Knipscheer P, et al. (2008) Ubc9 sumoylation regulates SUMO target discrimination. Mol Cell 31(3):371-82
Abstract: Posttranslational modification with small ubiquitin-related modifier, SUMO, is a widespread mechanism for rapid and reversible changes in protein function. Considering the large number of known targets, the number of enzymes involved in modification seems surprisingly low: a single E1, a single E2, and a few distinct E3 ligases. Here we show that autosumoylation of the mammalian E2-conjugating enzyme Ubc9 at Lys14 regulates target discrimination. While not altering its activity toward HDAC4, E2-25K, PML, or TDG, sumoylation of Ubc9 impairs its activity on RanGAP1 and strongly activates sumoylation of the transcriptional regulator Sp100. Enhancement depends on a SUMO-interacting motif (SIM) in Sp100 that creates an additional interface with the SUMO conjugated to the E2, a mechanism distinct from Ubc9 approximately SUMO thioester recruitment. The crystal structure of sumoylated Ubc9 demonstrates how the newly created binding interface can provide a gain in affinity otherwise provided by E3 ligases.
| Status: Published | Type: Journal Article | Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | PubMed ID: 18691969 |
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| Topics | Genes linked to topics |
|---|---|
| UBC9 | |
| Fungal Related Genes/Proteins | |
| Non-Fungal Related Genes/Proteins | |
| Primary Literature | |
| Protein Processing/Modification/Regulation | |
| Protein Sequence Features | |
| Protein-protein Interactions | |




