1. Academic Validation
  2. Electron microscopy structure of human APC/C(CDH1)-EMI1 reveals multimodal mechanism of E3 ligase shutdown

Electron microscopy structure of human APC/C(CDH1)-EMI1 reveals multimodal mechanism of E3 ligase shutdown

  • Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2013 Jul;20(7):827-35. doi: 10.1038/nsmb.2593.
Jeremiah J Frye 1 Nicholas G Brown Georg Petzold Edmond R Watson Christy R R Grace Amanda Nourse Marc A Jarvis Richard W Kriwacki Jan-Michael Peters Holger Stark Brenda A Schulman
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 1Department of Structural Biology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
Abstract

The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) is a ~1.5-MDa multiprotein E3 ligase Enzyme that regulates cell division by promoting timely ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis of key cell-cycle regulatory proteins. Inhibition of human APC/C(CDH1) during interphase by early mitotic inhibitor 1 (EMI1) is essential for accurate coordination of DNA synthesis and mitosis. Here, we report a hybrid structural approach involving NMR, electron microscopy and enzymology, which reveal that EMI1's 143-residue C-terminal domain inhibits multiple APC/C(CDH1) functions. The intrinsically disordered D-box, linker and tail elements, together with a structured zinc-binding domain, bind distinct regions of APC/C(CDH1) to synergistically both block the substrate-binding site and inhibit ubiquitin-chain elongation. The functional importance of intrinsic structural disorder is explained by enabling a small inhibitory domain to bind multiple sites to shut down various functions of a 'molecular machine' nearly 100 times its size.

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