The p62 protein functions as a scaffold in signaling pathways that lead to activation of NF-B and is an important regulator of osteoclastogenesis. Mutations affecting the receptor activator of NF-B signaling axis can result in human skeletal disorders, including those identified in the C-terminal ubiquitin-associated (UBA) domain of p62 in patients with Paget disease of bone. These observations suggest that the disease may involve a common mechanism related to alterations in the ubiquitin-binding properties of p62. The structural basis for ubiquitin recognition by the UBA domain of p62 has been investigated using NMR and reveals a novel binding mechanism involving a slow exchange structural reorganization of the UBA domain to a "bound" noncanonical UBA conformation that is not significantly populated in the absence of ubiquitin. The repacking of the three-helix bundle generates a binding surface localized around the conserved Xaa-Gly-Phe-Xaa loop that appears to optimize both hydrophobic and electrostatic surface complementarity with ubiquitin. NMR titration analysis shows that the p62-UBA binds to Lys 48 -linked di-ubiquitin with ϳ4-fold lower affinity than to mono-ubiquitin, suggesting preferential binding of the p62-UBA to single ubiquitin units, consistent with the apparent in vivo preference of the p62 protein for Lys 63 -linked polyubiquitin chains (which adopt a more open and extended structure). The conformational switch observed on binding may represent a novel mechanism that underlies specificity in regulating signalinduced protein recognition events.The p62 protein (encoded by the sequestosome 1 (SQSTM1) gene) functions as a scaffold in signaling pathways downstream of the interleukin-1, tumor necrosis factor-␣, nerve growth factor, and receptor activator of NF-B 3 receptors, which ultimately lead to activation of the NF-B transcription factor, with receptor activator of NF-B signaling being a critical determinant in the regulation of osteoclast formation (1-3). Mice that are deficient in p62 show no obvious skeletal phenotype under normal conditions but exhibit defective osteoclastogenesis when challenged with bone-resorbing factors (4). Moreover, mutations affecting p62 are a common cause of Paget disease of bone (PDB), a condition associated with increased osteoclast and osteoblast activity (5-8). PDB is characterized by excessive bone turnover leading to bone expansion, structural weakness, deformity, and pain (9, 10).The p62 protein has a domain structure consistent with its participation in multiple signaling complexes, although p62 also appears to be multifunctional, not least in controlling protein recruitment to endosomes (3) and proteasomal proteolysis (11). Within the p62 sequence, an N-terminal PB1 domain has been identified that binds atypical protein kinase C. In addition, a ZZ motif is evident, a binding site for the RING finger protein TRAF6, and two PEST sequences that lie adjacent to the C-terminal ubiquitin-associated (UBA) domain (Fig. 1), a motif that occurs in enzymes of the ubiq...
Growing evidence implicates impairment of autophagy as a candidate pathogenic mechanism in the spectrum of neurodegenerative disorders which includes amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (ALS-FTLD). SQSTM1, which encodes the autophagy receptor SQSTM1/p62, is genetically associated with ALS-FTLD, although to date autophagy-relevant functional defects in disease-associated variants have not been described. A key protein-protein interaction in autophagy is the recognition of a lipid-anchored form of LC3 (LC3-II) within the phagophore membrane by SQSTM1, mediated through its LC3-interacting region (LIR), and notably some ALS-FTLD mutations map to this region. Here we show that although representing a conservative substitution and predicted to be benign, the ALS-associated L341V mutation of SQSTM1 is defective in recognition of LC3B. We place our observations on a firm quantitative footing by showing the L341V-mutant LIR is associated with a ∼3-fold reduction in LC3B binding affinity and using protein NMR we rationalize the structural basis for the effect. This functional deficit is realized in motor neuron-like cells, with the L341V mutant EGFP-mCherry-SQSTM1 less readily incorporated into acidic autophagic vesicles than the wild type. Our data supports a model in which the L341V mutation limits the critical step of SQSTM1 recruitment to the phagophore. The oligomeric nature of SQSTM1, which presents multiple LIRs to template growth of the phagophore, potentially gives rise to avidity effects which amplify the relatively modest impact of any single mutation on LC3B binding. Over the lifetime of a neuron, impaired autophagy could expose a vulnerability, which ultimately tips the balance from cell survival toward cell death.
Ubiquitin-associated (UBA) domain mutations of SQSTM1 are an important cause of Paget's disease of bone (PDB), which is a human skeletal disorder characterized by abnormal bone turnover. We previously showed that, when introduced into the full-length SQSTM1 protein, the disease-causing P392L, M404V, G411S, and G425R missense mutations and the E396X truncating mutation (representative of all of the SQSTM1 truncating mutations) cause a generalized loss of monoubiquitin binding and impaired K48-linked polyubiquitin binding at physiological temperature. Here, we show that the remaining three known PDB missense mutations, P387L, S399P, and M404T, have similar deleterious effects on monoubiquitin binding and K48-linked polyubiquitin binding by SQSTM1. The P387L mutation affects an apparently unstructured region at the N terminus of the UBA domain, some five residues from the start of the first helix, which is dispensable for polyubiquitin binding by the isolated UBA domain. Our findings support the proposal that the disease mechanism in PDB with SQSTM1 mutations involves a common loss of ubiquitin binding function of SQSTM1 and implicate a sequence extrinsic to the compact globular region of the UBA domain as a critical determinant of ubiquitin recognition by the full-length SQSTM1 protein.
Ubiquitin (Ub) modifications are transduced by receptor proteins that use Ub-binding domains (UBDs) to recognize distinct interaction faces on the Ub surface. We report the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) solution structures of the A20-like zinc finger (A20 Znf) UBD of the Ub receptor ZNF216, and its complex with Ub, and show that the binding surface on Ub centered on Asp58 leaves the canonical hydrophobic Ile44 patch free to participate in additional interactions. We have modeled ternary complexes of the different families of UBDs and show that while many are expected to bind competitively to the same Ile44 surface or show steric incompatibility, other combinations (in particular, those involving the A20 Znf domain) are consistent with a single Ub moiety simultaneously participating in multiple interactions with different UBDs. We subsequently demonstrate by NMR that the A20 Znf domain of ZNF216 and the UBA domain of the p62 protein (an Ile44-binding UBD), which function in the same biological pathways, are able to form such a Ub-mediated ternary complex through independent interactions with a single Ub. This work supports an emerging concept of Ub acting as a scaffold to mediate multiprotein complex assembly.
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