scholarly journals Regulation of Drosophila Vasa In Vivo through Paralogous Cullin-RING E3 Ligase Specificity Receptors

2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
pp. 1769-1782 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan-Michael Kugler ◽  
Jae-Sung Woo ◽  
Byung-Ha Oh ◽  
Paul Lasko

ABSTRACT In Drosophila species, molecular asymmetries guiding embryonic development are established maternally. Vasa, a DEAD-box RNA helicase, accumulates in the posterior pole plasm, where it is required for embryonic germ cell specification. Maintenance of Vasa at the posterior pole requires the deubiquitinating enzyme Fat facets, which protects Vasa from degradation. Here, we found that Gustavus (Gus) and Fsn, two ubiquitin Cullin-RING E3 ligase specificity receptors, bind to the same motif on Vasa through their paralogous B30.2/SPRY domains. Both Gus and Fsn accumulate in the pole plasm in a Vasa-dependent manner. Posterior Vasa accumulation is precocious in Fsn mutant oocytes; Fsn overexpression reduces ovarian Vasa levels, and embryos from Fsn-overexpressing females form fewer primordial germ cells (PGCs); thus, Fsn destabilizes Vasa. In contrast, endogenous Gus may promote Vasa activity in the pole plasm, as gus females produce embryos with fewer PGCs, and posterior accumulation of Vas is delayed in gus mutant oocytes that also lack one copy of cullin-5. We propose that Fsn- and Gus-containing E3 ligase complexes contribute to establishing a fine-tuned steady state of Vasa ubiquitination that influences the kinetics of posterior Vasa deployment.

Science ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 365 (6448) ◽  
pp. eaaw4912 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard T. Timms ◽  
Zhiqian Zhang ◽  
David Y. Rhee ◽  
J. Wade Harper ◽  
Itay Koren ◽  
...  

The N-terminal residue influences protein stability through N-degron pathways. We used stability profiling of the human N-terminome to uncover multiple additional features of N-degron pathways. In addition to uncovering extended specificities of UBR E3 ligases, we characterized two related Cullin-RING E3 ligase complexes, Cul2ZYG11B and Cul2ZER1, that act redundantly to target N-terminal glycine. N-terminal glycine degrons are depleted at native N-termini but strongly enriched at caspase cleavage sites, suggesting roles for the substrate adaptors ZYG11B and ZER1 in protein degradation during apoptosis. Furthermore, ZYG11B and ZER1 were found to participate in the quality control of N-myristoylated proteins, in which N-terminal glycine degrons are conditionally exposed after a failure of N-myristoylation. Thus, an additional N-degron pathway specific for glycine regulates the stability of metazoan proteomes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan J. Lumpkin ◽  
Richard W. Baker ◽  
Andres E. Leschziner ◽  
Elizabeth A. Komives

2015 ◽  
Vol 89 ◽  
pp. 1036-1048 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dhanendra Tomar ◽  
Paresh Prajapati ◽  
Julie Lavie ◽  
Kritarth Singh ◽  
Sripada Lakshmi ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 169 (2) ◽  
pp. 1405-1417 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurens Pauwels ◽  
Andrés Ritter ◽  
Jonas Goossens ◽  
Astrid Nagels Durand ◽  
Hongxia Liu ◽  
...  
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