The SCFHOS/β-TRCP-ROC1 E3 Ubiquitin Ligase Utilizes Two Distinct Domains within CUL1 for Substrate Targeting and Ubiquitin Ligation

K Wu, SY Fuchs, A Chen, P Tan, C Gomez… - … and cellular biology, 2000 - Taylor & Francis
K Wu, SY Fuchs, A Chen, P Tan, C Gomez, Z Ronai, ZQ Pan
Molecular and cellular biology, 2000Taylor & Francis
We describe a purified ubiquitination system capable of rapidly catalyzing the covalent
linkage of polyubiquitin chains onto a model substrate, phosphorylated IκBα. The initial
ubiquitin transfer and subsequent polymerization steps of this reaction require the
coordinated action of Cdc34 and the SCFHOS/β-TRCP-ROC1 E3 ligase complex,
comprised of four subunits (Skp1, cullin 1 [CUL1], HOS/β-TRCP, and ROC1). Deletion
analysis reveals that the N terminus of CUL1 is both necessary and sufficient for binding …
We describe a purified ubiquitination system capable of rapidly catalyzing the covalent linkage of polyubiquitin chains onto a model substrate, phosphorylated IκBα. The initial ubiquitin transfer and subsequent polymerization steps of this reaction require the coordinated action of Cdc34 and the SCFHOS/β-TRCP-ROC1 E3 ligase complex, comprised of four subunits (Skp1, cullin 1 [CUL1], HOS/β-TRCP, and ROC1). Deletion analysis reveals that the N terminus of CUL1 is both necessary and sufficient for binding Skp1 but is devoid of ROC1-binding activity and, hence, is inactive in catalyzing ubiquitin ligation. Consistent with this, introduction of the N-terminal CUL1 polypeptide into cells blocks the tumor necrosis factor alpha-induced and SCF-mediated degradation of IκB by forming catalytically inactive complexes lacking ROC1. In contrast, the C terminus of CUL1 alone interacts with ROC1 through a region containing the cullin consensus domain, to form a complex fully active in supporting ubiquitin polymerization. These results suggest the mode of action of SCF-ROC1, where CUL1 serves as a dual-function molecule that recruits an F-box protein for substrate targeting through Skp1 at its N terminus, while the C terminus of CUL1 binds ROC1 to assemble a core ubiquitin ligase.
Taylor & Francis Online