1. Academic Validation
  2. UBE2A and UBE2B are recruited by an atypical E3 ligase module in UBR4

UBE2A and UBE2B are recruited by an atypical E3 ligase module in UBR4

  • Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2024 Feb;31(2):351-363. doi: 10.1038/s41594-023-01192-4.
Lucy Barnsby-Greer # 1 Peter D Mabbitt # 1 2 Marc-Andre Dery 1 Daniel R Squair 1 Nicola T Wood 1 Frederic Lamoliatte 1 Sven M Lange 1 Satpal Virdee 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 MRC Protein Phosphorylation and Ubiquitylation Unit, University of Dundee, Scotland, UK.
  • 2 Scion, Rotorua, New Zealand.
  • 3 MRC Protein Phosphorylation and Ubiquitylation Unit, University of Dundee, Scotland, UK. s.s.virdee@dundee.ac.uk.
  • # Contributed equally.
Abstract

UBR4 is a 574 kDa E3 Ligase (E3) of the N-degron pathway with roles in neurodevelopment, age-associated muscular atrophy and Cancer. The catalytic module that carries out ubiquitin (Ub) transfer remains unknown. Here we identify and characterize a distinct E3 module within human UBR4 consisting of a 'hemiRING' zinc finger, a helical-rich UBR zinc-finger interacting (UZI) subdomain, and an N-terminal region that can serve as an affinity factor for the E2 conjugating Enzyme (E2). The structure of an E2-E3 complex provides atomic-level insight into the specificity determinants of the hemiRING toward the cognate E2s UBE2A/UBE2B. Via an allosteric mechanism, the UZI subdomain modestly activates the Ub-loaded E2 (E2∼Ub). We propose attenuated activation is complemented by the intrinsically high lysine reactivity of UBE2A, and their cooperation imparts a reactivity profile important for substrate specificity and optimal degradation kinetics. These findings reveal the mechanistic underpinnings of a neuronal N-degron E3, its specific recruitment of UBE2A, and highlight the underappreciated architectural diversity of cross-brace domains with Ub E3 activity.

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