Background
Ubiquitin (Ub) is a highly conserved 76 amino-acid protein found throughout eukaryotic cells. A vast number of cellular processes, including targeted protein degradation, cell cycle progression, DNA repair, protein trafficking, inflammatory response, virus budding, and receptor endocytosis, are regulated by Ub-mediated signalling; where the target protein is tagged by single or multi-monomeric Ub (monomeric Ub attached to multiple sites on the substrate) or a polymeric chain of Ubs (Fushman et al., 2010). This post-translational modification is tightly controlled by an enzymatic cascade involving several enzymes (E1, E2, and E3) and occurs through either an isopeptide bond between the C-terminal Glycyl residue of Ub and the epsilon amino group of a Lysyl residue on a target protein or through a peptide bond between the C-terminal Glycyl residue of Ub and the N-terminal amine on a further Ub. In the former (isopeptide bond-linked) case the substrate protein may either be ubiquitin itself - thus leading to the generation of poly-ubiquitin chains - or another target protein (Fushman et al., 2010). Thus, ubiquitin can be attached to a substrate either as a monomer or as a poly-ubiquitin chain. Further - depending on their linkage type (M1, K6, K11, K27, K29, K33, K48 and K63 linked) - the Ub chains can take different structural forms. Chains containing all eight possible Ub linkages have been found in living cells and different ubiquitin chain types may encode different biological signals, allowing this single protein to mediate many diverse functions (Komander 2009; Weeks et al., 2009; Walczak et al., 2012). The functionality of Ub chains is most commonly associated with their attachment to substrate proteins but there is also evidence that they may also play a role in cellular signalling as free chains (Braten et al., 2012). A mass spectrometry-based study found that K11 linkages account for 28% of all yeast ubiquitin-ubiquitin linkages. The relative abundance of the other linkages were K6 (11%), K27 (9%), K29 (3%), K33 (4%), K48 (29%) and K63 (16%) (Xu et al., 2009). Ubiquitin chains form distinct structures based on their linkage. K11- and K48-linked chains form compact, globular structures with significant ubiquitin-ubiquitin contact. In contrast, K63-linked chains adopt an extended conformation with little interaction between adjacent ubiquitins (Schaefer et al., 2011). K11 linkages between ubiquitin molecules are as abundant as K48 linkages and data indicates that K11-linked chains are, like Lys48-linked chains, efficient proteasomal degradation signals. More recent data has indicated that K11-linked ubiquitin chains also play a vital role in the regulation of the cell cycle by regulating the substrates of the E3 ligase anaphase-promoting complex (APC/C) and controlling progression through mitosis (Bremm et al., 2010; Wickliffe et al., 2011). Cezanne has been identified as the first DUB with preference for K11 linkages, suggesting that K11-linked ubiquitin chains are independently regulated degradation signals within the ubiquitin system (Bremm et al., 2010).
References
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