A Family of Mammalian E3 Ubiquitin Ligases That Contain the UBR Box Motif and Recognize N-degrons
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
A subset of proteins targeted by the N-end rule pathway bear degradation signals called N-degrons, whose determinants include destabilizing N-terminal residues. Our previous work identified mouse UBR1 and UBR2 as E3 ubiquitin ligases that recognize N-degrons. Such E3s are called N-recognins. We report here that while double-mutant UBR1(-/-) UBR2(-/-) mice die as early embryos, the rescued UBR1(-/-) UBR2(-/-) fibroblasts still retain the N-end rule pathway, albeit of lower activity than that of wild-type fibroblasts. An affinity assay for proteins that bind to destabilizing N-terminal residues has identified, in addition to UBR1 and UBR2, a huge (570 kDa) mouse protein, termed UBR4, and also the 300-kDa UBR5, a previously characterized mammalian E3 known as EDD/hHYD. UBR1, UBR2, UBR4, and UBR5 shared a approximately 70-amino-acid zinc finger-like domain termed the UBR box. The mammalian genome encodes at least seven UBR box-containing proteins, which we propose to call UBR1 to UBR7. UBR1(-/-) UBR2(-/-) fibroblasts that have been made deficient in UBR4 as well (through RNA interference) were significantly impaired in the degradation of N-end rule substrates such as the Sindbis virus RNA polymerase nsP4 (bearing N-terminal Tyr) and the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase (bearing N-terminal Phe). Our results establish the UBR box family as a unique class of E3 proteins that recognize N-degrons or structurally related determinants for ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis and perhaps other processes as well.
Illuminating the impact of N-terminal acetylation: from protein to physiology.
McTiernan N, Kjosas I, Arnesen T Nat Commun. 2025; 16(1):703.
PMID: 39814713 PMC: 11735805. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-55960-5.
Ubiquitin E3 ligases in the plant Arg/N-degron pathway.
Oldham K, Mabbitt P Biochem J. 2024; 481(24):1949-1965.
PMID: 39670824 PMC: 11668491. DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20240132.
Protein degradation kinetics measured by microinjection and live-cell fluorescence microscopy.
Vukovic D, Winkelvoss D, Kapp J, Hanny A, Burgisser H, Riermeier L Sci Rep. 2024; 14(1):27153.
PMID: 39511251 PMC: 11544240. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-76224-0.
Calva Moreno J, Jose G, Weaver Y, Weaver B Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024; 121(43):e2407561121.
PMID: 39405353 PMC: 11513905. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2407561121.
The lowdown on breakdown: Open questions in plant proteolysis.
Eckardt N, Avin-Wittenberg T, Bassham D, Chen P, Chen Q, Fang J Plant Cell. 2024; 36(9):2931-2975.
PMID: 38980154 PMC: 11371169. DOI: 10.1093/plcell/koae193.