Molecular Cell
Volume 39, Issue 3, 13 August 2010, Pages 477-484
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K11-Linked Polyubiquitination in Cell Cycle Control Revealed by a K11 Linkage-Specific Antibody

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Summary

Polyubiquitination is a posttranslational modification where ubiquitin chains containing isopeptide bonds linking one of seven ubiquitin lysines with the C terminus of an adjoining ubiquitin are covalently attached to proteins. While functions of K48- and K63-linked polyubiquitin are understood, the role(s) of noncanonical K11-linked chains is less clear. A crystal structure of K11-linked diubiquitin demonstrates a distinct conformation from K48- or K63-linked diubiquitin. We engineered a K11 linkage-specific antibody and use it to demonstrate that K11 chains are highly upregulated in mitotic human cells precisely when substrates of the ubiquitin ligase anaphase-promoting complex (APC/C) are degraded. These chains increased with proteasomal inhibition, suggesting they act as degradation signals in vivo. Inhibition of the APC/C strongly impeded the formation of K11-linked chains, suggesting that a single ubiquitin ligase is the major source of mitotic K11-linked chains. Our results underscore the importance of K11-linked ubiquitin chains as critical regulators of mitotic protein degradation.

Highlights

► K11-linked diubiquitin adopts a conformation distinct from other diubiquitins ► A K11-linked polyubiquitin-specific antibody was engineered ► UbcH10/Ube2S and APC/C are the major source of mitotic K11-linked chains in vivo ► K11-linked chains act as proteasomal degradation signals in vivo

SIGNALING
PROTEINS
CELLCYCLE

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6

These authors contributed equally to this work