• Title of article

    Deubiquitinases Sharpen Substrate Discrimination during Membrane Protein Degradation from the ER

  • Author/Authors

    Zai-Rong Zhang، نويسنده , , Juan S. Bonifacino، نويسنده , , Ramanujan S. Hegde، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    609
  • To page
    622
  • Abstract
    Newly synthesized membrane proteins are queried by ubiquitin ligase complexes and triaged between degradative and nondegradative fates. The mechanisms that convert modest differences in substrate-ligase interactions into decisive outcomes of ubiquitination are not well understood. Here, we reconstitute membrane protein recognition and ubiquitination in liposomes using purified components from a viral-mediated degradation pathway. We find that substrate-ligase interactions in the membrane directly influence processivity of ubiquitin attachment to modulate polyubiquitination. Unexpectedly, differential processivity alone could not explain the differential fates in cultured cells of degraded and nondegraded clients. Both computational and experimental analyses identified continuous deubiquitination as a prerequisite for maximal substrate discrimination. Deubiquitinases reduce polyubiquitin dwell times preferentially on clients that dissociate more rapidly from the ligase. This explains how small differences in substrate-ligase interaction can be amplified into larger differences in net degradation. These results provide a conceptual framework for substrate discrimination during membrane protein quality control.
  • Journal title
    CELL
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    CELL
  • Record number

    1021835