affect hRpn13 interaction with Uch37, but rather directly binds and inactivates Uch37. hRpn13 deletion from HCT116 cells abrogates RA190-induced accumulation of substrates at proteasomes. We propose that RA190 targets hRpn13 and Uch37 through parallel mechanisms and at proteasomes, RA190-inactivated Uch37 cannot disassemble hRpn13-bound ubiquitin chains.
Proteasome-ubiquitin receptor hRpn13/Adrm1 binds and activates deubiquitinating enzyme Uch37/UCHL5 and is targeted by bis-benzylidine piperidoneRA190, which restricts cancer growth in mice xenografts. Here, we solve the structure of hRpn13 with a segment of hRpn2 that serves as its proteasome docking site; a proline-rich C-terminal hRpn2 extension stretches across a narrow canyon of the ubiquitin-binding hRpn13 Pru domain blocking an RA190-binding surface. Biophysical analyses in combination with cell-based assays indicate that hRpn13 binds preferentially to hRpn2 and proteasomes over RA190. hRpn13 also exists outside of proteasomes where it may be RA190 sensitive. RA190 does not affect hRpn13 interaction with Uch37, but rather directly binds and inactivates Uch37. hRpn13 deletion from HCT116 cells abrogates RA190-induced accumulation of substrates at proteasomes. We propose that RA190 targets hRpn13 and Uch37 through parallel mechanisms and at proteasomes, RA190-inactivated Uch37 cannot disassemble hRpn13-bound ubiquitin chains.
The ubiquitin–proteasome system (UPS) performs regulated protein degradation in
eukaryotes through a multistep process by which protein substrates are first modified
with ubiquitin chains and subsequently delivered to proteasomes for proteolysis1. Substrate degradation at proteasomes occurs within a hollow catalytic
chamber at the centre of its 20S core particle (CP). Ubiquitinated substrates are
recognized by a 19S regulatory particle (RP) that caps the CP to form the proteasome
holoenzyme, as reviewed in refs 2, 3. The UPS is essential, ensuring orderly cell cycle progression, signal
transduction, clearance of damaged proteins and maintenance of general protein
homeostasis. Dysfunction in the UPS is associated with various diseases, as reviewed in
refs 4, 5, with hyperactivation
of proteasome function often invoked by cancer cells467 and
inhibitors specifically targeting the CP (bortezomib, carfilzomib and ixazomib) used
clinically to treat haematological cancers8910.Three receptors in the RP (Rpn1/S2/PSMD2, Rpn10/S5a/PSMD4 and Rpn13/Adrm1) capture
substrates by binding to ubiquitin and substrate shuttle factors11121314151617181920. Dss1/Sem1 is also reported to bind
ubiquitin21, but it is unclear whether this protein, which localizes
to the proteasome lid22, functions as a ubiquitin receptor in the
proteasome18. Following capture, ubiquitin chains are disassembled by
deubiquitinating enzymes of the RP, namely Rpn11/PSMD14, Ubp6/Usp14 and Uch37/UCHL5,
while substrates are unfolded and translocated into the CP by a hexameric ATPase ring,
as reviewed in refs 2, 3. The
substrate receptors of the proteasome are structurally distinct, with hRpn10 docked into
the RP by an N-terminal von Willebrand factor A domain, while two helical ubiquitin
interacting motifs orient as needed to bind ubiquitin chains2324. The
proteasome/cyclosome (PC) repeat protein hRpn1 has two recognition regions for
ubiquitin-fold molecules, one distinct for substrates and the other for Ubp6/Usp14 (ref.
18). hRpn13 binds ubiquitin chains with loops from an
N-terminal Pru (pleckstrin-like receptor for ubiquitin) domain1617 that
also integrates hRpn13 into the proteasome by binding to 106 kDa PC repeat
proteasome subunit hRpn2/S1/PSMD1 (refs 25, 26, 27, 28). Although cryoEM-based structures of the 26S proteasome have emerged,
the region where Rpn13 localizes remains poorly characterized2930. The
spherical shape of scRpn13 has prevented assignment of a defined orientation in
cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) density maps16. High-resolution cryoEM
structures of human 26S proteasome have recently been reported by two independent
groups3132, but with no information for hRpn13. Thus, the mechanism
for hRpn13 incorporation into the proteasome remains unclear.hRpn13 may couple substrate recruitment with deubiquitination through a C-terminal DEUBAD
(DEUBiquitinase ADaptor) domain that binds Uch37 (refs 27,
28, 33). hRpn13 activates
Uch37 catalytic activity2833 and recent crystal structures of the
Rpn13DEUBAD-Uch37 complex suggest that the DEUBAD domain promotes
accessibility of the Uch37 active site to ubiquitin343536. The two
functional domains in hRpn13 interact in an intramolecular fashion, reducing affinity
for ubiquitin37. Interaction with hRpn2 and the proteasome activates
hRpn13 for ubiquitin binding by releasing the autoinhibitory Pru:DEUBAD interaction37. The DEUBAD domain of free hRpn13 adopts an 8-helical bundle37 that splits to engulf a region in Uch37 that is C-terminal to its
catalytic domain and unique to this deubiquitinating enzyme343536.
In vitro, Rpn10 and Rpn13 can bind to a common K48-linked diubiquitin24, and may coordinately recruit ubiquitinated proteins to proteasomes.In recent years, Rpn13 has emerged as a therapeutic target for cancers, including
bortezomib-resistant multiple myeloma38. The bis-benzylidine piperidone
derivative RA190 was found to restrict multiple myeloma and ovarian cancer
xenografts38, and to act synergistically with lenalidomide,
pomalidomide or bortezomib against multiple myeloma39. Another study
independently found that an Rpn13-targeting peptoid inhibitor exerts selective
cytotoxicity for multiple myeloma cells40. Several findings substantiate
a role for hRpn13 in humancancers. hRpn13 mRNA levels are elevated in colorectal41, ovarian42 and gastric43 cancers, and
cellular proliferation and migration are inhibited, with apoptosis induced in cell lines
derived from these cancers by knock down of hRpn13 (refs 41, 44, 45).
Moreover, hRpn13 and Uch37 are each essential for robust cell cycle progression in HeLa
cells46.Herein, we define how hRpn13 is assembled into the RP by solving the structure of the
hRpn13 Pru domain in a complex with the region of hRpn2 to which it binds in the
proteasome. This structure in combination with mechanistic studies provides insights
that challenge the current model for the mechanism of action of hRpn13-targeting
molecule RA190. Currently approved proteasome inhibitors all target the same enzymatic
activity in the proteolytic CP. Our findings highlight an inhibitory mechanism that
occurs at a different proteasome location than that currently targeted.
Results
Structure of hRpn13 at the proteasome
The C-terminal 38 amino acids of hRpn2 are sufficient for interaction with hRpn13
(refs 17, 47, 48). To further define the hRpn13-binding region in
hRpn2, we generated smaller fragments and assayed for binding by isothermal
titration calorimetry (ITC) to hRpn13 (1–150) which includes the Pru
domain. A dissociation constant (Kd) of 27±10 nM
was found for the binding of hRpn2 (940–953) to hRpn13 Pru (Table 1 and Supplementary Fig. 1a). Further truncation to hRpn2 (944–953)
impaired binding, with an increased Kd value of
1.96±0.22 μM (Table 1 and Supplementary Fig. 1a). A strong interaction
between hRpn13 Pru and hRpn2 (940–953) was also indicated by measurements
of thermal stability. Label-free differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF)
indicated a shift in melting temperature for hRpn13 Pru from 44.6±0.5 to
59.4±0.3 °C upon binding hRpn2 (940–953) (Fig. 1a). We also used fluorescence polarization (FP) to measure the
binding affinity between full-length hRpn13 and hRpn2 (940–953). This
approach yielded a Kd value of 14.7±0.6 nM
(Fig. 1b), indicating that the hRpn13 DEUBAD domain
does not impair hRpn13 Pru binding to hRpn2.
Table 1
Dissociation constants for hRpn13 Pru with hRpn2-derived peptides.
hRpn2
Kd(μM)
940–953
0.027±0.010
944–953
1.96±0.22
Figure 1
Structure of hRpn13 at the proteasome.
(a) hRpn13 Pru alone (black) or with hRpn2 (940–953) (orange)
was heated from 20 to 85 °C at a rate of 1 °C per min.
The melting temperature was calculated from the first derivative of
tryptophan emission intensities at 350 nm (a.u., arbitrary unit).
(b) 10 nM FITC-labelled hRpn2 (940–953) was
incubated with varying concentrations of full-length hRpn13 as indicated in
triplicate to measure a binding constant by FP. Corresponding values for the
probe alone were subtracted from measurements of the complex and the final
numbers plotted against hRpn13 concentration and fit by nonlinear regression
to a Hill slope model. The error bar represents the s.d. of each data point
to the average value. (c) Cell lysates or immunoprecipitates derived
by anti-FLAG antibodies from HCT116 cells expressing FLAG-EGFP (control),
FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940–947) or FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940–953) were
subjected to immunoprobing, as indicated. Direct loading (DL) of the lysates
from FLAG-EGFP-expressing HCT116 cells is also included. (d) Backbone
heavy atoms for the 12 lowest energy structures with best geometry for the
hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2 (940–953) complex with hRpn13 displayed in periwinkle
blue and hRpn2 in light orange. (e) Ribbon diagram for the hRpn13
Pru-hRpn2 (940–953) structure depicting the classic pleckstrin
homology fold of hRpn13 Pru (periwinkle blue) with the hRpn2 peptide (light
orange) extended across a β-strand surface. hRpn2 nitrogen and oxygen
atoms are displayed in blue and red, respectively. (f) The hRpn13
Pru-hRpn2 (940–953) structure is modelled into a cryoEM reconstruction
(EMD-2594, displayed in grey) from S. cerevisiae 26S proteasome50 that includes the scRpn2 PC repeat region (PDB code 4CR2).
The N-terminal 19 amino acids of hRpn13 Pru are randomly coiled and most
likely contribute to the extra density displayed near residue N20.
To verify that hRpn2 (940–953) can interact with hRpn13 in a cellular
context, we expressed FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940-953), FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940-947) or
FLAG-EGFP (control) in HCT116 cells. Anti-FLAG antibodies immunoprecipitated
endogenous hRpn13 with FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940–953) (Fig.
1c, lane 4), but not FLAG-EGFP (control) (Fig.
1c, lane 2) or FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940–947) (Fig.
1c, lane 3).Having defined the binding interaction biochemically, we next used nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to solve the structure of hRpn13 Pru
complexed with hRpn2 (940–953), as described in Methods. In total,
chemical shift values were assigned to 94 and 93% of the hRpn13 Pru
(spanning N20 to N130) and hRpn2 (940–953) atoms respectively in this
complex. Our hRpn13 construct spanned amino acids M1-L150, but the N-terminal 19
and C-terminal 20 amino acids were randomly coiled (Supplementary Fig. 1b), as found previously
for free hRpn13 (refs 37, 49). A series of NMR experiments were recorded (Supplementary Fig. 2a,b), including
half-filtered nuclear Overhauser enhancement spectroscopy (NOESY) experiments,
to define unambiguous intermolecular interactions between hRpn13 Pru and hRpn2
(940–953), as we did previously to solve the structure of the
Rpn1-ubiquitin complex18. In total, 140 unambiguous
intermolecular distance constraints were identified and used to solve the
structure (Table 2 and Supplementary Table 1). The 12 lowest energy
structures with best geometry converged to a backbone root mean square deviation
of 0.81 Å (Fig. 1d and Table
2).
Table 2
Structural statistics for the hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2 complex.
hRpn13 Pru (20–130)
hRpn2 (940–953)
NMR distance and dihedral constraints
Distance restraints
Total NOE
1,641
141
Intra-residue
550
75
Inter-residue
1,091
66
Sequential
(|i–j|=1)
438
47
Nonsequential
(|i–j|>1)
653
19
Hydrogen bonds
45
0
Intermolecular NOEs
140
Total dihedral angle restraints
phi
161
18
psi
161
18
Structure statistics
Violations (mean and s.d.)
Distance constraints (Å)
0.041
Dihedral angle constraints (°)
0.390
Max. dihedral angle violation (°)
0
Max. distance constraint violation (Å)
0
Deviations from idealized geometry
Bond lengths (Å)
0.003±0.000
Bond angles (°)
0.454±0.024
Impropers (°)
0.330±0.016
Average pairwise root mean square deviation (r.m.s.d.)* (Å)
Heavy
1.55±0.24
Backbone
0.81±0.17
*Statistics for secondary structural
elements of 12 lowest energy with best geometry structures
within hRpn13 Pru (V24-K34, T37-P40, G45-Q51, I57-D63,
N68-I75, E81-K83, Y94-K97, R104-W108 and D117-L128) and
hRpn2 P942-I951.
A representative ribbon diagram for the hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2 (940–953)
structure highlights the classic pleckstrin homology fold of hRpn13 Pru, formed
by an 8-stranded β-sandwich capped by a C-terminal amphipathic
α-helix (Fig. 1e), as was observed for murine17 and human Rpn13 (ref. 49). The
hRpn2 peptide contacts 1,190 Å2 of hRpn13 Pru,
capping its β-strand structure, across from the location of the
α-helix by binding between β2 and a β-sheet composed of β6
to β8 (Fig. 1e).Interestingly, in the crystal form of free mRpn13 and hRpn13 Pru, the
hRpn2-binding region is occupied by another Rpn13 Pru molecule (Supplementary Fig. 3a) that, similar to
hRpn2, buries 1,094 Å2. Residues located on β1,
β2 and the β6–β7 loop from one Rpn13 Pru molecule interact
with F76 from a neighbouring Rpn13 molecule in a manner akin to their
interaction with hRpn2 F948 (Supplementary Fig. 3a). Many rearrangements were observed between the
free Rpn13 Pru crystal structures and the hRpn2-bound hRpn13 Pru and their
backbone root mean square deviation is 2.65 Å (Supplementary Fig. 3a). The most striking
difference is the reconfiguration of β1, β2, and β6 to bend
towards hRpn2, like a pincer clamping down on it; the juxtaposed Rpn13 molecule
in the crystal requires slightly larger space in this region (Supplementary Fig. 3a and Supplementary Movie 1).We next sought to use our hRpn13-hRpn2 structure to better define the location of
Rpn13 in a cryoEM-based structure of the 26S proteasome. We used sequence
alignment to register our hRpn2 fragment to that of Saccharomyces
cerevisiae (Supplementary
Fig. 3b) and manually docked our hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2 (940–953)
structure into the cryoEM reconstruction (EMD-2594) with the S.
cerevisiae Rpn2 structure incorporated (PDB 4CR2)50 by
using UCSF (University of California, San Francisco) Chimera51.
The resolution for the Rpn13 region of the reconstruction is poor; nonetheless,
by fusing the hRpn13-binding region of hRpn2 to the appropriate site in scRpn2,
a favoured orientation is suggested for Rpn13 in the density map (Fig. 1f). It is worth noting that the hinge between the Rpn2 region
that binds hRpn13 and the preceding toroidal PC repeat domain is undoubtedly
flexible. This flexibility would provide conformational freedom for hRpn2-bound
hRpn13 Pru domain, facilitating capture of substrates.
hRpn13 and hRpn2 form extensive and proline-rich contacts
hRpn2 (940–953) includes four prolines (Supplementary Fig. 3b), all of which
interact with hRpn13 amino acids from a trans configuration (Fig.
2a). Strictly conserved P942, P944 and P945 bury hRpn13 W108 (Fig. 2a), as indicated by nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE)
interactions (Fig. 2b, upper panel). hRpn2 P942 also
interacts with an hRpn13 proline placed at the edge of the interaction surface
(P112) and the backbone of Q110 (Fig. 2a). The many
interactions involving P942 provide an explanation for the measured reduction in
hRpn2 affinity towards hRpn13 upon deletion of Q940 through E943 (Table 1 and Supplementary Fig. 1a). hRpn2 P947 also forms many contacts with
hRpn13, interacting with M31, T37, T39 and P40 (Fig.
2a).
Figure 2
hRpn2 zippers along an hRpn13 surface with extensive interactions and a
proline-rich contact surface.
(a,c) Ribbon diagram of hRpn13 (periwinkle blue) with heavy
atoms at the hRpn2 contact surface displayed. All hRpn2 heavy atoms are
shown (light orange) with dashed lines representing intermolecular NOE
interactions involving (a) hRpn2 P942-P945 and P947 and (c)
hRpn2 F948 and Y950. Nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur side-chain atoms are
displayed in blue, red and yellow, respectively. The orientation in
(a) is selected to highlight interactions involving hRpn13 W108.
(b) Selected intermolecular NOEs between hRpn2 and hRpn13.
Selected regions from a 1H, 13C edited NOESY
experiment acquired with 0.7 mM 15N,
13C-labelled hRpn2 (940–953) and equimolar unlabelled
hRpn13 Pru (upper panel) and selected regions from a 1H,
13C half-filtered NOESY experiment acquired with
0.7 mM 15N, 13C-labelled hRpn13 Pru and
equimolar unlabelled hRpn2 (940–953) (lower panel).
In previous work, we found that amino acid substitution of hRpn2 F948 or
Y950/I951 results in loss of interaction with hRpn13 (ref. 47). This finding is consistent with the structure of the
hRpn13-hRpn2 complex, as hRpn2 F948 and Y950 are buried by many hRpn13 contacts
(Fig. 2c). Two hRpn13 valines (V38 and V85) bridge
these two hRpn2aromatic amino acids, while hydrophobic pockets are formed
around hRpn2 Y950 by hRpn13 L33, T36, V95 and R104 and hRpn2 F948 by hRpn13 M31
and V93 (Fig. 2c). These locations in the structure are
well defined by NOE interactions from hRpn13 methyl groups to hRpn2 F948 and
Y950 (Fig. 2b, lower panel).
hRpn2 sterically restricts hRpn13 Pru from binding to RA190
Previous reports indicate that hRpn13 C88 is targeted by RA190 and required for
RA190 sensitivity in HCT116 cells3839. Unexpectedly, our
hRpn13-hRpn2 structure suggests that hRpn2 sterically blocks the RA190 binding
site at C88, as indicated by direct comparison of a model structure of
RA190-conjugated hRpn13 Pru (Fig. 3a, left panel) to
hRpn2-bound hRpn13 Pru (Fig. 3a, right panel). To test
directly whether RA190 reacts with hRpn2-bound hRpn13 Pru, we incubated
20 μM RA190 with 2 μM hRpn13 (1–150) with and without
2 μM hRpn2 (940–953) for 2 h at 4 °C and used
mass spectrometry to probe for RA190-conjugated hRpn13 Pru, as described in
Methods. hRpn13 contains five cysteines, four in the Pru domain and one in the
DEUBAD domain (Fig. 3b). Without hRpn2, the reaction
mixture contained species at the correct molecular weight for free and
RA190-conjugated hRpn13 Pru (Fig. 3c, black, Table 3 and Supplementary Table 2). However, RA190-conjugated hRpn13 Pru was not
detected when this experiment was done with hRpn2 present (Fig.
3c, orange, Table 3 and Supplementary Table 2). This finding is
consistent with the hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2 structure and further suggests that RA190
cannot compete with hRpn2 (940–953) for hRpn13 Pru interaction.
Figure 3
hRpn2 restricts RA190 from binding hRpn13 Pru.
(a) Model of RA190 (yellow) adducted to hRpn13 (periwinkle blue) C88
(yellow, left panel) and NMR structure of hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2 (940–953)
(right panel). hRpn2 is orange with nitrogen and oxygen in blue and red,
respectively. (b) Schematic representation of hRpn13 domains with
locations of cysteines indicated. (c–e) LC-MS analysis
of 2 μM hRpn13 (c) Pru (black), (d) DEUBAD or
(e) full-length protein (black) or with equimolar hRpn2
(940–953) (orange) following 2 h of incubation with
20 μM RA190. (f) FP values for 30 nM hRpn13 Pru
incubated serially for 30 min with indicated RA190 concentrations and
10 nM FITC-hRpn2 (940–953) (upper panel). FP values for
100 μM RA190 or 2% DMSO incubated serially for
30 min with varying concentrations of full-length hRpn13 as indicated
(lower panel), followed by 10 nM FITC-hRpn2 (940-953). In both cases,
FP values were measured in triplicate and corresponding values for
FITC-hRpn2 (940–953) alone were subtracted from the measurements. The
final values for each panel were plotted against RA190 concentration and fit
using the log(inhibitor) versus response–variable, four parameter
model (upper panel) or hRpn13 concentration by a Hill slope model (lower
panel). The s.d. of each data point to the average value is displayed by
error bar. (g) HCT116 cells were treated with 1 μM RA190
for 24 h or DMSO (as a control) and the cell lysates immunoprobed
(DL) or subjected to immunoprecipitation with anti-hRpt3 antibodies before
immunoblotting as indicated. (h) Cell lysates (DL) or
immunoprecipitates derived by anti-hRpt3 antibodies from HCT116 cells
expressing FLAG-EGFP (control) or FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940–953) were
subjected to immunoprobing, as indicated.
Table 3
Detected hRpn13 species by LC-MS for indicated samples.
Sample
hRpn13 species
Free
1 (RA190)
2 (RA190)
3 (RA190)
Pru
✓
✓
0.2%
ND
Pru+hRpn2
✓
ND
ND
ND
DEUBAD
✓
✓
ND
ND
hRpn13
✓
✓
✓
✓
hRpn13+hRpn2
✓
✓
ND
ND
ND, not detected.
Table summarizing species detected by LC-MS after 2 h
of incubation with 10-fold molar excess RA190
(20 μM) at 4 °C for 2 μM
hRpn13 (hRpn13), hRpn13 Pru (Pru), hRpn13 DEUBAD (DEUBAD),
hRpn13 and hRpn2 (940–953) mixture or hRpn13 Pru and
hRpn2 (940–953) mixture. Check marks indicate detected
species for unmodified protein (free) or hRpn13 with one
(1(RA190)), two (2(RA190)) or three (3(RA190)) RA190
molecules ligated.
We previously demonstrated that RA190 adducts to hRpn13 at the proteasome38, where the Pru domain is apparently inaccessible (Fig. 3a), but were unable to detect RA190-conjugated DEUBAD domain
by NMR in samples that were buffer exchanged by dialysis to remove excess
RA19038. To resolve this inconsistency, we used liquid
chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC-MS) to test whether the covalent bond
between RA190 and hRpn13 Pru is labile in the presence of hRpn2 (940–953).
We incubated 2 μM hRpn13 Pru with 20 μM RA190 for 1 h
at 4 °C and acquired an LC-MS spectrum to find unmodified and
RA190-adducted hRpn13 Pru domain (Supplementary Fig. 4, left spectrum). We then in parallel added
either 10-fold molar excess hRpn2 (940–953) or an equivalent volume of
buffer to yield final concentrations of 2 μM hRpn13 Pru,
20 μM RA190, with or without 20 μM hRpn2 (940–953).
LC-MS spectra were recorded on these two mixtures after 1 or 19 h of
incubation at 4 °C. A time-dependent reduction in RA190-conjugated
hRpn13 Pru was observed by hRpn2 addition, whereas longer incubation times
allowed this species to increase when hRpn2 was not present (Supplementary Fig. 4). This result indicates
that RA190 reacts reversibly with hRpn13 Pru and is displaced by hRpn2. Such
reversibility is also reported for b-AP15 (refs 52,
53) that is chemically similar to RA190.We hypothesized that RA190 could be even more labile towards the hRpn13 DEUBAD
domain, as the Pru domain provides a binding pocket for RA190 when it is
conjugated to C88 (ref. 38). By using optimized
conditions, including more stringent removal of reducing agent, more diluted
samples and retaining RA190 in the reaction mixture, we detected RA190
conjugated to hRpn13 DEUBAD (Fig. 3d, Table 3 and Supplementary
Table 2). Moreover, we found that full-length hRpn13 interacts with
RA190 when hRpn2 (940–953) is present. Without hRpn2, up to three RA190
molecules can conjugate to hRpn13 (Fig. 3e, black, Table 3 and Supplementary Table 2). In contrast, only one RA190 molecule
conjugates to hRpn2-bound hRpn13 (Fig. 3e, orange, Table 3 and Supplementary Table 2). Altogether, these findings indicate that the
DEUBAD domain, and not the Pru domain, is accessible to RA190 in the presence of
hRpn2.Since substitution of hRpn13 C88 for alanine is reported to cause loss of RA190
sensitivity39, we used FP to test whether hRpn13 Pru affinity
for FITC-hRpn2 (940-953) is reduced following 30 min of incubation with
RA190. Inhibition was not observed even in the presence of 8,000-fold molar
excess RA190 (Fig. 3f, upper panel). Similarly, the
binding affinity between hRpn13 full-length protein and FITC-hRpn2
(940–953) was unaltered by the presence of 100 μM RA190 (Fig. 3f, lower panel).We next tested whether RA190 affects hRpn13 interaction with proteasomes in
HCT116 cells. We immunoprecipitated proteasomes of RA190-treated (1 μM
for 24 h) or dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO)-treated cells by using antibodies
to hRpt3 (a member of the proteasome ATPase ring) and immunoprobed for the
presence of hRpn13. No change in the amount of hRpn13 immunoprecipitated with
hRpt3 was observed following RA190 treatment (Fig. 3g,
lane 3 versus lane 4). In contrast, performing the same experiment with cells
overexpressing FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940–953) demonstrated loss of hRpn13 from
proteasomes, an effect not observed by FLAG-EGFP (control) expression (Fig. 3h, lane 4 versus lane 3). Thus, the hRpn2 fragment,
but not RA190, effectively competes with endogenous proteasomes for hRpn13.
Altogether, our data suggest that binding to proteasomes protects hRpn13 Pru
domain from RA190 reactivity.
RA190 binds Uch37 and inhibits its catalytic activity
We next tested whether RA190 affects hRpn13 activation of Uch37. RA190 was
previously found to have a small inhibitory effect on Uch37 activity when
ubiquitin-AMC was used as a substrate, but the effect was considerably reduced
compared with established inhibitor Ubal38. We therefore
performed an in vitro assay to directly probe whether RA190 affects
deconjugation of K48-linked tetraubiquitin by Uch37. His-Uch37 (1 μM)
was incubated for 8 h at 37 °C with 1 μM K48-linked
tetraubiquitin (Ub4), 0 or 20-fold molar excess RA190 and no or equimolar
hRpn13. Immunoblotting was performed on the reaction mixtures with
anti-ubiquitin, anti-His and anti-hRpn13 antibodies. Uch37 activity was
evaluated by the production of triubiquitin (Ub3), diubiquitin (Ub2) and
monoubiquitin (Ub1). Addition of hRpn13 to Uch37 increased the presence of Ub3,
Ub2 and Ub1 (Fig. 4a, lane 4 versus 2), as expected2833. In contrast, reduced amounts of Ub3, Ub2 and Ub1 were
observed with inclusion of RA190, both in the absence (Fig.
4a, lanes 2 and 3) and presence (Fig. 4a, lanes
4 and 5) of hRpn13. These findings indicate that RA190 inhibits Uch37 activity
and, moreover, that it has a direct effect that is independent of hRpn13.
Figure 4
RA190 binds Uch37 and inhibits its catalytic activity.
(a) In vitro deconjugation assay of K48-linked tetraubiquitin
(Ub4) by Uch37 with 20-fold molar excess RA190 and/or equimolar hRpn13, as
indicated. Immunoprobing was performed as indicated. (b) Schematic
representation of Uch37 depicting the catalytic domain (CD), hRpn13-binding
region (Uch37-like domain (ULD)) and cysteines (italic 'C'
with numbers). (c) 2 μM purified Uch37 was incubated with
50 μM RA190 for 2 h and samples subjected to LC-MS analysis
to detect the formation of RA190 adducts.
Since RA190 directly affected Uch37 activity, we tested whether it reacts with
Uch37 by mass spectrometry, similarly as described in Fig.
3c for hRpn13 Pru. Uch37 contains five cysteines, all localized to
its catalytic domain (Fig. 4b). We found RA190 to be
highly promiscuous towards Uch37 (Fig. 4c, Table 4 and Supplementary
Table 3), adducting to all five cysteines. Moreover, RA190 reacts with
Uch37 when hRpn13 and hRpn2 (940–953) are present (Table
4, Supplementary Fig.
5 and Supplementary Table
3). Therefore, our data indicate that RA190 is reactive towards Uch37
and can inhibit its catalytic activity.
Table 4
Detected Uch37 and hRpn13 species by LC-MS for indicated samples.
Sample
Species
Free
Uch37∼(RA190)
hRpn13∼(RA190)
hRpn13
Uch37
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
Uch37
NA
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
NA
NA
NA
hRpn13+Uch37
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
hRpn13+Uch37+hRpn2
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
✓
ND
ND
NA, not applicable; ND, not detected.
Table summarizing the species detected by mass spectrometry
for the indicated samples; 2 μM Uch37, equimolar
mixture of 2 μM hRpn13 and Uch37 or equimolar
mixture of 2 μM hRpn13, Uch37, and hRpn2 were
incubated with 25-fold molar excess RA190 for 2 h at
4 °C and the samples subjected to LC-MS analysis.
Detected Rpn13 or Uch37 species are indicated by a check
mark, with the numerical indicator over the column
representing numbers of RA190 molecules conjugated based on
molecular weight.
Effect of RA190 at the proteasome
The hRpn13 DEUBAD cysteine (C357) is directed away from the Uch37-binding
surface3435. We thus hypothesized that in cells treated
with RA190, hRpn13 would remain competent for interaction with Uch37. To test
the impact of RA190 on hRpn13 interaction with Uch37, we evaluated whether Uch37
is crosslinked to hRpn13 in RA190-treated cells, by using a denaturing
immunoprecipitation experiment. Lysates from HCT116 cells treated for
24 h with 1 μM RA190 or DMSO (as a control) were incubated with
dithiobis(succinimidyl) propionate (DSP) for 30 min followed by lysis in
radioimmunoprecipitation (RIPA) buffer. hRpn13 was immunoprecipitated by
anti-hRpn13 antibodies and interaction with Uch37 probed by anti-Uch37
antibodies. We consistently observed Uch37 to co-immunoprecipitate with hRpn13
in RA190-treated cells, although a 1.5-fold reduction was detected with RA190
treatment (P value=0.049, n=3; Fig.
5a). The region in Uch37 that interacts with hRpn13 is aggregation
prone355455 and it is possible that the small reduction
of Uch37 immunoprecipitated with hRpn13 in RA190-treated cells is caused by
nonspecific interactions with this region when RA190 is adducted to the Uch37
catalytic domain.
Figure 5
RA190 treatment leads to accumulation of ubiquitinated species at the
proteasome.
(a) HCT116 cells were treated with 1 μM RA190 or DMSO for
24 h and then further treated with the crosslinker DSP or DMSO as a
control. Cell lysates were immunoprecipitated with anti-hRpn13 antibodies
and immunoprobed with anti-Uch37 antibodies. (b) His-Uch37, hRpn13 or
equimolar mixture of these two proteins at 2 μM were incubated
with 20-fold molar excess RA190 or DMSO and then Talon resin. Retention of
hRpn13 on the Uch37-bound resin was assessed by SDS–PAGE with
Coomassie staining. Protein markers are included in lane 1. (c)
HCT116 cell lysates treated with 1 μM RA190 or DMSO (as a control)
for 24 h were loaded onto a 10–40% linear glycerol
gradient and subjected to ultracentrifugation. Gradient fractions were
resolved by SDS–PAGE and immunoprobed with indicated antibodies.
*Nonspecific band from the Uch37 antibody. (d) HCT116 cells were
treated with 1 μM RA190 or DMSO control for 24 h and
lysates immunoprecipitated with anti-hRpt3 antibodies, followed by
immunoblotting as indicated. Direct loads (DLs) were included as well as an
IgG control for the DMSO-treated cells. (e) Wild-type (WT) or
hRpn13-deleted (ΔhRpn13) HCT116 cells were collected, lysed and
immunoprobed as indicated, with β-actin as a loading control.
(f) HCT116 WT and ΔhRpn13 cells were treated with
1 μM RA190 or DMSO control for 24 h and lysates
immunoprecipitated with anti-hRpt3 antibodies, followed by immunoblotting as
indicated. hRpn2 was used as a control to confirm immunoprecipitation of
proteasome subunits. (g) Proposed mechanism of action for RA190 at
the proteasome. RA190 (pink star) targets the hRpn13 DEUBAD domain without
abrogating hRpn13 (periwinkle blue) interaction with ubiquitin chains
(yellow) or Uch37 (green). RA190 also targets and inactivates the Uch37
catalytic domain (CD), impairing ubiquitin chain disassembly and in turn
ubiquitin release at hRpn13. A portion of the 26S proteasome is represented
in grey with Rpn2 in orange and substrate in black.
To test further whether RA190 disrupts hRpn13 interaction with Uch37, we used an
in vitro pulldown experiment. His-tagged Uch37, hRpn13 or a mixture
of equimolar quantities of these two proteins were incubated with 20-fold molar
excess RA190 or DMSO (as a control), followed by incubation with Talon resin.
After washing with buffer that maintained RA190 or DMSO, retention of hRpn13 on
the resin with His-Uch37 was evaluated by SDS–polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (SDS–PAGE) and Coomassie staining (Fig.
5b). The result indicated that hRpn13 interacted with Uch37
equivalently when RA190 was present (Fig. 5b, lane 3
versus 2).Since Uch37 interaction with hRpn13 appeared to be unaffected by RA190, we
hypothesized that the presence of Uch37 at the proteasome would similarly be
unperturbed by RA190. We tested this hypothesis directly by subjecting cell
lysates from DMSO-treated (as a control) or RA190-treated (1 μM,
24 h) HCT116 cells to fractionation over a 10–40% linear
glycerol gradient, an established method to isolate proteasomes56. This experiment revealed no change following RA190 treatment for the CP
component β5, hRpn13 or Uch37 (Fig. 5c); β-actin
was included as a cytosolic marker and INO80A, based on its reported interaction
with Uch37 (ref. 57). Altogether, our findings led
us to conclude that RA190 does not block Uch37 interaction with hRpn13 or the
proteasome.Since Uch37 is expected to disassemble ubiquitin chains at hRpn13 in the
proteasome, we hypothesized that RA190 inactivation of Uch37 could impair the
disassembly and clearance of ubiquitin chains from the proteasome. To test this
model, lysates from HCT116 cells treated as above with RA190 or DMSO were
subjected to immunoprecipitation with anti-hRpt3 antibodies followed by
immunoprobing with anti-ubiquitin antibodies. RA190 treatment led to increased
levels of ubiquitinated protein in the cell lysates (Fig.
5d, lane 2 versus lane 1), as expected38. We also
found increased levels of ubiquitinated proteins co-immunoprecipitated with
hRpt3 following RA190 treatment (Fig. 5d, lane 4 versus
lane 3).We next tested whether RA190 activity at the proteasome requires hRpn13 and
Uch37. We used CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing to delete hRpn13 from the HCT116 colon
cancer cell line, confirming hRpn13 loss by immunoprobing lysates (Fig. 5e) and performing quantitative PCR (Supplementary Fig. 6) for HCT116 wild-type
(WT) and hRpn13-deleted (ΔhRpn13) cells. Proteasomes from lysates of WT
and ΔhRpn13 cells treated with RA190 (1 μM for 24 h) or
DMSO (as a control) were immunoprecipitated by anti-hRpt3 antibodies and
immunoprobed for ubiquitin with anti-ubiquitin antibodies. The presence of
ubiquitinated proteins at the proteasome was unaltered by hRpn13 deletion (Fig. 5f, lane 3 versus lane 1), suggesting that proteasome
is functional in ΔhRpn13 HCT116 cells. A difference was observed however
following RA190 treatment. In particular, no accumulation of ubiquitinated
proteins was observed for RA190-treated lysates prepared from ΔhRpn13
cells (Fig. 5f, lane 4 versus lane 3). Consistent with
Fig. 5d, ubiquitinated proteins accumulate in
RA190-treated HCT116 WT cells (Fig. 5f, lane 2 versus lane
1). Thus, RA190 treatment led to impaired clearance of ubiquitinated proteins at
the proteasome through a mechanism that requires hRpn13 and/or Uch37 at the
proteasome.
Discussion
The human Rpn13 orthologue was identified as a proteasome component one decade
ago273358 and soon after, as one of its major ubiquitin
receptors1617. Since that time, cryoEM-based structures have
emerged of the 26S proteasome but the region where Rpn13 localizes remained poorly
characterized2930. We used NMR to define at atomic-level
resolution how hRpn13 binds to the proteasome. We find that the extreme C-terminal
end of hRpn2 binds an extensive channel formed along an hRpn13 surface in its
ubiquitin-binding Pru domain. The hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2 structure challenges the current
model for RA190 induction of apoptosis. In particular, the surface that RA190
interacts with when adducted to hRpn13 C88 is occupied by its binding site in the
proteasome.Previous findings demonstrate that RA190 sensitivity is lost upon hRpn13 deletion
from HCT116 cells and restored by expression of wild-type hRpn13, but not by
expression of hRpn13 C88A39. Although this experiment implicates
hRpn13 C88 as being the target of RA190, lack of supporting data including that the
C88A mutation does not alter the function of hRpn13 and a lack of direct evidence
for RA190 adducting to this cysteine in cells warrants further investigation. If
hRpn13 C88 is validated as an essential RA190 target, then this interaction most
likely occurs outside of the proteasome. It is possible that newly synthesized
hRpn13 may be restricted from assembly into the proteasome by RA190, although we
were unable to find evidence for this model in vitro (Fig.
3f). It is also possible that hRpn13 performs functions outside of the
proteasome that use the RA190-binding site with lower affinity compared with hRpn2.
Intriguingly, hRpn13 knockdown leads to reduced levels of Uch37 in cells2746 and similar phenotypes are observed by hRpn13 or Uch37
knockdown27; however, the mechanism linking hRpn13 to Uch37
protein levels remain unknown.We report that RA190 reacts with hRpn13 DEUBAD domain C357 (Fig.
3d, Table 3 and Supplementary Table 2); however, this cysteine
is directed away from the Uch37-binding surface and does not appear to effect Uch37
interaction with hRpn13 (Fig. 5a,b) or the proteasome (Fig. 5c). Therefore, we do not expect this cysteine to be
important for RA190-induced apoptosis, but rather propose that RA190 reaction at
this site is a reflection of promiscuity towards exposed cysteine residues. Thus,
RA190 may react with other cellular constituents; however, we find that hRpn13 is
required for RA190-induced accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins at the proteasome,
suggesting that it does not inhibit hRpn13-independent activities at the
proteasome.Uch37 is contributed to the proteasome by hRpn13 (refs 27, 28, 33). We propose that RA190 deactivation of Uch37 at the proteasome
contributes to induction of apoptosis. Mechanistically, loss of Uch37 activity at
the proteasome would cause ubiquitin chains to become stalled at hRpn13 in the
proteasome (Fig. 5g, right panel). This model assumes that
ubiquitin chain release from hRpn13 is coupled to ubiquitin chain disassembly by
Uch37. Our rationale is based on the higher affinity measured for hRpn13 binding to
ubiquitin chains compared with monoubiquitin16. Consistent with this
model, ubiquitinated substrates accumulate at the proteasome in RA190-treated HCT116
cells (Fig. 5d,f) and sensitivity to RA190 is lost following
hRpn13 deletion (Fig. 5f). Without hRpn13, ubiquitinated
substrates that bind proteasomes by Rpn1 (ref. 18) and
Rpn10 (ref. 15) do not rely on Uch37 activity. These
two receptors have other nearby deubiquitinating enzymes, namely Usp14 near Rpn1 and
Rpn11 near Rpn10, as reviewed in ref. 3; these enzymes
are apparently not affected by RA190 in the proteasome context (Fig.
5f). Nonetheless, the presence of ubiquitinated proteins stalled at
RA190-inhibited hRpn13-Uch37 seems to interfere with the ability of these functional
receptors (Rpn1 and Rpn10) to clear ubiquitinated proteins from the proteasome
(Fig. 5f). Future experiments are required to understand
this finding mechanistically; however, it is possible that Rpn1 and Rpn10 are
affected by the presence and/or occupancy of Rpn13 through allosteric relationships
within the RP and/or direct interaction with Rpn13-bound substrates that, in
response to Uch37 inhibition, become less dynamic or improperly oriented for
deubiquitination.Proteasomal deubiquitinating enzymes have emerged as new anticancer targets525960. Uch37 is upregulated in multiple cancers, including
epithelial ovarian cancer, hepatocellular carcinoma and oesophageal squamous cell
carcinoma with high Uch37 expression associated with poor prognosis616263. A compound with a similar reactive group compared with
RA190 was previously reported to react with the proteasome deubiquitinating
enzymes53, in support of our finding that RA190 directly targets
and inhibits Uch37.It is possible that RA190 efficacy is achieved by two synergistic effects: targeting
hRpn13 outside of the proteasome at C88 and inactivation of Uch37. All of the
proteasome inhibitors currently approved for cancer therapy target the proteasome
catalytic CP. A compelling aspect of this model is the synergy expected by targeting
an alternative enzymatic function in the proteasome, and a recent publication
indicated RA190 to be synergistic with bortezomib and carfilzomib39.
Our findings merged with this published result suggest that inhibition of Uch37 may
be effective towards restricting cancer cell proliferation with synergy towards
currently FDA (Food and Drug Administration)-approved proteasome inhibitors. It is
worth noting that the RA190bis-benzylidine activity, which relies on covalent
targeting of cysteine, has been identified to target many cellular proteins536465, suggesting a lack of specificity. However, loss of hRpn13,
and in turn Uch37, abrogates RA190 sensitivity in HCT116 cells, as ubiquitinated
proteins do not accumulate at the proteasome when hRpn13 and Uch37 are absent (Fig. 5f); thus, RA190 does not appear to affect proteasome
function when hRpn13 is deleted. Indeed, specific inhibitors of Uch37 versus hRpn13
would be invaluable for further dissecting the potential of this ubiquitin
receptor-deubiquitinating enzyme pair as anticancer targets. Moreover, such agents
may maintain the efficacy of RA190, but with reduced off-target effects.
Methods
Plasmids and antibodies
We used a p3 × FLAG-hRpn2 (916-953) expression vector47 to
produce p3 × FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2 (940–953) or p3 × FLAG-EGFP-hRpn2
(940–947), inserting enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) between the
3 × FLAG tag and the hRpn2 sequence that was modified as indicated by
site-directed mutagenesis (Agilent QuickChange) and validated with sequencing
(Macrogen). A p3 × FLAG-EGFP expression vector was used for control
experiments. Antibodies (dilutions) used in this study include anti-hRpn13
(Abcam ab157185, 1:5,000 or 1:10,000), anti-hRpt3 (Abcam ab140515, 1:1,000),
anti-hRpn2 (Abcam ab2941, 1:1,000), anti-Uch37 (Abgent AM2200a, 1:5,000),
anti-FLAG (Sigma-Aldrich F1804, 1:3,000 or 1:2,000), anti-ubiquitin (EMD
Millipore MAB1510, 1:1,000), anti-His (Thermo Fisher Scientific MA1-21315,
1:1,000), anti-β-actin (Cell Signaling Technology 4970, 1:3,000),
anti-INO80A (Abcam ab118787, 1:2,000) and anti-β5 (Enzo BML-PW 8895-0100,
1:5,000).
Cell culture and transfection
HCT116 cell line was purchased from the American Tissue Culture Collection (ATCC,
cat. no. ATCC CCL-247) and the hRpn13-deletion (ΔhRpn13) HCT116 cell line
generated in this study, as described below. Cells were grown in McCoy’s
5A modified medium (ATCC), supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum
(Atlanta Biologicals) in a 37 °C humidified atmosphere of 5%
CO2. Plasmids were transfected using Lipofectamine LTX according
to the manufacturer’s instructions (Thermo Fisher Scientific).
CRISPR-Cas9-mediated gene targeting strategy
We amplified a 0.9 kb fragment upstream of exon 4 as a 5′-homologous
arm and a 1.0 kb fragment downstream of exon 4 as a 3′-homologous
arm in the ADRM1 gene (encoding hRpn13) by PCR using genomic DNA from
HCT116 cells as a template. The primers used were
5′-AACTCGAGTGAAGGGGACCACCGTGACTCCG-3′ and
5′-TTGAATTCTTGGACCCTGCCTTGAACTTCAGC-3′ for
the 0.9 kb fragment, and
5′-AAGGATCCATGCTGGCCCTGGTTCTAACGATG-3′ and
5′-TTTGCGGCCGCTCCGAAGGCACTTAGCTGCTGC-3′ for
the 1.0 kb fragment. A targeting vector was constructed by sequentially
subcloning the 5′-arm, the puromycin resistance gene cassette and the
3′-arm into pBluescript II to delete exon 4 of the ADRM1 gene. Two
pairs of single-guide RNA (sgRNA)-encoding DNA oligos that target 39 bp
downstream and 217 bp downstream of exon 4 were designed (sgRNA-B and
sgRNA-C, Supplementary Table 4).
Each pair of annealed oligos was subcloned into the BbsI site of pX330
(Addgene 42230) that which expresses sgRNA and Cas9 simultaneously.
Establishment of hRpn13 deletion HCT116 cells
The targeting vector and the pX330 plasmid encoding each sgRNA were transfected
into HCT116 cells. The cells were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified
Eagle’s medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and
4 μg ml−1 puromycin for 10 days.
Colonies were then picked, and deficiency of hRpn13 proteins screened by
immunoblot analysis of cell lysates using anti-Rpn13 antibodies. We obtained
three independent HCT116 clones deficient in hRpn13, one using sgRNA-B (B11) and
two using sgRNA-C (C8 and C9). Clone B11 was used exclusively for this
study.
Quantitative real-time PCR
Six independent total RNA samples from HCT116 WT or ΔhRpn13 cell lines were
purified by using the RNeasy Plus Mini Kit (QIAGEN), and complementary DNA
(cDNA) synthesized by using the iScript cDNA synthesis kit (1708890, Bio-Rad).
hRpn13 and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) mRNA expression was
measured by using a real-time PCR (CFX96, Bio-Rad) instrument with specific
PrimeTime TaqMan primers (hRpn13-Hs.PT.56a.79495 (PrimeTime Primer 1:
5′-GCTTGAACTCACAGTCGTCA-3′; PrimeTime Primer
2: 5′-GACTCGCTTATTCACTTCTGC-3′; PrimeTime Probe:
5′-ATCAAGTCGTCTTCCACGTTCCCG-3′),
GAPDH-Hs.PT.42.61714 (PrimeTime Primer 1:
5′-CATGTAAACCATGTAGTTGAGGT-3′; PrimeTime
Primer 2: 5′-AAGGTGAAGGTCGGAGTCA-3′; PrimeTime
Probe: 5′-CGGATTTGGTCGTATTGGGCGC-3′), Integrated
DNA Technologies). GAPDH was used as an internal standard. Statistical analysis
was performed by a two-tailed, two-sample equal variance Student’s
t-test with P values ≤0.05 considered significant.
Crosslinking coupled immunoprecipitation
HCT116 cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) followed by
incubation with 0.5 mM DSP (Thermo Fisher Scientific) freshly prepared.
After incubating at room temperature for 30 min, the reaction was
quenched for 15 min with 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5. Cells were then
collected, washed with PBS and lysed in RIPA buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific)
supplemented with 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (Sigma-Aldrich) and
a protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche). Lysates were subjected to
immunoprecipitation with anti-hRpt3 or anti-hRpn13 antibodies. Before
immunoblotting, 100 mM 1,4-dithiothreitol (DTT) was added to the direct
loads and immunoprecipitated protein complexes.
Immunoprecipitation
HCT116 WT or hRpn13 deletion (ΔhRpn13) cells were collected and washed with
PBS followed by lysing in either RIPA or 1% Triton-TBS buffer
(50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA)
supplemented with protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche). Total protein
concentration was determined by bicinchoninic acid (Pierce) or Bradford
(Sigma-Aldrich). Lysates were precleared with protein G sepharose
(Sigma-Aldrich) for 1 h, incubated with the indicated antibodies
overnight at 4 °C and then incubated for an additional 3 h at
4 °C with protein G sepharose. A control experiment was done with
rabbit IgG and the DMSO-treated cell lysates. Following extensive washing,
proteins bound to the protein G sepharose were eluted and analysed by
immunoblotting.
Immunoblotting
Cells were lysed and protein concentration determined as described above. Protein
lysates were loaded onto 4–12% Bis-Trispolyacrylamide gels (Life
Technologies), subjected to SDS–PAGE and transferred to Invitrolon
polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Life Technologies). The membranes were
blocked in Tris-buffered saline with 0.1% Tween-20 (TBST) supplemented
with 5% skim milk, incubated with primary antibody, washed in TBST,
incubated in secondary antibody and finally washed extensively in TBST. Amersham
ECL regular or enhanced chemiluminescent reagent (GE Life Sciences) was used for
antibody signal detection. Uncropped images for Figs 1c
are included in the Supplementary Fig.
7.
Immunoblot quantification and statistical analyses
After immunoblotting, the films were scanned and protein band density quantified
using ImageJ. Protein abundance was normalized to the signal of
immunoprecipitated protein and Excel used to perform the statistical analyses. A
two-tailed, two-sample equal variance Student’s t-test was
performed with P values ≤0.05 considered significant.
Glycerol gradient centrifugation and fractionation
Glycerol gradients were made in a buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl,
1 mM DTT, 1 mM ATP, 5 mM MgCl2, pH 7.6 in a
volume of 1.7 ml. Cells were treated with 1 μM RA190 or DMSO as
a control for 24 h and whole-cell lysates from HCT116 cells were
fractionated by ultracentrifugation with a 10–40% glycerol gradient
(Beckman Coulter, SW41 Ti rotor, 131,600 g for 18 h at
4 °C). Gradient fractions were collected and resolved by
SDS–PAGE (4–12% Bis-Tris gel) and immunoprobed with indicated
antibodies with dilutions mentioned in the above section.
ITC experiments
ITC experiments were performed at 25 °C on a MicroCal iTC200 system
(Malvern, PA, USA). hRpn13 Pru and hRpn2 (940–953) samples were dialysed
extensively against ITC buffer (20 mM sodium phosphate, 50 mM NaCl
and 10 mM βME, pH 7.0) while hRpn2 (944–953) was dissolved in
ITC buffer. One aliquot of 0.5 μl followed by 18 aliquots of
2.1 μl of 200 μM hRpn2 (940–953) or hRpn2
(944–953) were injected at 1,000 r.p.m. into the calorimeter cell
(volume 200.7 μl) that contained 20 μM or 18 μM
hRpn13 Pru, respectively. Blank experiments were performed by replacing protein
samples with buffer and the resulting data subtracted from the experimental data
during analyses. The integrated interaction heat values were normalized as a
function of protein concentration, and the data were fit with MicroCal Origin
7.0 software. Binding was assumed to be at one site to yield the binding
affinity Ka (1/Kd), stoichiometry and other
thermodynamic parameters. The peptide hRpn2 (944–953) was synthesized on a
Liberty Blue Microwave peptide synthesizer (CEM Corporation) using Fmoc
chemistry on Wang resin, cleaved from the resin and purified by high-performance
liquid chromatography (HPLC) in a manner similar to that described below for the
synthesis of FITC-hRpn2 (940–953).
Differential scanning fluorimetry
Thermal stability of the protein and complexes was measured using label-free DSF
on a Prometheus NT.48 instrument (NanoTemper Technologies, Germany). The shift
of intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence upon temperature-induced unfolding was
monitored measuring emission fluorescence at 350 nm. The samples were
loaded in standard glass capillaries (NanoTemper) and subjected to heating from
20 to 85 °C at a rate of 1 °C per min. Melting
temperatures were obtained from three independent scans and calculated from the
first derivative of the tryptophan emission intensities at 350 nm.
Synthesis of FITC-labelled hRpn2 probe for FP assays
The hRpn2 sequence (QEPEPPEPFEYIDD) was synthesized using automated,
microwave-assisted solid-phase peptide chemistry with Fmoc-protection on a CEM
Liberty peptide synthesizer on Wang resin. The N-terminus was extended by using
commercial {2-[2-(Fmoc-amino)ethoxy]ethoxy} acetic acid (Chem-Impex
Int cat. no. 07310) and capped with 4-pentynoic acid (Chem-Impex cat. no.
26911). The final peptide was cleaved from the resin in trifluoroacetic acid
(TFA)/triisopropylsilane/water (95/2.5/2.5) and purified by preparative HPLC
(gradient elution, 100% H2O to 40/60 water/MeCN with
0.1% TFA added). Fluorescein isothiocyanate, isomer I (FITC)
(39 mg, 0.10 mmol) was dissolved in anhydrous
N,N-dimethyformamide (1 ml) with magnetic stirring in a
round-bottom flask. N,N-diisopropylethylamine (35 μl,
0.20 mmol) was added to the solution, followed by 3-azidopropylamine
(10 mg, 0.1 mmol). The reaction was allowed to stir overnight,
then concentrated to dryness under vacuum. The resulting residue was purified
directly using combiflash (Telodyne Isco CombiFlash 200i, gradient elution of
0–10% methanol in dichloromethane). Fractions containing pure
product were combined and concentrated to provide FITC-N3
(40 mg, 0.08 mmol, 82% yield) as a dark orange solid.
FITC-N3 was then coupled to the hRpn2-alkyne using
copper-mediated click chemistry. Briefly, 1 equivalent each of
FITC-N3 and hRpn2-alkyne were mixed in 1:1 DMSO/water with
CuSO4 (25 mol% from a 4% w/v in
H2O), tris(3-hydroxypropyltriazolylmethyl)amine (THPTA,
50 mol% from a 100 mM DMSO stock) and sodium ascorbate (5
equivalent from a 0.5 M aqueous solution). The click reaction proceeded
overnight at room temperature, and the product purified directly by preparative
HPLC (gradient elution, 90/10 water/MeCN to 100% MeCN with 0.1%
TFA added) to >95% purity.
FP assays
The assay buffer used to determine the affinity of hRpn13 for FITC-hRpn2
(940–953) was 20 mM sodium phosphate, 50 mM NaCl, pH 6.5.
For Kd determination of full-length hRpn13 with FITC-hRpn2
(940–953), 30 μl of serially diluted hRpn13 or assay buffer was
added to the wells of a 384-well plate. Then, 10 μl of 40 nM
FITC-hRpn2 solution was added to each well containing hRpn13 protein or buffer
control. For inhibition experiments with RA190, assay buffer contained 2%
DMSO. The plate was incubated at room temperature for 30 min with
shaking, then FP was read using a BioTek Synergy 2 plate reader (excitation
485/20 nm, emission 528/20 nm). The experiment was performed in
triplicate and FP values with the corresponding value of probe alone subtracted
plotted against hRpn13 concentration. Analyses were performed by using nonlinear
regression in GraphPad Prism 7 with the data fit as specific binding to a Hill
slope model. The indicated Kd value represents
average±s.d.To determine the effect of RA190 on binding affinity, 20 μl of serially
diluted hRpn13 or assay buffer was added to the wells of a 384-well plate
containing 10 μl of 400 μM RA190 (8% DMSO) or buffer
with 8% DMSO. Following 30 min of preincubation at room
temperature, 10 μl of 40 nM FITC-hRpn2 solution was added to
each well. Final concentrations were 100 μM RA190, 10 nM
FITC-hRpn2 and 2% DMSO. The plate was incubated at room temperature for
30 min with shaking, then FP was read and the data analysed as described
above.The competition assay with RA190 was performed in triplicate with 10 μl
of serially diluted RA190 in assay buffer containing 8% DMSO added to the
wells of a 384-well plate, along with DMSO controls. Then, 20 μl of
60 nM Pru domain was added to the wells containing serially diluted RA190
and incubated for 30 min at room temperature with shaking. Next,
10 μl of 40 nM FITC-hRpn2 was added for a final concentration
of 30 nM hRpn13 Pru domain, 10 nM FITC-hRpn2 and 2% DMSO.
The plate was incubated for an additional 30 min at room temperature with
shaking and FP read as described above. FP values were background subtracted
(probe alone), plotted versus RA190 concentration, and analysed by nonlinear
regression in GraphPad Prism 7 (data were fit using the log(inhibitor) versus
response–variable, four parameter model).
LC-MS analyses of RA190 adducts
hRpn13 Pru or hRpn2 (940-953) was purified as described below. hRpn13 DEUBAD
(253–407) was purified in a similar manner to hRpn2 (940–953), but
with a thrombin cleavage site. Preparation of His-Uch37 was similar to hRpn13
Pru, but with elution from Talon Metal Affinity resin in imidazole-containing
buffer (20 mM sodium phosphate, 300 mM NaCl, 250 mM
imidazole, 2 mM DTT, pH 6.5) and the His tag retained. The purified
proteins were dialysed extensively against phosphate buffer (20 mM sodium
phosphate, 50 mM NaCl, pH 6.5) to remove DTT and complexes formed as
indicated by incubating sample mixtures on ice for >1 h. Next, 20 or
50 μM RA190 (Xcessbio, San Diego, CA, USA) was reacted with
100 μl of 2 μM target sample by incubation at
4 °C for 2 h while rotating. To test for reversibility, hRpn13
Pru was incubated with 10-fold molar excess RA190 for 1 h at
4 °C, and then 10-fold molar excess hRpn2 (940–953) or
equivalent volume of buffer (as a control) for another 1 or 19 h at
4 °C for a final concentration of 2 μM hRpn13 Pru and
20 μM RA190 with or without 20 μM hRpn2 (940–953). For
LC-MS analysis, acetonitrile was added to RA190-treated samples to a final
concentration of 10%. LC-MS was performed on either an Agilent (Agilent
Technologies, Inc., Santa Clara, CA, USA) 6100 Series Quadrupol LC/MS System or
6520 Accurate-Mass Q-TOF LC/MS System, each equipped with a dual electro-spray
source, operated in the positive-ion mode. Data acquisition and analysis were
performed by OpenLAB CDS ChemStation Edition C.01.05 or Mass Hunter Workstation
(version B.06.01). For data analysis and deconvolution of mass spectra, Mass
Hunter Qualitative Analysis software (version B.07.00) with Bioconfirm Workflow
was used.
In vitro deubiquitination assay
Purified His-Uch37 and hRpn13 were dialysed extensively against phosphate buffer
to remove DTT and K48-linked tetraubiquitin (Boston Biochem) was dissolved in
the same buffer. Uch37, hRpn13 or hRpn13-Uch37 were incubated with RA190 or DMSO
rotating at 4 °C for 2 h, followed by addition of K48-linked
tetraubiquitin (final concentration of 1 μM K48-linked tetraubiquitin,
0.1% DMSO in all of reactions and final concentrations of 1 μM
Uch37, hRpn13, hRpn13-Uch37 or 20 μM RA190) for another 8 h at
37 °C. The reaction was quenched by adding SDS–PAGE loading
buffer (2% SDS, 10% glycerol, 2 M urea, 0.01%
Bromophenol Blue, 200 mM DTT) and heating at 80 °C for
8 min. Samples were subjected to SDS–PAGE and immunoblot
analysis.
Pulldown assay
hRpn13 and His-Uch37 were dialysed extensively against buffer (20 mM
sodium phosphate, 50 mM NaCl, pH 6.5) to remove DTT. His-Uch37, hRpn13 or
an equimolar mixture of these two proteins at 2 μM concentration were
separately incubated with 20-fold molar excess RA190 or 0.2% DMSO (RA190
is dissolved in DMSO) for 2 h at 4 °C, followed by
25 μl of Talon resin (Clontech) for 40 min. The resin was then
washed three times with buffer maintaining the same amount of RA190 or DMSO.
Resin-bound proteins were next denatured by addition of SDS–PAGE loading
buffer and heating at 80 °C for 8 min, and then visualized by
SDS–PAGE with Coomassie blue staining.
NMR sample preparation
hRpn2 (940-953) or hRpn13 Pru (150) was expressed in Escherichia coli
BL21(DE3) pLysS (Invitrogen) as a recombinant protein fused with glutathione
S-transferase or His tags at the N-terminus followed by a PreScission protease
cleavage site. Cells were grown at 37 °C to an OD value of 0.6 and
isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactoside (0.4 mM) used to induce
protein expression for 4 h at 37 °C or 20 h at
17°C. The cells were collected by centrifugation at 4,550 g
for 30 min, lysed by sonication and cell debris removed by centrifugation
at 31,000 g for 30 min. The lysates were incubated with
GlutathioneS-sepharose 4B (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) for 3 h or Talon
Metal Affinity resin (Clontech) for 1 h, and the resin washed extensively
with buffer (20 mM sodium phosphate, 300 mM NaCl, 2 mM DTT,
pH 6.5). hRpn2 (940–953) or hRpn13 Pru (1–150) was eluted from the
resin by overnight incubation with 50 units per ml PreScission protease (GE
Healthcare Life Sciences) in buffer (20 mM sodium phosphate, 50 mM
NaCl, 2 mM DTT, pH 6.5). The eluent was subjected to size exclusion
chromatography with a Superdex75 column on an FPLC system for further
purification. A mixture of 1.5-molar excess hRpn2 (940-953) with hRpn13 Pru was
prepared from the separately purified proteins and then passed over the
Superdex75 column again. 15N ammonium chloride and
13C glucose were used for isotopic labelling. All NMR
experiments were performed in phosphate buffer that included 2 mM DTT,
0.1% sodium azide and 10% D2O or 100%
D2O.
NMR experiments
All NMR experiments were conducted at 25 °C on Bruker Avance 600, 700,
800 or 850 MHz spectrometers equipped with cryogenically cooled probes.
1H, 15N, 13C HNCACO, HNCO,
HNCACB and CBCACONH spectra were acquired on a mixture of 0.7 mM
15N-, 13C-labelled hRpn13 Pru and equimolar
unlabelled hRpn2 (940–953). Distance constraints for structure
calculations were obtained by using an 15N-dispersed NOESY
spectrum recorded on a mixture of 0.6 mM 15N-,
13C-labelled hRpn13 Pru and equimolar 15N-,
13C- labelled hRpn2 (940-953) with a 150 ms mixing
time as well as 13C-edited NOESY spectra on mixtures of
0.7 mM 15N-, 13C-labelled hRpn13 Pru and
equimolar unlabelled hRpn2 (940–953) (120 ms mixing time) or
0.7 mM 15N-, 13C-labelled hRpn2
(940–953) and equimolar unlabelled hRpn13 Pru (100 ms mixing time).
Intermolecular NOE distance constraints were determined by using a
13C-half-filtered NOESY spectrum (100 ms mixing time)
recorded on a mixture of 0.7 mM 15N-,
13C-labelled hRpn13 Pru and equimolar unlabelled hRpn2 (940-953).
The 13C-edited NOESY spectra were acquired on samples dissolved
in D2O. NMRPipe66 was used to process data and
XEASY67 was used to visualize and analyse spectra.
Structure determination
The 179 backbone φ and ψ torsion angle constraints were generated by
TALOS+ (http://spin.niddk.nih.gov/bax/software/TALOS/) based on HN,
Cα, Cβ, CO and N chemical shift assignments. NOE interactions were
used in combination with secondary structure information by TALOS+ to
define 45 intramolecular hydrogen bonds for hRpn13 Pru in the hRpn2-bound state.
One intermolecular hydrogen bond was determined by NOE interactions between
hRpn13 V38 HN and hRpn2 F948 HN in a 15N-dispersed NOESY spectrum
recorded on a mixture of 0.6 mM 15N-,
13C-labelled hRpn13 Pru and equimolar 15N-,
13C- labelled hRpn2 (940-953) with a 150 ms mixing
time. Distances for hydrogen bonds were set between the acceptor oxygen and
donorhydrogen and nitrogen of 1.8–2.1 Å and
2.5–2.9 Å, respectively. These constraints were combined with
1,782 intramolecular and 140 intermolecular NOE-derived distance constraints
(Table 2) to calculate the structure of the hRpn13
Pru-hRpn2 (940-953) complex by using simulated annealing algorithms in XPLOR-NIH
2.33 (http://nmr.cit.nih.gov/xplor-nih/). Briefly, 20 linear starting
structures were subjected to 19,400 simulated annealing and cooling steps of
0.005 ps. The lowest energy structure with best geometry was then used as
the starting structure for a second iteration of simulated annealing to generate
200 structures. The 12 lowest energy structures without distance or dihedral
angle violations >0.5 Å or 5° respectively were finally
selected for visualization and statistical analyses. Structure evaluation was
performed with the program PROCHECK-NMR68; the percentage of
residues in the most favoured, additionally allowed, generously allowed and
disallowed regions is 84.0, 13.7, 2.3 and 0.0, respectively. Visualization was
performed with MOLMOL69, PyMOL (PyMOL Molecular Graphics System,
http://www.pymol.org) and
CCP4mg70.
Data availability
The structural coordinates and chemical shift data for hRpn13 Pru-hRpn2
(940–953) have been deposited into the Protein Data Bank (PDB) and
Biological Magnetic Resonance Data Bank (BMRB) with respective accession codes
2NBK and 25979. The UniProt accession codes Q99460 (hRpn2), Q16186 (hRpn13) and
Q9Y5K5 (Uch37), PDB accession codes 4CR2 and 5IRS and EMDB accession code
EMD-2594 were used in this study. All other data are available from the
corresponding author on reasonable request.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Lu, X. et al. Structure of the Rpn13-Rpn2
complex provides insights for Rpn13 and Uch37 as anticancer targets. Nat.
Commun.
8, 15540 doi: 10.1038/ncomms15540 (2017).Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to
jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
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