分子生物学


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现刊
往期刊物
0 Q&A 331 Views Jun 20, 2025

Ubiquitination is a post-translational protein modification that regulates a vast majority of processes during protein homeostasis. The covalent attachment of ubiquitin is a highly regulated process carried out by the sequential action of the three enzymes E1, E2, and E3. E3 ligases share a dual function of 1) transferring covalently attached ubiquitin from the catalytic cysteine of E2 (E2~Ub) to the substrate and 2) providing substrate specificity. Our current knowledge of their individual substrate pools is incomplete due to the difficult capture of these transient substrate–E3 ligase interactions. Here, we present an efficient protocol that enables the selective biotinylation of substrates of a given ubiquitin ligase. In brief, the candidate E3 ligase is fused to the biotin ligase BirA and ubiquitin to a biotin acceptor peptide, an Avi-tag variant (-2) AP. Cells are co-transfected with these fusion constructs and exposed to biotin, resulting in a BirA-E3 ligase-catalyzed biotinylation of (-2) AP-Ub when in complex with E2. As the next step, the biotinylated (-2) AP-Ub is transferred covalently to the substrate lysine, which enables an enrichment via denaturing streptavidin pulldown. Substrate candidates can then be identified via mass spectrometry (MS). Our ubiquitin-specific proximity-dependent labeling (Ub-POD) method allows robust biotinylation of the ubiquitylation substrates of a candidate E3 ligase thanks to the wild-type BirA and biotin acceptor peptide fused to the E3 and Ub, respectively. Because of the highly Ub-specific labeling, Ub-POD is more appropriate for identifying ubiquitination substrates compared to other conventional proximity labeling or immunoprecipitation (IP) approaches.

0 Q&A 928 Views Sep 20, 2023

The identification and characterization of the ubiquitin E-ligase complexes involved in specific proteins’ degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) can be challenging and require biochemical purification processes and in vitro reconstitution assays. Likewise, evaluating the effect of parallel phosphorylation and ubiquitination events occurring in vivo at dual phospho/ubiquitin-regulated motifs (called Phospho-Degrons or pDegrons) driving UPS degradation of the targeted protein has remained elusive. Indeed, the functional study of such E1-E2-E3 complexes acting on a protein-specific level requires previously or otherwise acquired knowledge of the nature of such degradation complex components. Furthermore, the molecular basis of the interaction between an E3 ligase and its pDegron binding motif on a target protein would require individually optimized in vitro kinase and ubiquitination assays. Here, we describe a novel enzymatically enhanced pull-down method to functionally streamline the discovery and functional validation of the ubiquitin E-ligase components interacting with a phospho-degron containing protein domain and/or sub-domain. The protocol combines key features of a protein kinase and ubiquitination in vitro assay by including them in a pull-down step exerted by a known or putative pDegron-tagged peptide using the cell extracts as a source of enzymatically active post-translational modification (PTM) modifying/binding native proteins. The same method allows studying specific stimuli or treatments towards the recruitment of the molecular degradation complex at the target protein’s phospho-degron site, reflecting in vivo–initiated events further enhanced through the assay design. In order to take full advantage of the method over traditional protein–protein interaction methods, we propose to use this PTM-enhanced (PTMe) pull down both towards the degradation complex discovery/ID phase as well as for the functional pDegron recruitment validation phase, which is the one described in the present protocol both graphically and in a stepwise fashion for reproduceable results.


Key features

• Suitable to study UPS-regulated (a) cytosolic and/or nuclear proteins, (b) intracellular region of transmembrane proteins, and (c) protein sub-domains bearing a known/putative pDegron motif.

• Requires a biotin-tagged recombinant version of the target protein and/or sub-domain.

• Allows the qualitative and quantitative analysis of endogenous ubiquitin (Ub) E-ligases recruitment to a known or putative pDegron bearing protein/sub-domain.

• Allows simultaneous testing of various treatments and/or conditions affecting the phosphorylative and/or ubiquitylation status of the studied pDegron bearing protein/sub-domain and the recruited factors.


Graphical overview


0 Q&A 5008 Views Nov 20, 2019
Ubiquitylation is a common post-translational modification of cellular proteins that results in proteasomal and lysosomal degradations. Ubiquitylation is generally measured by methods such as immunoblotting using anti-ubiquitin antibodies after isolating the protein-of-interest by denaturing immunoprecipitation. The following protocol can be used to easily quantify the ubiquitylation of the protein-of-interest tagged with biotin by ELISA.