A modular toolbox to generate complex polymeric ubiquitin architectures using orthogonal sortase enzymes

November 29, 2021

Title

A modular toolbox to generate complex polymeric ubiquitin architectures using orthogonal sortase enzymes

Author

Maximilian Fottner, Maria Weyh, Stefan Gaussmann, Dominic Schwarz, Michael Sattler & Kathrin Lang

Year

2021

Journal

Nature Communications

Abstract

The post-translational modification of proteins with ubiquitin (Ub) and Ub-like modifiers (Ubls) represents one of the most important regulators in eukaryotic biology. Polymeric Ub/Ubl chains of distinct topologies control the activity, stability, interaction and localization of almost all cellular proteins and elicit a variety of biological outputs. Our ability to characterize the roles of distinct Ub/Ubl topologies and to identify enzymes and receptors that create, recognize and remove these modifications is however hampered by the difficulty to prepare them. Here we introduce a modular toolbox (Ubl-tools) that allows the stepwise assembly of Ub/Ubl chains in a flexible and user-defined manner facilitated by orthogonal sortase enzymes. We demonstrate the universality and applicability of Ubl-tools by generating distinctly linked Ub/Ubl hybrid chains, and investigate their role in DNA damage repair. Importantly, Ubl-tools guarantees straightforward access to target proteins, site-specifically modified with distinct homo- and heterotypic (including branched) Ub chains, providing a powerful approach for studying the functional impact of these complex modifications on cellular processes.

Instrument

FP-8500

Keywords

protein, Ubls, interaction, DNA,