Mechanism of ubiquitin ligation and lysine prioritization by a HECT E3

Hari Kamadurai(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Yu Qiu(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Alan Deng(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Joseph S. Harrison(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Chris MacDonald(University of Iowa), Marcelo Actis(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Patrick Fernandes Rodrigues(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Darcie J. Miller(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Judith Souphron(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Steven M. Lewis(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Igor Kurinov(Cornell University), Naoaki Fujii(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Michal Hammel(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory), Robert C. Piper(University of Iowa), Brian Kuhlman(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Brenda A. Schulman(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital)
eLife
August 8, 2013
Cited by 171Open Access
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Abstract

Ubiquitination by HECT E3 enzymes regulates myriad processes, including tumor suppression, transcription, protein trafficking, and degradation. HECT E3s use a two-step mechanism to ligate ubiquitin to target proteins. The first step is guided by interactions between the catalytic HECT domain and the E2∼ubiquitin intermediate, which promote formation of a transient, thioester-bonded HECT∼ubiquitin intermediate. Here we report that the second step of ligation is mediated by a distinct catalytic architecture established by both the HECT E3 and its covalently linked ubiquitin. The structure of a chemically trapped proxy for an E3∼ubiquitin-substrate intermediate reveals three-way interactions between ubiquitin and the bilobal HECT domain orienting the E3∼ubiquitin thioester bond for ligation, and restricting the location of the substrate-binding domain to prioritize target lysines for ubiquitination. The data allow visualization of an E2-to-E3-to-substrate ubiquitin transfer cascade, and show how HECT-specific ubiquitin interactions driving multiple reactions are repurposed by a major E3 conformational change to promote ligation. DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00828.001.


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