Published January 3, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Identifying the substrate proteins of U-box E3s E4B and CHIP by orthogonal ubiquitin transfer

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Georgia State University
  • 3. Northwestern University
  • 4. Emory University
  • 5. Shanghai Jiao Tong University
  • 6. AbbVie Bioresearch Center
  • 7. Vanderbilt University

Description

E3 ubiquitin (UB) ligases E4B and carboxyl terminus of Hsc70-interacting protein (CHIP) use a common U-box motif to transfer UB from E1 and E2 enzymes to their substrate proteins and regulate diverse cellular processes. To profile their ubiquitination targets in the cell, we used phage display to engineer E2-E4B and E2-CHIP pairs that were free of cross-reactivity with the native UB transfer cascades. We then used the engineered E2-E3 pairs to construct "orthogonal UB transfer (OUT)" cascades so that a mutant UB (xUB) could be exclusively used by the engineered E4B or CHIP to label their substrate proteins. Purification of xUB-conjugated proteins followed by proteomics analysis enabled the identification of hundreds of potential substrates of E4B and CHIP in human embryonic kidney 293 cells. Kinase MAPK3 (mitogen-activated protein kinase 3), methyltransferase PRMT1 (protein arginine N-methyltransferase 1), and phosphatase PPP3CA (protein phosphatase 3 catalytic subunit alpha) were identified as the shared substrates of the two E3s. Phosphatase PGAM5 (phosphoglycerate mutase 5) and deubiquitinase OTUB1 (ovarian tumor domain containing ubiquitin aldehyde binding protein 1) were confirmed as E4B substrates, and b-catenin and CDK4 (cyclin-dependent kinase 4) were confirmed as CHIP substrates. On the basis of the CHIP-CDK4 circuit identified by OUT, we revealed that CHIP signals CDK4 degradation in response to endoplasmic reticulum stress.

Data availability

All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors. The proteomics data for identification of E4B and CHIP substrates are available at the ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRoteomics IDEntifications partner repository (http://proteomecentral.proteomexchange.org).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/sciadv.1701393
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10979

Funding

National Science Foundation
1420193
National Science Foundation
1710460
National Institutes of Health
GM104498
National Institutes of Health
CA112282
National Institutes of Health
GM075156
Lynn Sage Cancer Research Foundation
Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center
Emory Integrated Proteomics Core
Project 985
WF220417001
Project 985
WF114117001/004
National Natural Science Foundation of China
31770921
Chicago biomedical consortium
PDR-010
Chicago biomedical consortium
Catalyst-026
National Institutes of Health
GM118089

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Chemistry