This is a preprint.
Substrate identification and specificity profiling of deubiquitylases against endogenously-generated ubiquitin-protein conjugates
- PMID: 38187689
- PMCID: PMC10769257
- DOI: 10.1101/2023.12.20.572581
Substrate identification and specificity profiling of deubiquitylases against endogenously-generated ubiquitin-protein conjugates
Update in
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Specificity profiling of deubiquitylases against endogenously generated ubiquitin-protein conjugates.Cell Chem Biol. 2024 Jul 18;31(7):1349-1362.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2024.05.001. Epub 2024 May 28. Cell Chem Biol. 2024. PMID: 38810651 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Deubiquitylating enzymes (DUBs) remove ubiquitin from proteins thereby regulating their stability or activity. Our understanding of DUB-substrate specificity is limited because DUBs are typically not compared to each other against many physiological substrates. By broadly inhibiting DUBs in Xenopus egg extract, we generated hundreds of ubiquitylated proteins and compared the ability of 30 DUBs to deubiquitylate them using quantitative proteomics. We identified five high impact DUBs (USP7, USP9X, USP36, USP15 and USP24) that each reduced ubiquitylation of over ten percent of the isolated proteins. Candidate substrates of high impact DUBs showed substantial overlap and were enriched for disordered regions, suggesting this feature may promote substrate recognition. Other DUBs showed lower impact and non-overlapping specificity, targeting distinct non-disordered proteins including complexes such as the ribosome or the proteasome. Altogether our study identifies candidate DUB substrates and defines patterns of functional redundancy and specificity, revealing substrate characteristics that may influence DUB-substrate recognition.
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