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ABSTRACT: Nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) is a quality control mechanism that detects and degrades mRNAs containing premature stop codons (PTCs). In vertebrates, PTCs trigger efficient NMD when located upstream of an exon junction complex (EJC). Degradation of PTC-containing mRNAs requires the endonucleolytic activity of SMG6, a conserved NMD factor; nevertheless, the precise role for the EJC in NMD and how the SMG6 endonuclease is recruited to NMD targets have been unclear. Here we show that SMG6 interacts directly with the EJC via two conserved EJC-binding motifs (EBMs). We further show that the SMG6-EJC interaction is required for NMD. Our results reveal an unprecedented role for the EJC in recruiting the SMG6 endonuclease to NMD targets. More generally, our findings identify the EBM as a protein motif present in a handful of proteins, and suggest that EJCs establish multiple and mutually exclusive interactions with various protein partners, providing a plausible explanation for the myriad functions performed by this complex in post-transcriptional mRNA regulation.
Genes & development 10/2010; 24(21):2440-50. · 12.08 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In mammals, Up-frameshift proteins (UPFs) form a surveillance complex that interacts with the exon junction complex (EJC) to elicit nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD). UPF3b is the component of the surveillance complex that bridges the interaction with the EJC. Here, we report the 3.4 A resolution crystal structure of a minimal UPF3b-EJC assembly, consisting of the interacting domains of five proteins (UPF3b, MAGO, Y14, eIF4AIII, and Barentsz) together with RNA and adenylyl-imidodiphosphate. Human UPF3b binds with the C-terminal domain stretched over a composite surface formed by eIF4AIII, MAGO, and Y14. Residues that affect NMD when mutated are found at the core interacting surfaces, whereas differences between UPF3b and UPF3a map at peripheral interacting residues. Comparison with the binding mode of the protein PYM underscores how a common molecular surface of MAGO and Y14 recognizes different proteins acting at different times in the same pathway. The binding mode to eIF4AIII identifies a surface hot spot that is used by different DEAD-box proteins to recruit their regulators.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 06/2010; 107(22):10050-5. · 9.68 Impact Factor
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Christophe Romier,
Marouane Ben Jelloul,
Shira Albeck, Gretel Buchwald,
Didier Busso,
Patrick H N Celie,
Evangelos Christodoulou,
Valeria De Marco,
Suzan van Gerwen,
Puck Knipscheer,
Joyce H Lebbink,
Valerie Notenboom,
Arnaud Poterszman,
Natacha Rochel,
Serge X Cohen,
Tamar Unger,
Joel L Sussman,
Dino Moras,
Titia K Sixma,
Anastassis Perrakis
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ABSTRACT: Structure determination and functional characterization of macromolecular complexes requires the purification of the different subunits in large quantities and their assembly into a functional entity. Although isolation and structure determination of endogenous complexes has been reported, much progress has to be made to make this technology easily accessible. Co-expression of subunits within hosts such as Escherichia coli and insect cells has become more and more amenable, even at the level of high-throughput projects. As part of SPINE (Structural Proteomics In Europe), several laboratories have investigated the use co-expression techniques for their projects, trying to extend from the common binary expression to the more complicated multi-expression systems. A new system for multi-expression in E. coli and a database system dedicated to handle co-expression data are described. Results are also reported from various case studies investigating different methods for performing co-expression in E. coli and insect cells.
Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography 11/2006; 62(Pt 10):1232-42. · 12.62 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Polycomb group proteins Ring1b and Bmi1 (B-cell-specific Moloney murine leukaemia virus integration site 1) are critical components of the chromatin modulating PRC1 complex. Histone H2A ubiquitination by the PRC1 complex strongly depends on the Ring1b protein. Here we show that the E3-ligase activity of Ring1b on histone H2A is enhanced by Bmi1 in vitro. The N-terminal Ring-domains are sufficient for this activity and Ring1a can replace Ring1b. E2 enzymes UbcH5a, b, c or UbcH6 support this activity with varying processivity and selectivity. All four E2s promote autoubiquitination of Ring1b without affecting E3-ligase activity. We solved the crystal structure of the Ring-Ring heterodimeric complex of Ring1b and Bmi1. In the structure the arrangement of the Ring-domains is similar to another H2A E3 ligase, the BRCA1/BARD1 complex, but complex formation depends on an N-terminal arm of Ring1b that embraces the Bmi1 Ring-domain. Mutation of a critical residue in the E2/E3 interface shows that catalytic activity resides in Ring1b and not in Bmi1. These data provide a foundation for understanding the critical enzymatic activity at the core of the PRC1 polycomb complex, which is implicated in stem cell maintenance and cancer.
The EMBO Journal 07/2006; 25(11):2465-74. · 9.20 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: RhoGTPases are central switches in all eukaryotic cells. There are at least two known families of guanine nucleotide exchange factors that can activate RhoGTPases: the Dbl-like eukaryotic G nucleotide exchange factors and the SopE-like toxins of pathogenic bacteria, which are injected into host cells to manipulate signaling. Both families have strikingly different sequences, structures, and catalytic core elements. This suggests that they have emerged by convergent evolution. Nevertheless, both families of G nucleotide exchange factors also share some similarities: (a) both rearrange the G nucleotide binding site of RhoGTPases into virtually identical conformations, and (b) two SopE residues (Gln-109SopE and Asp-124SopE) engage Cdc42 in a similar way as equivalent residues of Dbl-like G nucleotide exchange factors (i.e. Asn-810Dbs and Glu-639Dbs). The functional importance of these observations has remained unclear. Here, we have analyzed the effect of amino acid substitutions at selected SopE residues implicated in catalysis (Asp-124SopE, Gln-109SopE, Asp-103SopE, Lys-198SopE, and Gly-168SopE) on in vitro catalysis of G nucleotide release from Cdc42 and on in vivo activity. Substitutions at Asp-124SopE, Gln-109SopE, and Gly-168SopE severely reduced the SopE activity. Slight defects were observed with Asp-103SopE variants, whereas Lys-198SopE was not found to be required in vitro or in vivo. Our results demonstrate that G nucleotide exchange by SopE involves both catalytic elements unique to the SopE family (i.e. 166GAGA169 loop, Asp-103SopE) and amino acid contacts resembling those of key residues of Dbl-like guanine nucleotide exchange factors. Therefore, besides all of the differences, the catalytic mechanisms of the SopE and the Dbl families share some key functional aspects.
Journal of Biological Chemistry 08/2003; 278(29):27149-59. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The bacterial enteropathogen Salmonella typhimurium employs a type III secretion system to inject bacterial toxins into the host cell cytosol. These toxins transiently activate Rho family GTP-binding protein-dependent signaling cascades to induce cytoskeletal rearrangements. One of these translocated Salmonella toxins, SopE, can activate Cdc42 in a Dbl-like fashion despite its lack of sequence similarity to Dbl-like proteins, the Rho-specific eukaryotic guanine nucleotide exchange factors. To elucidate the mechanism of SopE-mediated guanine nucleotide exchange, we have analyzed the structure of the complex between a catalytic fragment of SopE and Cdc42. SopE binds to and locks the switch I and switch II regions of Cdc42 in a conformation that promotes guanine nucleotide release. This conformation is strikingly similar to that of Rac1 in complex with the eukaryotic Dbl-like exchange factor Tiam1. However, the catalytic domain of SopE has an entirely different architecture from that of Tiam1 and interacts with the switch regions via different amino acids. Therefore, SopE represents the first example of a non-Dbl-like protein capable of inducing guanine nucleotide exchange in Rho family proteins.
The EMBO Journal 08/2002; 21(13):3286-95. · 9.20 Impact Factor