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Emi1 preferentially inhibits ubiquitin chain elongation by the anaphase promoting complex

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2013

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Wang, Weiping, and Marc W. Kirschner. 2013. “Emi1 preferentially inhibits ubiquitin chain elongation by the anaphase promoting complex.” Nature cell biology 15 (7): 10.1038/ncb2755. doi:10.1038/ncb2755. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncb2755.

Abstract

The anaphase promoting complex (APC) is the crucial ubiquitin ligase targeting the regulatory machinery of the cell cycle. Emi1, a major modulator of APC activity, is thought to act competitively as a pseudosubstrate. We show that the modulation of APC activity is more subtle: Emi1 inhibits ubiquitylation at both substrate binding and separately at the step of ubiquitin transfer to APC-bound substrates. The zinc-binding region of Emi1 allows multiple monoubiquitylation of substrates, but preferentially suppresses the ubiquitin chain elongation by UBCH10. Furthermore, the C-terminal tail of Emi1 antagonizes chain elongation by Ube2S, via competitively preventing its binding to APC cullin subunit through electrostatic interaction. Combinatorially, Emi1 effectively stabilizes APC substrates by suppressing ubiquitin chain extension. Deubiquitylating enzymes can then convert inhibited substrates to their basal state. Chain elongation may be a particularly sensitive step for controlling degradation and this study provides the first kinetic evidence for how it is inhibited.

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