| Literature DB >> 34066106 |
Charles Ducker1, Peter E Shaw1.
Abstract
Genome expansion, whole genome and gene duplication events during metazoan evolution produced an extensive family of ETS genes whose members express transcription factors with a conserved winged helix-turn-helix DNA-binding domain. Unravelling their biological roles has proved challenging with functional redundancy manifest in overlapping expression patterns, a common consensus DNA-binding motif and responsiveness to mitogen-activated protein kinase signalling. Key determinants of the cellular repertoire of ETS proteins are their stability and turnover, controlled largely by the actions of selective E3 ubiquitin ligases and deubiquitinases. Here we discuss the known relationships between ETS proteins and enzymes that determine their ubiquitin status, their integration with other developmental signal transduction pathways and how suppression of ETS protein ubiquitination contributes to the malignant cell phenotype in multiple cancers.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; E3 ligase complex; deubiquitinase; gene fusions; mitogens; phosphorylation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066106 PMCID: PMC8151852 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22105119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1(a) Domain organisation of ETS proteins with established ubiquitination modalities indicating ubiquitinated lysines confirmed by a combination of mutagenesis and MS in red and characterised degron motifs as orange bars: COP, constitutive photomorphogenesis 1 degron; SBC, SPOP-binding consensus; CPD, CDC4 phospho-degron; CD, cryptic degron. Domains are indicated thus: PNT, pointed (peach); TAD, transactivation (green); ets, ETS (cyan); NTD, N-terminal (lilac); CAE, central alternative exons (light green); B; SRF-interaction (sea green); PEST, proline/glutamate/serine/threonine-rich (pink). (b) Alignment of ETS domain α3 helices indicating conservation (in 25/28 human ETS proteins) of most frequently modified lysine in red, as determined by MS, including large-scale proteomic analysis. See Table 2 for references. (c) ETS domain of ELK-1 (PDB: 1DUX) bound to consensus ETS binding site, showing alpha-helices in cyan and beta-strands in blue with α3 inserted in major groove and sidechain of K59 (K388 in ETS-1) in red making contact with core GGA sequence [33].
Figure 2Subunit composition of E3 ligase complexes and domain structures of DUBs implicated in regulation of ETS protein activity. Each E3 ligase recognition subunit recruits its targets by means of a short consensus motif, indicated below each complex (Ф = hydrophobic; П = hydrophilic), to allow transfer of ubiquitin from the bound E2 activating enzyme to one or more target lysines, predominantly within the ETS domain. Target phosphorylation within the consensus motif may be a prerequisite or an adjunct for binding, whereas phosphorylation of residues adjacent to the motif can inhibit binding (see text for details). DUBs implicated in ETS protein ubiquitination all share a conserved USP domain (green) with a catalytic triad of cysteine, histidine and aspartic acid residues (two in the case of USP9X), but few other recognised features in common. U, ubiquitin-like (UBL) domain (blue); H, hyaluranon binding motif (pink); Z, Zinc finger (peach). Numbers to the right indicate protein size in amino acids.
E3 ligases and DUBs reported to facilitate ubiquitination and deubiquitination of human ETS proteins and their oncogenic fusions (* Disputed, ^Lacks ETS domain).
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| ETS-1 | COP1 | USP9X | [ |
| ETS-2 | COP1 | - | [ |
| ERG | TRIM25, SPOP, FBXW7 | USP9X | [ |
| ETV1/ER81 | COP1 | - | [ |
| ETV4/PEA3/E1AF | COP1 | - | [ |
| ETV5/ERM | COP1 | - | [ |
| ETV6/TEL1 | FBXL6 | - | [ |
| ETV7/TEL2 | FBXL6 | - | [ |
| ELF3/ESE1 | FBXW1A | - | [ |
| ELF4/MEF | SKP2 | - | [ |
| PU.1/SPI-1 | FBXW7 | USP22 | [ |
| ELK-1 | FBXO25 * | USP17 | [ |
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| TMPRSS2-ERG | TRIM25, FBXW7 | USP9X | [ |
| EWS-FLI-1/ERGB | - | USP19 | [ |
| ETV6/TEL1^-NTRK3 | RNF123 | - | [ |
| ETV6/TEL1^-JAK2 | SOCS1 | - | [ |
ETS-domain lysines identified as ubiquitination sites from targeted and large-scale proteomic datasets and/or mutational analysis (human-produced with use of PhosphoSitePlus). Highlighted in red is the conserved α3 helix lysine found to be a target in multiple ETS proteins.
| ETS Protein | ETS Domain Ubiquitination Site | References |
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| ETS-1 | K377, | [ |
| ETS-2 | [ | |
| FLI-1/ERGB | [ | |
| ETV2/ER71 |
| [ |
| ETV6/TEL1 | [ | |
| ETV7/TEL2 | K293 | [ |
| GABPα | K359, K366, | [ |
| ELF1 | K226, K244 | [ |
| ELF2/NERF | K290 | [ |
| ELF3/ESE1 | K294, | [ |
| ELK-1 | K35, K52, | [ |
| ELK-3/NET | K83 | [ |