of
ubiquitin, the highly conserved
protein that serves as a molecular tag targeting proteins for degradation by the proteasome
Ubiquitination and targeting Proteins are targeted for degradation by the proteasome with covalent modification of a lysine residue that requires the coordinated reactions of three
enzymes. In the first step, a
ubiquitin-activating enzyme (known as E1) hydrolyzes ATP and adenylylates a
ubiquitin molecule. This is then transferred to E1's active-site
cysteine residue in concert with the adenylylation of a second ubiquitin. This adenylylated ubiquitin is then transferred to a cysteine of a second enzyme,
ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (E2). In the last step, a member of a highly diverse class of enzymes known as
ubiquitin ligases (E3) recognizes the specific protein to be ubiquitinated and catalyzes the transfer of ubiquitin from E2 to this target protein. A target protein must be labeled with at least four ubiquitin monomers (in the form of a polyubiquitin chain) before it is recognized by the proteasome lid. It is therefore the E3 that confers
substrate specificity to this system. The number of E1, E2, and E3 proteins expressed depends on the organism and cell type, but there are many different E3 enzymes present in humans, indicating that there is a huge number of targets for the ubiquitin proteasome system. The
ubiquitin protein itself is 76
amino acids long and was named due to its ubiquitous nature, as it has a highly
conserved sequence and is found in all known eukaryotic organisms. The genes encoding ubiquitin in
eukaryotes are arranged in
tandem repeats, possibly due to the heavy
transcription demands on these genes to produce enough ubiquitin for the cell. It has been proposed that ubiquitin is the slowest-
evolving protein identified to date. Ubiquitin contains seven lysine residues to which another ubiquitin can be ligated, resulting in different types of polyubiquitin chains. Chains in which each additional ubiquitin is linked to lysine 48 of the previous ubiquitin have a role in proteasome targeting, while other types of chains may be involved in other processes. ation pathway
Intrinsic Ubiquitin Receptors of the Proteasome Polyubiquitinated proteins are targeted to the proteasome through three identified Ubiquitin receptors: Rpn1, Rpn10, and Rpn13, that decorate the 19S RP and can direct an unstructured region of the target substrate into the N-domain of the AAA motor. Each was identified individually and characterized to bind ubiquitin.
Rpn10 Rpn10 was the first ubiquitin receptor identified on the proteasome. Rpn10 has a von Willebrand factor type A (VWA) attached to either a single Ubiquitin Interaction Motif (UIM), in yeast, or two UIMs in higher eukaryotes. The VWA domain binds between the base subcomplex and lid subcomplex of the 19S RP, while the UIM extends into a space over the AAA motor, though the UIM has not been seen in cryo-EM structures. NMR studies have shown that the UIM of Rpn10 binds mono-ubiquitin, and K48 di-ubiquitin with higher affinity. More recently, the C-terminus of Rpn10 in higher eukaryotes has been shown to bind an E3 ligase, UBE3A/E6AP (see Proteasomal Ligases).
Rpn13 Rpn13 was identified as a ubiquitin receptor using a
Yeast-2-hybrid screen. and mutations to the PRU block binding to ubiquitin. Rpn13 binds the proteasome through Rpn2 and sits at the top of the 19S, positioned over the OB ring of the motor. Rpn1 also provides a docking site for Ubp6. The affinities for ubiquitin for these receptors in isolation has been measured through a variety of methods. They are all in the micromolar range, however a substrate that has both a ubiquitin signal and an unstructured region has a
Michaelis menten constant in the hundreds of nanomolar range, suggesting that the unstructured region in key in engaging a substrate.
Potential additional ubiquitin receptors. Interestingly, mutations of Rpn1, Rpn10, and Rpn13 in yeast are not lethal, suggesting that additional sites may exist. Rpn11 forms an obligate dimer with Rpn8 forming an active DUB able to cleave all ubiquitin linkages. The active site of Rpn11 is formed through metal coordination of the catalytic zinc and this site is covered by an Insert-1 loop that covers this active site. The structure is very similar to that of a related JAMM DUB, AMSH, that is responsible for K63 ubiquitin cleavage, however it lacks the residues that are key for AMSH's linkage specificity. The structure of Rpn11 bound to ubiquitin revealed that the C-terminus of Ubiquitin pushes the insert-1 loop into an beta-sheet providing access to the catalytic zinc. This structure combined with detailed biochemistry revealed that the DUB activity of Rpn11 was accelerated at least 10-fold by the translocation of the protein substrate, suggesting that the translocation delivered the Ub substrate to the active site of Rpn11. This model of translocation-dependent deubiquitination was later confirmed by cryoEM of both the yeast and human proteasome bound to a substrate, both of which recapitulated the crystal structure of Ubiquitin bound to Rpn11. Single molecule studies on the yeast proteasome confirmed that the DUB rates measured by biochemistry were indeed stimulated by translocation. More recent biochemical and single molecule studies have shown that on top of being the essential DUB, Rpn11 is also a ubiquitin receptor that acts as an allosteric sensor to enable proper engagement of a substrate by the proteasome. In addition to binding Ubiquitin, Rpn11 has also recently been shown to be a binding spot for many proteasome associated factors. Three recent cryo-EM studies have shown that PITHD1 (Proteasome Interacting Thioredoxin Domain 1) and TXNL1 (Thioredoxin-like protein 1) bind the proteasome by binding Rpn2/Rpn10 and making an interaction with the insert-1 loop of Rpn11. PITHD1 binds the proteasome in a resting state and has been proposed to be a dormancy factor,
USP14/UBP6 In contrast to Rpn11, USP14 and UCH37 are the DUBs that do not always associated with the proteasome and are not essential for ubiquitin dependent degradation. Instead, these DUBs are proposed to "edit" the ubiquitin code of a substrate that is already engaged with the proteasome. In cells, about 10-40% of the proteasomes were found to have USP14 associated. Ubp6/USP14 is a member of the Ubiquitin Specific Protease (USP) family, utilizing a catalytic cysteine to cleave ubiquitin. Along with the USP, Ubp6/USP14 contains a
Ubiquitin-like protein (UBL) that binds the proteasome. Ubp6/USP14 is largely activated by the proteasome and exhibit a very low DUB activity alone. Once activated, USP14 was found to suppress proteasome function by its DUB activity and by inducing parallel pathways of proteasome conformational transitions, one of which turned out to directly prohibit substrate insertion into the AAA-ATPase, as first observed biochemically It appears that USP14 regulates proteasome function at multiple checkpoints by both catalytically competing with Rpn11 and allosterically reprogramming the AAA-ATPase states, which is rather unexpected for a DUB. UCH37 is activated upon binding the proteasome through the C-terminal DEUBAD (DUB adaptor) domain that binds Rpn2.
Proteasomal ligases While Ubp6 and UCH37 can remodel the ubiquitin code on a substrate by removing Ubiquitins,
Ubiquitin ligases can also associate with the proteasome and attach ubiquitins. For the 26S, this includes Hul5 in yeast (or
UBE3C in humans) and
UBE3A/E6AP in humans. Hul5 was first identified in yeast as a 26S associated ligase along with Ubp6 and they were proposed to remodel ubiquitin chains at the proteasome. Biochemical studies show that Hul5 can attach additional ubiquitins onto a ubiquitinated substrate effectively acting as an
Ubiquitin ligase. Hul5 has been proposed to bind Rpn2 in yeast, however this interaction has not been shown structurally. Further work needs to be done to understand how Hul5 works and what substrates are processed by Hul5. UBE3A/E6AP binds the C-terminus of Rpn10 in mammals. NMR has shown that a previously described disordered region of Rpn10 becomes order upon binding E6AP forming a tight interaction in the low nanomolar range.
Proteasomal chaperones In addition to DUBs and Ligases, many other proteins associate with the proteasome and are important for degradation. These proteins typically consist of a
Ubiquitin-like domain (UBL) and a Ubiquitin associating domain (UBA) with Dsk2, Rad23, and Ddi1 being classified as Proteasomal Chaperones. Dsk2 and Rad23 have UBLs that bind the receptors of the proteasome. Ddi1 has been shown to bind long K48-Ubiquitin chains and act as a protease and is probably not directly interacting with the proteasome.
Unfolding and translocation After a protein has been ubiquitinated, it is recognized by the 19S regulatory particle in an ATP-dependent binding step. Which of these processes is the
rate-limiting step in the overall proteolysis reaction depends on the specific substrate; for some proteins, the unfolding process is rate-limiting, while deubiquitination is the slowest step for other proteins. The presence of
intrinsically disordered protein segments of sufficient size, either at the protein terminus or internally, has also been proposed to facilitate efficient initiation of degradation. The gate formed by the α subunits prevents peptides longer than about four residues from entering the interior of the 20S particle. The ATP molecules bound before the initial recognition step are
hydrolyzed before translocation. While energy is needed for substrate unfolding, it is not required for translocation. The mechanism for unfolding of
globular proteins is necessarily general, but somewhat dependent on the
amino acid sequence. Long sequences of alternating glycine and
alanine have been shown to inhibit substrate unfolding, decreasing the efficiency of proteasomal degradation; this results in the release of partially degraded byproducts, possibly due to the decoupling of the ATP hydrolysis and unfolding steps. Such glycine-alanine repeats are also found in nature, for example in
silk fibroin; in particular, certain
Epstein–Barr virus gene products bearing this sequence can stall the proteasome, helping the virus propagate by preventing
antigen presentation on the major histocompatibility complex. s. The α subunits are represented as green spheres and the β subunits as protein backbones colored by individual
polypeptide chain. The small pink spheres represent the location of the active-site
threonine residue in each subunit. Light blue chemical structures are the inhibitor
bortezomib bound to the active sites.
Proteolysis The proteasome functions as an
endoprotease. The mechanism of proteolysis by the β subunits of the 20S core particle is through a threonine-dependent
nucleophilic attack. This mechanism may depend on an associated
water molecule for deprotonation of the reactive threonine
hydroxyl. Degradation occurs within the central chamber formed by the association of the two β rings and normally does not release partially degraded products, instead reducing the substrate to short polypeptides typically 7–9 residues long, though they can range from 4 to 25 residues, depending on the organism and substrate. The biochemical mechanism that determines product length is not fully characterized. Although the three catalytic β subunits have a common mechanism, they have slightly different substrate specificities, which are considered chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like, and peptidyl-glutamyl peptide-hydrolyzing (PHGH)-like. These variations in specificity are the result of interatomic contacts with local residues near the active sites of each subunit. Each catalytic β subunit also possesses a conserved lysine residue required for proteolysis. Similar effects have been observed in yeast proteins; this mechanism of selective degradation is known as
regulated ubiquitin/proteasome dependent processing (RUP).
Ubiquitin-independent degradation Although most substrates must be ubiquitinated before being degraded by the 26S proteasome, there are some exceptions to this general rule, especially when the proteasome plays a normal role in the post-
translational processing of the protein. The proteasomal activation of NF-κB by processing
p105 into p50 via internal proteolysis is one major example. are degraded in a ubiquitin-independent manner. Ubiquitin-independent mechanisms targeting key
cell cycle regulators such as
p53 have also been reported, although p53 is also subject to ubiquitin-dependent degradation. Finally, structurally abnormal, misfolded, or highly oxidized proteins are also subject to ubiquitin-independent and 19S-independent degradation under conditions of cellular stress. The most well-known example of a ubiquitin-independent proteasome substrate is the enzyme
ornithine decarboxylase (ODC). ODC is degraded upon the expression and binding to a cofactor,
Ornithine decarboxylase antizyme (AZ) that breaks the ODC dimer. ODC contains either a C-terminal disordered region (in human) or an N-terminal disordered region (in yeast) is necessary for degradation and is proposed to engage the AAA motor of the 19S RP, however the mechanistic details of this interaction have yet to be identified. Another example of ubiquitin independent degradation is Thymidine synthetase, where an N-terminal disordered region is essential for degradation. FAT10 (or
Ubiquitin D) is a tandem UBL protein that is also degraded by the proteasome in a ubiquitin independent manner. Recent biochemical and structural studies show that FAT10 is degraded upon binding of
NUB1 that unfolds the first UBL of FAT10 enabling engagement by the 26S proteasome. The NUB1-FAT10 complex also exposes a UBL on NUB1 that binds Rpn1, positioning FAT10 above the central channel of the proteasome. Midnolin was identified as a protein that targeted transcription factors to the proteasome for ubiquitin independent degradation. Recent structural studies show that the UBL of midnolin binds binds Rpn11, a helix binds Rpn1, and the CATCH domain binds the transcription factor, providing a model for how ubiquitin independent degradation occurs. Pathogens also have learned to take advantage of ubiquitin-independent degradation. For plants, a parasitic
Phytoplasma, expresses SAP05, a protein that binds transcription factors and target them for degradation by the 26S proteasome by binding the VWA domain of Rpn10. Interestingly, SAP05 does not bind the insect vector Rpn10. Crystal structures show how SAP05 binds both these TFs and Rpn10 indicating that SAP05 places the TFs near the entry of the AAA motor allowing for ubiquitin independent degradation. ==Evolution==