| Literature DB >> 31708416 |
Shuai Qiao1, Christine R Langlois1, Jakub Chrustowicz1, Dawafuti Sherpa1, Ozge Karayel2, Fynn M Hansen2, Viola Beier1, Susanne von Gronau1, Daniel Bollschweiler3, Tillman Schäfer3, Arno F Alpi1, Matthias Mann2, J Rajan Prabu1, Brenda A Schulman4.
Abstract
Cells respond to environmental changes by toggling metabolic pathways, preparing for homeostasis, and anticipating future stresses. For example, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, carbon stress-induced gluconeogenesis is terminated upon glucose availability, a process that involves the multiprotein E3 ligase GIDSR4 recruiting N termini and catalyzing ubiquitylation of gluconeogenic enzymes. Here, genetics, biochemistry, and cryoelectron microscopy define molecular underpinnings of glucose-induced degradation. Unexpectedly, carbon stress induces an inactive anticipatory complex (GIDAnt), which awaits a glucose-induced substrate receptor to form the active GIDSR4. Meanwhile, other environmental perturbations elicit production of an alternative substrate receptor assembling into a related E3 ligase complex. The intricate structure of GIDAnt enables anticipating and ultimately binding various N-degron-targeting (i.e., "N-end rule") substrate receptors, while the GIDSR4 E3 forms a clamp-like structure juxtaposing substrate lysines with the ubiquitylation active site. The data reveal evolutionarily conserved GID complexes as a family of multisubunit E3 ubiquitin ligases responsive to extracellular stimuli.Entities:
Keywords: CTLH; E3 ligase; GID; N-degron; N-end rule; cryo-EM; gluconeogenesis; metabolism; stress response; ubiquitin
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31708416 DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2019.10.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell ISSN: 1097-2765 Impact factor: 17.970