MINDY-1 Is a Member of an Evolutionarily Conserved and Structurally Distinct New Family of Deubiquitinating Enzymes

S.A. Abdul Rehman(University of Dundee), Yosua Adi Kristariyanto(University of Dundee), Soo‐Youn Choi(University of Dundee), Pedro Junior Nkosi(University of Dundee), Simone Weidlich(University of Dundee), Karim Labib(University of Dundee), Kay Hofmann(University of Cologne), Yogesh Kulathu(University of Dundee)
Molecular Cell
June 12, 2016
Cited by 371Open Access
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Abstract

Deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) remove ubiquitin (Ub) from Ub-conjugated substrates to regulate the functional outcome of ubiquitylation. Here we report the discovery of a new family of DUBs, which we have named MINDY (motif interacting with Ub-containing novel DUB family). Found in all eukaryotes, MINDY-family DUBs are highly selective at cleaving K48-linked polyUb, a signal that targets proteins for degradation. We identify the catalytic activity to be encoded within a previously unannotated domain, the crystal structure of which reveals a distinct protein fold with no homology to any of the known DUBs. The crystal structure of MINDY-1 (also known as FAM63A) in complex with propargylated Ub reveals conformational changes that realign the active site for catalysis. MINDY-1 prefers cleaving long polyUb chains and works by trimming chains from the distal end. Collectively, our results reveal a new family of DUBs that may have specialized roles in regulating proteostasis.


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