Human proteome-scale structural modeling of E2-E3 interactions exploiting interface motifs

Gozde Kar, Ozlem Keskin*, Ruth Nussinov, Attila Gursoy

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

43 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ubiquitination is crucial for many cellular processes such as protein degradation, DNA repair, transcription regulation, and cell signaling. Ubiquitin attachment takes place via a sequential enzymatic cascade involving ubiquitin activation (by E1 enzymes), ubiquitin conjugation (by E2 enzymes), and ubiquitin substrate tagging (by E3 enzymes). E3 ligases mediate ubiquitin transfer from E2s to substrates and as such confer substrate specificity. Although E3s can interact and function with numerous E2s, it is still unclear how they choose which E2 to use. Identifying all E2 partners of an E3 is essential for inferring the principles guiding E2 selection by an E3. Here we model the interactions of E3 and E2 proteins in a large, proteome-scale strategy based on interface structural motifs, which allows elucidation of (1) which E3s interact with which E2s in the human ubiquitination pathway and (2) how they interact with each other. Interface analysis of E2-E3 complexes reveals that loop L1 of E2s is critical for binding; the residue in the sixth position in loop L1 is widely utilized as an interface hot spot and appears indispensible for E2 interactions. Other loop L1 residues also confer specificity on the E2-E3 interactions: HECT E3s are in contact with the residue in the second position in loop L1 of E2s, but this is not the case for the RING finger type E3s. Our modeled E2-E3 complexes illuminate how slight sequence variations in E2 residues may contribute to specificity in E3 binding. These findings may be important for discovering drug candidates targeting E3s, which have been implicated in many diseases.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1196-1207
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Proteome Research
Volume11
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 3 Feb 2012

Funding

FundersFunder number
National Cancer InstituteZIABC010440

    Keywords

    • E2
    • E3
    • degradation
    • protein-protein interactions
    • protein-protein interfaces
    • proteome-scale structural maps
    • proteomics
    • ubiquitination

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