AI Article Synopsis

  • Ubiquitin is a small protein that helps control other proteins in our cells, either tagging them for destruction or helping them do their jobs without breaking down.
  • Researchers studied how adding ubiquitin to different spots on a protein called barstar changes its behavior and structure.
  • They found that modifying certain areas can make the protein unstable, while other areas can help protect it, showing that the effects of ubiquitin really depend on where it's attached.

Article Abstract

Ubiquitin is a common posttranslational modification canonically associated with targeting proteins to the 26S proteasome for degradation and also plays a role in numerous other nondegradative cellular processes. Ubiquitination at certain sites destabilizes the substrate protein, with consequences for proteasomal processing, while ubiquitination at other sites has little energetic effect. How this site specificity-and, by extension, the myriad effects of ubiquitination on substrate proteins-arises remains unknown. Here, we systematically characterize the atomic-level effects of ubiquitination at various sites on a model protein, barstar, using a combination of NMR, hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry, and molecular dynamics simulation. We find that, regardless of the site of modification, ubiquitination does not induce large structural rearrangements in the substrate. Destabilizing modifications, however, increase fluctuations from the native state resulting in exposure of the substrate's C terminus. Both of the sites occur in regions of barstar with relatively high conformational flexibility. Nevertheless, destabilization appears to occur through different thermodynamic mechanisms, involving a reduction in entropy in one case and a loss in enthalpy in another. By contrast, ubiquitination at a nondestabilizing site protects the substrate C terminus through intermittent formation of a structural motif with the last three residues of ubiquitin. Thus, the biophysical effects of ubiquitination at a given site depend greatly on local context. Taken together, our results reveal how a single posttranslational modification can generate a broad array of distinct effects, providing a framework to guide the design of proteins and therapeutics with desired degradation and quality control properties.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8000280PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2025126118DOI Listing

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