| Literature DB >> 35635104 |
Zhishuo Wang1, Steven H Spoel1.
Abstract
The proteasome plays vital roles in eukaryotic cells by orchestrating the regulated degradation of large repertoires of substrates involved in numerous biological processes. Proteasome dysfunction is associated with a wide variety of human pathologies and in plants severely affects growth, development and responses to stress. The activity of E3 ubiquitin ligases marks proteins fated for degradation with chains of the post-translational modifier, ubiquitin. Proteasomal processing of ubiquitinated substrates involves ubiquitin chain recognition, deubiquitination, ATP-mediated unfolding and translocation, and proteolytic digestion. This complex series of steps is made possible not only by the many specialised subunits of the 1.5 MDa proteasome complex but also by a range of accessory proteins that are recruited to the proteasome. A surprising class of accessory proteins are members of the HECT-type family of ubiquitin ligases that utilise a unique mechanism for post-translational attachment of ubiquitin to their substrates. So why do proteasomes that already contain all the necessary machinery to recognise ubiquitinated substrates, harbour HECT ligase activity? It is now clear that some ubiquitin ligases physically relay their substrates to proteasome-associated HECT ligases, which prevent substrate stalling at the proteasome. Moreover, HECT ligases ubiquitinate proteasome subunits, thereby modifying the proteasome's ability to recognise substrates. They may therefore enable proteasomes to be both non-specific and extraordinarily selective in a complex substrate environment. Understanding the relationship between the proteasome and accessory HECT ligases will reveal how the proteasome controls so many diverse plant developmental and stress responses.Entities:
Keywords: HECT ligases; plant signal transduction; ubiquitin ligases; ubiquitin proteasome system; ubiquitin signalling
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35635104 PMCID: PMC9400063 DOI: 10.1042/EBC20210064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Essays Biochem ISSN: 0071-1365 Impact factor: 7.258
Figure 1HECT ligases regulate proteasome function and processivity
(A) HECT ligases ubiquitinate Rpn10, Rpn13 and possibly other components of the proteasomal 19S regulatory particle, thereby regulating substrate perception. HECT ligases also ubiquitinate 19S subunits of stalled or dysfunctional proteasomes to promote their autophagic degradation. (B) Pathway-specific E3 ligases (E3) relay ubiquitinated (grey circles) substrates to the proteasome by physical interaction with HECT ligases. This relay leads to HECT ligase-mediated ubiquitination (orange circles) of the substrate, which promotes its degradation by the proteasome. (C) HECT ligases either initiate the formation of new ubiquitin chains on the substrate or they elongate existing chains to promote substrate degradation.
Figure 2HECT ligases may promote proteasome processivity by geometrically reorientating substrates
Ubiquitinated substrates are recognised by the proteasome through the Rpn10 and Rpn13 ubiquitin receptors (step 1). Subsequently, the proteasome engages the substrate, partially unfolds it and initiates translocation into the 20S proteolytic core particle (step 2). Translocation proceeds until the ubiquitin chain encounters the proteasomal DUB Rpn11 or other accessory DUBs (not shown), which deubiquitinate the substrate (step 3). Proteasome-associated HECT ligases re-ubiquitinate substrates (addition of red-coloured ubiquitin) to geometrically reorientate them for further unfolding and translocation, and to ensure they retain high affinity for proteasomal ubiquitin receptors (steps 4 and 5). Created with BioRender.com.