ESCRT complexes form the main machinery driving protein sorting from endosomes to lysosomes. Currently, the picture regarding assembly of ESCRTs on endosomes is incomplete. The structure of the conserved heterotrimeric ESCRT-I core presented here shows a fan-like arrangement of three helical hairpins, each corresponding to a different subunit. Vps23/Tsg101 is the central hairpin sandwiched between the other subunits, explaining the critical role of its "steadiness box" in the stability of ESCRT-I. We show that yeast ESCRT-I links directly to ESCRT-II, through a tight interaction of Vps28 (ESCRT-I) with the yeast-specific zinc-finger insertion within the GLUE domain of Vps36 (ESCRT-II). The crystal structure of the GLUE domain missing this insertion reveals it is a split PH domain, with a noncanonical lipid binding pocket that binds PtdIns3P. The simultaneous and reinforcing interactions of ESCRT-II GLUE domain with membranes, ESCRT-I, and ubiquitin are critical for ubiquitinated cargo progression from early to late endosomes.
We describe a genome-wide gain-of-function screen for regulators of NF-kappaB, and identify Rap1 (Trf2IP), as an essential modulator of NF-kappaB-mediated pathways. NF-kappaB is induced by ectopic expression of Rap1, whereas its activity is inhibited by Rap1 depletion. In addition to localizing on telomeres, mammalian Rap1 forms a complex with IKKs (IkappaB kinases), and is crucial for the ability of IKKs to be recruited to, and phosphorylate, the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB to make it transcriptionally competent. Rap1-mutant mice display defective NF-kappaB activation and are resistant to endotoxic shock. Furthermore, levels of Rap1 are positively regulated by NF-kappaB, and human breast cancers with NF-kappaB hyperactivity show elevated levels of cytoplasmic Rap1. Similar to inhibiting NF-kappaB, knockdown of Rap1 sensitizes breast cancer cells to apoptosis. These results identify the first cytoplasmic role of Rap1 and provide a mechanism through which it regulates an important signalling cascade in mammals, independent of its ability to regulate telomere function.
The structure confirms the importance of the HLH and leucine zipper motifs in dimerization as well as the mode of E box recognition which was previously analyzed by X-ray crystallography of shortened constructs. The disorder observed in the C-terminal domain suggests that contacts with additional protein components of the transcription machinery are necessary for ordering the secondary structure. The tetramers seen in the crystal are consistent with the tendency of Max and other bHLHZ and HLH proteins to form higher order oligomers in solution and may play a role in DNA looping. The location of the two phosphorylation sites at Ser1 and Ser10 (the latter is the N-cap of the basic helix) suggests how phosphorylation could disrupt DNA binding.
Post-translational modifications of NF-kappaB through phosphorylations enhance its transactivation potential. Much is known about the kinases that phosphorylate NF-kappaB, but little is known about the phosphatases that dephosphorylate it. By using a genome-scale siRNA screen, we identified the WIP1 phosphatase as a negative regulator of NF-kappaB signalling. WIP1-mediated regulation of NF-kappaB occurs in both a p38-dependent and independent manner. Overexpression of WIP1 resulted in decreased NF-kappaB activation in a dose-dependent manner, whereas WIP1 knockdown resulted in increased NF-kappaB function. We show that WIP1 is a direct phosphatase of Ser 536 of the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB. Phosphorylation of Ser 536 is known to be essential for the transactivation function of p65, as it is required for recruitment of the transcriptional co-activator p300. WIP1-mediated regulation of p65 regulated binding of NF-kappaB to p300 and hence chromatin remodelling. Consistent with our results, mice lacking WIP1 showed enhanced inflammation. These results provide the first genetic proof that a phosphatase directly regulates NF-kappaB signalling in vivo.
ESCRT (endosomal sorting complex required for transport) complexes orchestrate efficient sorting of ubiquitinated transmembrane receptors to lysosomes via multivesicular bodies (MVBs). Yeast ESCRT‐I and ESCRT‐II interact directly in vitro; however, this association is not detected in yeast cytosol. To gain understanding of the molecular mechanisms of this link, we have characterised the ESCRT‐I/‐II supercomplex and determined the crystal structure of its interface. The link is formed by the vacuolar protein sorting (Vps)28 C‐terminus (ESCRT‐I) binding with nanomolar affinity to the Vps36‐NZF‐N zinc‐finger domain (ESCRT‐II). A hydrophobic patch on the Vps28‐CT four‐helix bundle contacts the hydrophobic knuckles of Vps36‐NZF‐N. Mutation of the ESCRT‐I/‐II link results in a cargo‐sorting defect in yeast. Interestingly, the two Vps36 NZF domains, NZF‐N and NZF‐C, despite having the same core fold, use distinct surfaces to bind ESCRT‐I or ubiquitinated cargo. We also show that a new component of ESCRT‐I, Mvb12 (YGR206W), engages ESCRT‐I directly with nanomolar affinity to form a 1:1:1:1 heterotetramer. Mvb12 does not affect the affinity of ESCRT‐I for ESCRT‐II in vitro. Our data suggest a complex regulatory mechanism for the ESCRT‐I/‐II link in yeast.
ESCRT-I, -II, and -III protein complexes are sequentially recruited to endosomal membranes, where they orchestrate protein sorting and MVB biogenesis. In addition, they play a critical role in retrovirus budding. Structural understanding of ESCRT interaction networks is largely lacking. The 3.6 A structure of the yeast ESCRT-II core presented here reveals a trilobal complex containing two copies of Vps25, one copy of Vps22, and the C-terminal region of Vps36. Unexpectedly, the entire ESCRT-II core consists of eight repeats of a common building block, a "winged helix" domain. Two PPXY-motifs from Vps25 are involved in contacts with Vps22 and Vps36, and their mutation leads to ESCRT-II disruption. We show that purified ESCRT-II binds directly to the Vps20 component of ESCRT-III. Surprisingly, this binding does not require the protruding N-terminal coiled-coil of Vps22. Vps25 is the chief subunit responsible for Vps20 recruitment. This interaction dramatically increases binding of both components to lipid vesicles in vitro.
The endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT-I) is a 350-kDa complex of three proteins, Vps23, Vps28, and Vps37. The N-terminal ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2 variant (UEV) domain of Vps23 is required for sorting ubiquitinated proteins into the internal vesicles of multivesicular bodies. UEVs are homologous to E2 ubiquitin ligases but lack the conserved cysteine residue required for catalytic activity. The crystal structure of the yeast Vps23 UEV in a complex with ubiquitin (Ub) shows the detailed interactions made with the bound Ub. Compared with the solution structure of the Tsg101 UEV (the human homologue of Vps23) in the absence of Ub, two loops that are conserved among the ESCRT-I UEVs move toward each other to grip the Ub in a pincer-like grasp. The contacts with the UEV encompass two adjacent patches on the surface of the Ub, one containing several hydrophobic residues, including Ile-8 Ub , Ile-44 Ub , and Val-70 Ub , and the second containing a hydrophilic patch including residues Asn-60 Ub , Gln-62 Ub , Glu-64 Ub . The hydrophobic Ub patch interacting with the Vps23 UEV overlaps the surface of Ub interacting with the Vps27 ubiquitin-interacting motif, suggesting a sequential model for ubiquitinated cargo binding by these proteins. In contrast, the hydrophilic patch encompasses residues uniquely interacting with the ESCRT-I UEV. The structure provides a detailed framework for design of mutants that can specifically affect ESCRT-I-dependent sorting of ubiquitinated cargo without affecting Vps27-mediated delivery of cargo to endosomes.Ubiquitination serves as a general mechanism for regulating protein localization and destiny in eukaryotic cells. This mechanism involves conjugation of the 76-residue polypeptide ubiquitin (Ub) 1 to the ⑀-amino group of lysine residues on target proteins. The conjugation occurs by means of a sequential series of thiolester-bound intermediates involving the E1, E2, and E3 enzymes and results in proteasomal, nuclear, and endosomal targeting, depending upon the protein and the nature of the ubiquitination. Whereas proteasomal targeting requires attachment of a chain of at least four ubiquitins linked by isopeptide bonds between the C terminus of one Ub and Lys-48 of the next (1, 2), mono-ubiquitination is sufficient for endosomal targeting. Ubiquitination regulates internalization and/or
The fundamental process of protein self-assembly is governed by protein-protein interactions between subunits, which combine to form structures that are often on the nano-scale. The nano-cage protein, bacterioferritin from Escherichia coli, a maxi-ferritin made up of 24 subunits, was chosen as the basis for an alanine-shaving mutagenesis study to discover key amino acid residues at symmetry-related protein-protein interfaces that control protein stability and self-assembly. By inspection of these interfaces and "virtual alanine scanning," nine mutants were designed, expressed, purified, and characterized using transmission electron microscopy, size exclusion chromatography, dynamic light scattering, native PAGE, and temperaturedependent CD. Many of the selected amino acids act as hot spot residues. Four of these (Arg-30, which is located at the two-fold axis, and Arg-61, Tyr-114, and Glu-128, which are located at the three-fold axis), when individually mutated to alanine, completely shut down detectable solution formation of 24-mer, favoring a cooperatively folded dimer, suggesting that they may be oligomerization "switch residues." Furthermore, two residues, Arg-30 and Arg-61, when changed to alanine form mutants that are more thermodynamically stable than the native protein. This investigation into the structure and energetics of this self-assembling nano-cage protein not only can act as a jumping off point for the eventual design of novel protein nanostructures but can also help to understand the role that structure plays on the function of this important class of proteins.
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