The linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC) participates in inflammatory and oncogenic signaling by conjugating linear ubiquitin chains to target proteins. LUBAC consists of the catalytic HOIP subunit and two accessory subunits, HOIL-1L and SHARPIN. Interactions between the ubiquitin-associated (UBA) domains of HOIP and the ubiquitin-like (UBL) domains of two accessory subunits are involved in LUBAC stabilization, but the precise molecular mechanisms underlying the formation of stable trimeric LUBAC remain elusive. We solved the co-crystal structure of the binding regions of the trimeric LUBAC complex and found that LUBAC-tethering motifs (LTMs) located N terminally to the UBL domains of HOIL-1L and SHARPIN heterodimerize and fold into a single globular domain. This interaction is resistant to dissociation and plays a critical role in stabilizing trimeric LUBAC. Inhibition of LTM-mediated HOIL-1L/SHARPIN dimerization profoundly attenuated the function of LUBAC, suggesting LTM as a superior target of LUBAC destabilization for anticancer therapeutics.
Ubiquitin is known to be one of the most soluble and stably folded intracellular proteins, but it is often found in inclusion bodies associated with various diseases including neurodegenerative disorders and cancer. To gain insight into this contradictory behaviour, we have examined the physicochemical properties of ubiquitin and its polymeric chains that lead to aggregate formation. We find that the folding stability of ubiquitin chains unexpectedly decreases with increasing chain length, resulting in the formation of amyloid-like fibrils. Furthermore, when expressed in cells, polyubiquitin chains covalently linked to EGFP also form aggregates depending on chain length. Notably, these aggregates are selectively degraded by autophagy. We propose a novel model in which the physical and chemical instability of polyubiquitin chains drives the formation of fibrils, which then serve as an initiation signal for autophagy.
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is an immensely well-studied metabolite serving multiple key biochemical roles as the major chemical energy currency in living systems, a building block of ribonucleic acids, and a phosphoryl group donor in kinase-mediated signaling. Intriguingly, ATP has been recently proposed to act as a hydrotrope that inhibits aggregation of amyloidogenic proteins; however, the underlying mechanism and the general physicochemical effect that coexistence with ATP exerts on proteins remain unclear. By combining NMR spectroscopy and MD simulations, here we observed weak but unambiguously measurable and concentration-dependent noncovalent interactions between ATP and various proteins. The interactions were most pronounced for an intrinsically disordered protein (α-synuclein) and for residues in flexible regions (e.g., loops or termini) of two representative folded proteins (ubiquitin and the dimeric ubiquitin-binding domain of p62). As shown by solution NMR, a consequence of the ATP–protein interaction was altered hydration of solvent-exposed residues in the protein. The observation that ATP interacted with all three proteins suggests that ATP is a general nonspecific binder of proteins. Several complementary biophysical methods further confirmed that, at physiological concentrations of ∼5–10 mM, ATP starts to form oligomeric states via magnesium-chelating and chelation-independent mechanisms, in agreement with previous studies. Although the observed ATP–protein interaction was relatively weak overall, the high ratio of ATP (monomeric free ATP, mono- and divalent ion-bound ATP, oligomeric and chelated ATP) to proteins in cells suggests that most proteins are likely to encounter transient interactions with ATP (and chemically similar metabolites) that confer metabolite-mediated protein surface protection.
Background:The autophagic receptor NBR1 is commonly found in ubiquitin-positive inclusions in neurodegenerative diseases. Results: Molecular recognition of ubiquitin and polyubiquitin by NBR1 is described. Conclusion:The ubiquitin-associated domain of NBR1 shows unexpectedly high affinity for monoubiquitin but lacks polyubiquitin linkage specificity. Significance: NBR1 may be highly efficient at forming intracellular inclusions with ubiquitylated proteins via non-linkagespecific association with ubiquitin.
The rotation of an object cannot be fully tracked without understanding a set of three angles, namely, roll, pitch, and yaw. Tracking these angles as a three-degrees-of-freedom (3-DoF) rotation is a fundamental measurement, facilitating, for example, attitude control of a ship, image stabilization to reduce camera shake, and self-driving cars. Until now, however, there has been no method to track 3-DoF rotation to measure nanometer-scale dynamics in biomolecules and live cells. Here we show that 3-DoF rotation of biomolecules can be visualized via nitrogen-vacancy centers in a fluorescent nanodiamond using a tomographic vector magnetometry technique. We demonstrate application of the method to three different types of biological systems. First, we tracked the rotation of a single molecule of the motor protein F1-ATPase by attaching a nanodiamond to the γ-subunit. We visualized the 3-step rotation of the motor in 3D space and, moreover, a delay of ATP binding or ADP release step in the catalytic reaction. Second, we attached a nanodiamond to a membrane protein in live cells to report on cellular membrane dynamics, showing that 3D rotational motion of the membrane protein correlates with intracellular cytoskeletal density. Last, we used the method to track nonrandom motions in the intestine of Caenorhabditis elegans. Collectively, our findings show that the method can record nanoscale 3-DoF rotation in vitro, in cells, and even in vivo. 3-DoF rotation tracking introduces a new perspective on microscopic biological samples, revealing in greater detail the functional mechanisms due to nanoscale dynamics in molecules and cells.
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