Rpn1 provides adjacent receptor sites for substrate binding and deubiquitination by the proteasome

Yuan Shi(Harvard University), Xiang Chen(National Cancer Institute), Suzanne Elsasser(Harvard University), Bradley B. Stocks(Northeastern University), Geng Tian(Harvard University), Byung‐Hoon Lee(Harvard University), Yanhong Shi(Harvard University), Naixia Zhang(Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica), Stefanie A.H. de Poot(Harvard University), Fabian Tuebing(Harvard University), Shuangwu Sun(Harvard University), Jacob Vannoy(National Cancer Institute), Sergey G. Tarasov(National Cancer Institute), John R. Engen(Northeastern University), Daniel Finley(Harvard University), Kylie J. Walters(National Cancer Institute)
Science
February 19, 2016
Cited by 322

Abstract

Hundreds of pathways for degradation converge at ubiquitin recognition by a proteasome. Here, we found that the five known proteasomal ubiquitin receptors in yeast are collectively nonessential for ubiquitin recognition and identified a sixth receptor, Rpn1. A site ( T1: ) in the Rpn1 toroid recognized ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like ( UBL: ) domains of substrate shuttling factors. T1 structures with monoubiquitin or lysine 48 diubiquitin show three neighboring outer helices engaging two ubiquitins. T1 contributes a distinct substrate-binding pathway with preference for lysine 48-linked chains. Proximal to T1 within the Rpn1 toroid is a second UBL-binding site ( T2: ) that assists in ubiquitin chain disassembly, by binding the UBL of deubiquitinating enzyme Ubp6. Thus, a two-site recognition domain intrinsic to the proteasome uses distinct ubiquitin-fold ligands to assemble substrates, shuttling factors, and a deubiquitinating enzyme.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis