Distinct USP25 and USP28 Oligomerization States Regulate Deubiquitinating Activity
Journal Title
Molecular Cell
Publication Type
Journal Article in press
Abstract
The evolutionarily related deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) USP25 and USP28 comprise an identical overall domain architecture but are functionally non-redundant: USP28 stabilizes c-MYC and other nuclear proteins, and USP25 regulates inflammatory TRAF signaling. We here compare molecular features of USP25 and USP28. Active enzymes form distinctively shaped dimers, with a dimerizing insertion spatially separating independently active catalytic domains. In USP25, but not USP28, two dimers can form an autoinhibited tetramer, where a USP25-specific, conserved insertion sequence blocks ubiquitin binding. In full-length enzymes, a C-terminal domain with a previously unknown fold has no impact on oligomerization, but N-terminal regions affect the dimer-tetramer equilibrium in vitro. We confirm oligomeric states of USP25 and USP28 in cells and show that modulating oligomerization affects substrate stabilization in accordance with in vitro activity data. Our work highlights how regions outside of the catalytic domain enable a conceptually intriguing interplay of DUB oligomerization and activity.
Publisher
Cell Press
Research Division(s)
Ubiquitin Signalling
PubMed ID
30926242
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2019.02.030
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2019-04-11 12:23:45
Last Modified: 2019-04-11 12:27:09
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