RavN is a member of a previously unrecognized group of Legionella pneumophila E3 ubiquitin ligases
Ver/ Abrir
Registro completo
Mostrar el registro completo DCAutoría
Lin, Yi-Han; Lucas Gay, María
; Evans, Timothy R.; Abascal-Palacios, Guillermo; Doms, Alexandra G.; Beauchene, Nicole A.; Rojas, Adriana L.; Hierro, Aitor; Machner, Matthias 
P.
Fecha
2018Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
Publicado en
PLoS Pathog. 2018 Feb 7;14(2):e1006897.
Editorial
Public Library of Science
Enlace a la publicación
Resumen/Abstract
The eukaryotic ubiquitylation machinery catalyzes the covalent attachment of the small protein modifier ubiquitin to cellular target proteins in order to alter their fate. Microbial pathogens exploit this post-translational modification process by encoding molecular mimics of E3 ubiquitin ligases, eukaryotic enzymes that catalyze the final step in the ubiquitylation cascade.  Here, we show that the Legionella pneumophila effector protein RavN belongs to a  growing class of bacterial proteins that mimic host cell E3 ligases to exploit the ubiquitylation  pathway. The E3 ligase activity of RavN was located within its N-terminal region and was  dependent upon interaction with a defined subset of E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes. The  crystal structure of the N-terminal region of RavN revealed a U-box-like motif that was only  remotely similar to other U-box domains, indicating that RavN is an E3 ligase relic that has  undergone significant evolutionary alteration. Substitution of residues within the predicted  E2 binding interface rendered RavN inactive, indicating that, despite significant structural  changes, the mode of E2 recognition has remained conserved. Using hidden Markov  model-based secondary structure analyses, we identified and experimentally validated four  additional L. pneumophila effectors that were not previously recognized to possess E3  ligase activity, including Lpg2452/SdcB, a new paralog of SidC. Our study provides strong  evidence that L. pneumophila is dedicating a considerable fraction of its effector arsenal to  the manipulation of the host ubiquitylation pathway.
Colecciones a las que pertenece
- D55 Artículos [182]
 - D55 Proyectos de investigación [81]
 







