4.5 Article

New ubiquitin-dependent mechanisms regulating the Aurora B-protein phosphatase 1 balance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 131, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.217620

Keywords

Uba1; Aurora B; PP1; Protein stability; Protein localization; E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes; Chromosome segregation

Categories

Funding

  1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center-Shreveport
  2. Research Core Facility at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center-Shreveport
  3. Feist-Weiller Cancer Center at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center-Shreveport
  4. Ike Muslow Predoctoral Fellowship - the School of Graduate Studies, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Protein ubiquitylation regulates many cellular processes, including cell division. We report here a novel mutation altering the Saccharomyces cerevisiae E1 ubiquitin-activating enzyme (uba1-W928R) that suppresses the temperature sensitivity and chromosome loss phenotype of a well-characterized Aurora B mutant (ip1-2). The uba1-W928R mutation increases histone H3-S10 phosphorylation in the ipl1-2 strain, indicating that uba1-W928R acts by increasing Ipl1 activity and/ or reducing the opposing protein phosphatase 1 (PP1; Glc7 in S. cerevisiae) phosphatase activity. Consistent with this hypothesis, Ipl1 protein levels and stability are elevated in the uba1-W928Rmutant, likely mediated via the E2 enzymes Ubc4 and Cdc34. In contrast, the uba1-W928R mutation does not affect Glc7 stability, but exhibits synthetic lethality with several glc7 mutations. Moreover, uba1-W928R cells have an altered subcellular distribution of Glc7 and form nuclear Glc7 foci. These effects are likely mediated via the E2 enzymes Rad6 and Cdc34. Our new UBA1 allele reveals new roles for ubiquitylation in regulating the Ipl1-Glc7 balance in budding yeast. While ubiquitylation likely regulates Ipl1 protein stability via the canonical proteasomal degradation pathway, a non-canonical ubiquitin-dependent pathway maintains normal Glc7 localization and activity. This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available