research papers
Cocrystallization of ubiquitin–deubiquitinase complexes through disulfide linkage
aDepartment of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Drive, West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA
*Correspondence e-mail: cdas@purdue.edu
Structural characterization of the recognition of ubiquitin (Ub) by deubiquitinases (DUBs) has largely relied on covalent complexation of the DUB through its catalytic cysteine with a Ub C-terminal Legionella pneumophila effector SdeA DUB and the other involving the Orientia effector OtDUB. These DUBs had previously been crystallized in Ub-bound forms using the C-terminal strategy and noncovalent complexation, respectively. While the disulfide-linked SdeA DUB–Ub complex crystallized as expected, in the OtDUB complex the disulfide bond to the Ub mutant involved a cysteine that differed from the catalytic cysteine. Disulfide formation with the SdeA DUB catalytic cysteine was accompanied by local distortion of the helix carrying the active-site cysteine, whereas OtDUB reacted with the Ub mutant using a surface-exposed cysteine.
The Ub electrophiles are accessed through intein chemistry in conjunction with chemical synthesis. Here, it was asked whether DUB–Ub covalent complexes could instead be accessed by simpler disulfide chemistry using a Ub cysteine mutant in which the last glycine has been replaced with a cysteine. The Ub cysteine mutant displayed a wide variability in disulfide formation across a panel of eukaryotic and prokaryotic DUBs, with some showing no detectable reaction while others robustly produced a disulfide complex. Using this approach, two disulfide-linked ubiquitin-bound complexes were crystallized, one involving theKeywords: deubiquitinases; ubiquitin; deubiquitinase–ubiquitin complexes; disulfide-linked protein complexes.
1. Introduction
Protein ubiquitination involves the post-translational covalent attachment of the 76-residue eukaryotic protein ubiquitin (Ub) to, most commonly, lysine residues of target proteins via an ɛ-amino group of the target lysine. Attachment of a single Ub, or monoubiquitination, can serve as a regulatory signal, but protein targets are usually polyubiquitinated through successive extension of the Ub–Ub linkage using any of the seven lysines (or the Met1 α-amino group) of the modifier itself. In its simplest form, polyubiquitination can arise with eight topologically distinct linkage types in homotypic chains, which are chains produced by repeated use of the same Ub amino group. Additionally, the use of different lysines during chain extension, along with branching, can give rise to ubiquitination patterns that represent complex signals constituting what has been referred to as the ubiquitin code. The writers of the code are the E1, E2 and E3 enzymes, which function in coordination to first activate Ub by an ATP-requiring reaction catalyzed by the E1 enzyme, followed by transfer of the activated Ub to the catalytic cysteine of a ubiquitin-conjugating E2 enzyme and finally to a substrate lysine through the intermediacy of a Ub E3 ligase (Komander & Rape, 2012). The readers are one of several ubiquitin-binding domains found in receptor proteins that recognize the Ub tag and shepherd the modified protein to its biological fate (Husnjak & Dikic, 2012). Last but not least are erasers, or deubiquitinases (DUBs), that remove Ub from ubiquitinated proteins or trim and disassemble polyubiquitin chains, regulating the signal (Komander & Rape, 2012; Eletr & Wilkinson, 2014; Nijman et al., 2005).
that links the last glycine of Ub to theThe 90 or so eukaryotic DUBs can be classified into seven DUB families belonging to two broad mechanistic classes: cysteine ; Eletr & Wilkinson, 2014; Nijman et al., 2005). Within the cysteine protease class, the eukaryotic DUBs are divided into six groups based on the structure of their the ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase (UCH) family, the ubiquitin-specific protease (USP) family, the ovarian tumor (OTU) family, the Machado–Joseph domain (MJD) family, the motif interacting with Ub-containing novel DUB (MINDY) family and the zinc finger with UFM1-specific peptidase domain protein (zUFSP) family groups (Komander & Rape, 2012; Hewings et al., 2018; Kwasna et al., 2018), whereas the JAMM/MPN (JAMM) family of metalloenzymes are the only group of DUBs that use a zinc-dependent, thermolysin-like mechanism in their hydrolysis reaction (Sato et al., 2008; Shrestha et al., 2014).
and metalloproteases (Komander & Rape, 2012Mechanistic understanding of DUBs requires their ; Borodovsky et al., 2002). Ub at the proximal site (S1′ site) has been captured using diubiquitin probes with a suitably placed internal between the Ub units (Li et al., 2014; Haj-Yahya et al., 2014). However, the synthesis of such probes requires special expertise. We reasoned that disulfide linking may provide an easy-to-access alternative that does not involve any specialized synthetic methods. For example, placement of cysteine in place of Ly63 of Ub should permit the capture of Ub in the S1′ site of Lys63-specific cysteine DUBs. Towards this goal, we sought to determine whether cysteine substitution and subsequent disulfide formation is feasible at all, which we wanted to test with the Gly76-to-Cys Ub mutant, which is meant to react with the catalytic cysteine and allow the capture of Ub at the S1 site of the DUB.
structure with Ub to delineate the intermolecular recognition. A widely used strategy for capturing the Ub-bound DUB complex relies on a Ub-derived irreversible inhibitor that carries a C-terminal warhead exactly in place of the scissile peptide bond immediately following Gly76, the site of DUB cleavage. The Ub moiety, captured through covalent tethering with the catalytic cysteine, invariably occupies the so-called distal site (or S1 site; Zhang & Das, 2023Here, we explored disulfide-bridge formation as a strategy for producing a stable DUB–Ub complex amenable to crystallization. We envisioned that placement of a cysteine residue in Ub, which otherwise lacks this residue in the native form, in place of the last glycine may permit covalent capture of DUB–Ub complexes, allowing structural characterization. To this end, the Gly76-to-Cys mutant of Ub (UbG76C) was tested for its ability to form a disulfide bond with the catalytic cysteine of a group of DUBs. Two previously crystallized complexes of bacterial DUBs from pathogenic organisms were subjected to crystallization as their UbG76C complex, allowing an assessment of the disulfide strategy. While the SdeA DUB, an effector protein from the arsenal of Legionella pneumophila (Sheedlo et al., 2015, 2021), reacted with the Ub cysteine in the expected manner showing Ub binding at the S1 site, the effector DUB from Orientia tsutsugamushi (OtDUB; Berk et al., 2020) preferentially reacted with a noncatalytic cysteine.
2. Methods
2.1. Protein expression and purification
OtDUB1–259 cloned into a pET-28a vector was obtained from Mark Hochtrasser (Yale University) and transformed into Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3) (Novagen). The E. coli BL21(DE3) cells were grown in lysogeny broth (LB) medium at 37°C to an OD600 of 0.6, cooled to 18°C and induced overnight with the addition of 0.35 mM isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG). Cells from a 6 l culture were resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) supplemented with 400 mM KCl (binding buffer). The resuspended cells were lysed through a combination of lysozyme and high pressure using a French press. The lysate was centrifuged for 1 h at 100 000g at 4°C and the supernatant was passed through a self-packed column of 5 ml Ni–NTA resin (Qiagen) pre-equilibrated with binding buffer. The resin was then washed with five column volumes of binding buffer to wash off unbound protein. The column was further washed in two steps with binding buffer supplemented with 10 and 25 mM imidazole. The protein was eluted from the column using elution buffer (1× PBS supplemented with 400 mM KCl and 300 mM imidazole). The eluted protein was dialyzed in two changes of binding buffer at 4°C to remove excess imidazole. The dialyzed protein was then concentrated to 21 mg ml−1 and buffer-exchanged into a buffer consisting of 50 mM Tris pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl (cross-linking buffer). The purity of the enzyme was verified by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel (SDS–PAGE).
Ubiquitin with a C-terminal glycine-to-cysteine mutation (UbG76C) was cloned into a pRSET-A vector and transformed into E. coli strain BL21(DE3). The E. coli BL21(DE3) cells were grown in LB medium at 37°C to an OD600 of 0.6, cooled to 18°C and induced overnight with the addition of 0.35 mM IPTG. Cells from a 3 l culture were resuspended in 50 mM sodium acetate pH 4.5 (buffer A). The resuspended cells were initially lysed with lysozyme and by heating at 80°C for 30 min. The lysate was centrifuged for 1 h at 100 000g at 4°C and the supernatant was passed through a self-packed column of SP Sepharose Fast Flow resin (GE Healthcare) that had been pre-equilibrated with five column volumes of buffer A. After collecting the flowthrough, the column was washed with an additional five column volumes of buffer A to remove any unbound protein. To elute the bound protein, buffer A supplemented with increasing amounts of NaCl ranging from 100 mM to 1 M was used as a gradient to separate it from other potential contaminants. The fractions containing pure UbG76C, confirmed by SDS–PAGE, were pooled, concentrated and buffer-exchanged into 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer pH 8 (DTNB reaction buffer).
For SdeA DUB (Puvar et al., 2019), UchL1, UchL3, Zup-1, MINDY-1, LotA, LotB, ElaD and ChlaDUB2, E. coli BL21(DE3) cells were grown in LB medium at 37°C to an OD600 of 0.6–0.8, cooled to 18°C and induced overnight with the addition of 0.35 mM IPTG. The cells from a 6 l culture were resuspended in binding buffer. The resuspended cells were then lysed using a combination of lysozyme and and high pressure using a French press. The lysate was centrifuged for 1 h at 70 000g at 4°C and the supernatant was passed through a self-packed column of 5 ml Glutathione Sepharose resin (GE Healthcare) pre-equilibrated with binding buffer. The resin was then washed with 20 column volumes of binding buffer to wash off unbound protein. The bound fusion proteins were eluted with GST elution buffer (binding buffer with the addition of 10 mM reduced glutathione). The protein was dialyzed against two changes (4 l each) of GST dialysis buffer at 4°C, with the addition of PreScission protease, to cleave off the GST tag. The dialyzed protein was then passed through the GST column to remove cleaved GST and PreScission protease from the protein solution. The proteolyzed protein was then further purified by to remove any residual GST. The purified sample was then concentrated, aliquoted and stored at −80°C. The purity of the enzymes from every stage of expression and purification were monitored by SDS–PAGE.
For OTULIN, E. coli BL21(DE3) cells were grown in LB medium at 37°C to an OD600 of 0.6–0.8, cooled to 16°C and induced overnight with the addition of 0.35 mM IPTG. Cells from a 6 l culture were resuspended in PBS supplemented with 400 mM KCl (binding buffer). The resuspended cells were lysed using a combination of lysozyme and high pressure using a French press. The lysate was centrifuged for 1 h at 100 000g at 4°C and the supernatant was passed through a self-packed column of 5 ml Ni–NTA resin (Qiagen) pre-equilibrated with binding buffer. The resin was then washed with five column volumes of binding buffer to wash off unbound protein. This column was further washed with binding buffer supplemented with 10 and 25 mM imidazole. The protein was eluted from the column using elution buffer (1× PBS supplemented with 400 mM KCl and 300 mM imidazole). The eluted protein with SENP2 protease was dialyzed in two changes of binding buffer at 4°C to remove excess imidazole. The dialyzed protein was then passed through the Ni–NTA resin to remove the His-SUMO tag. The proteolyzed protein was concentrated and buffer-exchanged into a buffer consisting of 50 mM Tris pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl (cross-linking buffer). The purity of the enzyme was verified by SDS–PAGE.
2.2. Disulfide cross-link screening
Disulfide cross-linking was based on a previously described procedure (Pruneda et al., 2016). A 10 mM stock of 5,5′-dithio-bis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) was made by dissolving DTNB in DTNB reaction buffer. UbiquitinG76C was mixed with resuspended DTNB at a final reaction concentration of 250 µM ubiquitin and 2 mM DTNB overnight at 4°C to form 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid (TNB)-labeled ubiquitin (Ub76-TNB). The Ub76-TNB was buffer-exchanged into cross-linking buffer to remove excess DTNB and release 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid from the solution. The buffer-exchanged Ub76-TNB was mixed with different DUBs at an equal molar ratio in cross-linking buffer and left to react for 1 h at room temperature with shaking end over end. The resulting complex was subsquently buffer-exchanged in cross-linking buffer to remove the released TNB. The formation of cross-linking was monitored via SDS–PAGE.
2.3. Crystallization
Purified SdeA DUB was mixed with UbG76C-TNB adduct in a 1:2 molar ratio and allowed to incubate overnight at 4°C. After this, the complex was purified by cation-exchange (Mono Q, GE Healthcare) followed by (Superdex 75, GE Healthcare). The purified complex was concentrated to 30 mg ml−1 and crystallized in hanging drops consisting of 2.8 M sodium acetate–HCl pH 7 after 18 days at room temperature. A complete data set was collected at 2.81 Å resolution from a single crystal on the NE-CAT beamline 24-ID-E (λ = 0.97918) at the Advanced Photon Source (APS), Argonne National Laboratory.
OtDUB1–259 disulfide was mixed with UbG76C-TNB (in a nearly 1:1 molar ratio) and left overnight at 4°C. The reaction mixture was concentrated to 36 mg ml−1 and used directly in crystallization without further purification steps. Crystals were grown by the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion method at 20°C in crystallization buffer consisting of 0.16 M magnesium chloride, 0.08 M Tris pH 8.5, 24% PEG 8000, 20% glycerol after one day at room temperature. To confirm that the crystals obtained were of the disulfide complex, crystals were dissolved in both 5× reducing and 5× nonreducing SDS loading dye and analyzed using SDS–PAGE. A complete data set was collected to 1.85 Å resolution from a single crystal on the NE-CAT beamline 24-ID-C (λ = 0.97918) at the APS, Argonne National Laboratory.
2.4. Structure determination
Diffraction data sets were collected at the APS, Argonne National Laboratory and were processed using HKL-2000 (Otwinowski & Minor, 1997). The structure of SdeA DUB disulfide-linked with UbG76C was determined by using Phaser (McCoy et al., 2007) within the Phenix suite (Liebschner et al., 2019). The structure was then solved by using the SdeA DUB (Sheedlo et al., 2015) structure (PDB entry 5crb) and ubiquitin (Vijay-kumar et al., 1987; PDB entry 1ubq) as models. The contained two molecules, which were SdeA DUB and UbG76C. The structure was subjected to multiple steps of model building with Coot (Emsley et al., 2010) and with Phenix, which resulted in a final structure at 2.81 Å resolution (Table 1). The final structure was validated using MolProbity (Chen et al., 2010) and deposited in the Protein Data Bank.
|
The OtDUB–UbG76C crystal data were indexed, integrated and scaled using X-ray Detector Software (XDS; Kabsch, 2010), AIMLESS (Evans & Murshudov, 2013) and multiple programs from the CCP4 suite (Agirre et al., 2023), all integrated into the RAPD auto-processing program at NE-CAT, in the orthorhombic P22121. The structure was solved by using the native OtDUB structure (Berk et al., 2020; PDB entry 6ups) and ubiquitin (Boudreaux et al., 2010; PDB entry 1ubq) as models. The consisted of one OtDUB molecule and one ubiquitin molecule. Sequential rounds of model building with Coot (Emsley et al., 2010) and with Phenix were used to arrive at the final structure, which was then validated using MolProbity and deposited in the Protein Data Bank.
3. Results
3.1. The reactivity of a panel of DUBs towards UbG76C shows significant variability
Hydrolytic release of Ub from a target lysine involves nucleophilic attack of the catalytic cysteine of DUB at the et al., 2012). Crystal structures of DUBs have shown that the C-terminal Gly75-Gly76 segment of Ub is held in a narrow cleft in the active-site area where the amide carbonyl of Gly76 is positioned within attacking distance of the catalytic cysteine (Boudreaux et al., 2010). This conserved stereochemical feature enables DUBs to recognize and precisely cleave the target after the diglycine motif. Taking advantage of this unique DUB–Ub recognition feature, we introduced a cysteine residue in place of Gly76 in Ub for engagement with the catalytic cysteine of DUB. However, the placement of this substituent may hinder binding through steric effects. To test the feasibility of cysteine placement at this location for disulfide chemistry, we used a panel of cysteine DUBs from different families, including some recently described prokaryotic examples (Pruneda et al., 2016; Hermanns & Hofmann, 2019), and screened for their ability to produce a disulfide adduct with the Ub cysteine mutant (Fig. 1a). For efficient disulfide formation, UbG76C was reacted with Ellman's reagent (DTNB) to produce a disulfide-linked 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid (TNB) adduct (Lorenz et al., 2016) and, after washing off the excess reagent, the adduct was treated with each DUB in our list (Fig. 1b). Within an hour at room temperature, some DUBs showed a robust reaction, producing a distinct band on nonreducing SDS–PAGE corresponding to a ubiquitin adduct, while others showed no discernible activity. For example, the Legionella OTU DUB LotB (Ma et al., 2020) showed a robust reaction (showing two closely migrating adduct bands), whereas LotA (Warren et al., 2023), another OTU DUB from the same organism, produced no detectable band. On the other hand, the CE-clan DUB from the same organism, SdeA DUB, reacted readily with the ubiquitin mutant, whereas another CE-clan DUB from Chlamydia trachomatis (CDub2; Hausman et al., 2020) showed no reaction. OTULIN (Keusekotten et al., 2013) and MINDY (Kwasna et al., 2018), two eukaryotic DUBs, produced smearing in the nonreducing gel, preventing a clear analysis of their disulfide product (Fig. 1c). Overall, these results indicate that disulfide formation with UbG76C can vary widely across different DUBs.
at Gly76 of Ub that links the lysine-bearing (Boudreaux3.2. Structure of the SdeA DUB domain in complex with ubiquitin captured by disulfide chemistry
Since SdeA DUB showed robust disulfide formation, we sought to crystallize the disulfide complex to characterize the binding and compare it with previously solved crystal structures of the same DUB with the Ub 5cra; Sheedlo et al., 2015). The disulfide adduct was purified by (using buffers without a reducing agent) and subjected to crystallization trials (Fig. 2a). Crystals obtained from a condition lacking any reducing agent diffracted to 2.83 Å resolution and belonged to P3221 (see Section 2; PDB entry 8efw). The structure was solved using (MR) with SdeA DUB and wild-type Ub as search models, assuming that the crystals belonged to the two-protein complex. The MR search yielded a solution that contained the expected 1:1 complex of the DUB and Ub. A difference electron-density (Fo − Fc) map calculated after the MR search showed residual electron density extending from the DUB catalytic cysteine, which we interpreted to correspond to the disulfide bond linking the cysteine residue of UbG76C. Further after rounds of rebuilding and model adjustment allowed the placement of a disulfide bond into this density (Fig. 2b).
inhibitor ubiquitin vinyl methyl ester (Ub-VME; PDB entryApart from local distortion of the SdeA DUB near the catalytic cysteine (discussed below), the structure of the complex showed striking similarity to the Ub-VME-bound structure and the Ub product-bound structure (Fig. 2b and Supplementary Fig. S1). The C-terminal tail of UbG76C is held in the active-site cleft through several backbone hydrogen bonds, most of which remain the same compared with the other two structures (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. S4a). The free carboxylate at Cys76 points towards the catalytic histidine, much like the same group of Ub in the product-bound complex (Supplementary Fig. S2a). The tail, while in a β-sheet arrangement with two strands from either side of the cleft, is embraced from the top by a Glu–Ser hydrogen bond which has previously been noted to behave as a flap that opens and closes during substrate binding and product release (Fig. 3b). This observation indicates that the cysteine mutation at Gly76 does not prevent the entry of the C-terminal Ub tail into the active-site area when the flap opens. Distal from the active site, the interactions with Ub remained largely the same compared with the other two structures. For example, Gln40 of ubiquitin makes a hydrogen-bond network with Tyr33 and Asp61 of SdeA, and Leu8 forms hydrogen bonds to the backbone and side chain of Ser29 (Fig. 3c and Supplementary Fig. S4a).
3.3. Disulfide bonding to catalytic cysteine is accompanied by local distortion to accommodate the disulfide bridge
The Cα atom of Cys76 of the UbG76C mutant closely overlaps with the same atom of Gly76 in the Ub product-bound structure, with the free carboxylates pointing down in the same direction towards the catalytic histidine, as alluded to previously (Supplementary Fig. S2a). The thiol group of UbG76C points up towards the empty space in the active-site cavity, which appears to pull the DUB catalytic cysteine away from its preferred position as observed in the Ub-VME-bound structure (Fig. 2d). The alanine side chain of the SdeA DUB Cys118Ala mutant (the Ub product-bound complex was crystallized with the SdeA DUB catalytic cysteine mutated to alanine) also points in the same direction as the cysteine in the Ub-VME-bound structure. The movement of the catalytic cysteine by ∼4.6 Å (Cβ–Cβ distance) to engage with the cysteine of Ub in a disulfide bond induces a local conformational rearrangement, which seems to be necessary, partly due to having a substituent on the Cα atom of residue 76 and partly due to the aforementioned relocation of the DUB catalytic cysteine (Fig. 2d and Supplementary Fig. S2b). The resulting disulfide adopts a somewhat standard geometry characterized by an S—S torsion angle of −70°. This adjustment to accommodate the disulfide bridge causes the SdeA DUB backbone from residues 114 to 122 to adopt a different position with respect to the other two structures, which overlap nearly perfectly with each other (Supplementary Fig. S2b). The cost of this rearrangement is the unfurling of one hydrogen-bonding interaction in the SdeA DUB active-site area, at the N-terminal end of the helix carrying the catalytic cysteine (Fig. 2d and Supplementary Fig. S2c). Thus, the disulfide complex shows that the interactions of SdeA DUB with Ub largely remain the same, except for a local distortion involving the active-site cysteine.
3.4. of OtDUB disulfide-linked to the ubiquitin G76C mutant
To further study the effectiveness of disulfide chemistry to characterize DUB binding interfaces, we decided to use the bacterial effector OtDUB, which has recently been crystallized with Ub in a noncovalent complex (Berk et al., 2020). The UbG76C–TNB adduct described previously was mixed with OtDUB in near-equimolar proportions and left overnight at room temperature, which yielded approximately 79% conversion, and the mixture was subjected to crystallization without further purification (Supplementary Fig. S3 and Fig. 4b). A sample of the reaction mixture used for crystallization showed a single Ub adduct on nonreducing SDS–PAGE, while a portion of the OtDUB protein sample remained unmodified along with some UbG76C derivative. The OtDUB construct, unlike SdeA DUB (which only contains the catalytic cysteine), contains two additional cysteines (Cys111 and Cys116) beside the catalytic cysteine (Cys135), all of which are present in the core of the protein. By adding the Ub reagent in a limited stochiometric amount, we expected to capture a disulfide adduct involving primarily the catalytic cysteine.
Even though the protein sample remained as a mixture of at least three different species (Supplementary Fig. S3), crystallization trials successfully produced crystals that diffracted to 1.85 Å resolution. The crystals belonged to the orthorhombic P22121 (Table 1), with one complex comprising an OtDUB molecule and an Ub molecule in the The structure was solved by using OtDUB and Ub as two separate search models (see Section 2). The MR solution revealed a model of the that contained a Ub next to an OtDUB, but with its C-terminus pointing away from the catalytic cysteine residue and with no disulfide linkage to any other cysteine in the same OtDUB chain (Fig. 4a; PDB entry 8efx). Instead, the Ub C-terminal tail points towards a symmetry-related OtDUB neighbor, approaching its Cys116 (Fig. 5a). (In OtDUB, this cysteine is nearly 10 Å from the catalytic cysteine.) However, the C-terminal tail of UbG76C was disordered after Arg72, with missing density for the side chains of Leu73 and Arg74, even though the backbone is traceable up to Gly75 (Fig. 5b). While the terminal cysteine residue could not be placed due to missing density, the proximity and orientation of the C-terminus indicated that UbG76C could be disulfide-linked to Cys116 of the symmetry-related neighbor. Alternatively, despite the substantial population of a disulfide complex in solution, we might have managed to crystallize a noncovalent complex formed from the unreacted OtDUB and UbG76C species remaining in the reaction mixture. In probing this further, we harvested crystals from the same batch as used for diffraction, carefully washed them and subjected them to SDS–PAGE under either reducing or nonreducing conditions. Under the latter conditions, a single species corresponding to a covalent complex was detected, while the same dissolved crystals produced two distinct bands under reducing conditions (in the presence of DTT) corresponding to separated OtDUB and Ub chains, as expected for a disulfide-linked adduct (Fig. 5c). Within the complex representing the OtDUB makes only a handful of contacts with Ub, leaving most of its canonical interaction patches (the widely used Ile44 and Ile36 patches as well as the C-terminus) unsatisfied. The few contacts with Ub in the complex are provided entirely by four residues in the ubiquitin-binding domain (UBD; see below), but from a face diametrically opposite to a patch of residues known to be responsible for the high-affinity interaction with Ub (Berk et al., 2020; Fig. 4a). The intra-asymmetric unit contacts between the UBD and Ub utilize Lys33 and the backbone atoms of the Gly35-Glu36 segment of Ub and Asn195, Arg196, Lys237 and Glu238 of OtDUB (Fig. 4c).
3.4.1. Crystallographic contacts mediated by high-affinity interaction between Ub and OtDUB UBD
The likely inter-subunit disulfide in the crystals prompted us to further examine the crystallographic contacts (Fig. 6a). In the previously characterized noncovalent complex that was produced under conditions of excess Ub, OtDUB showed three distinct Ub-binding sites: two of them belong to the with Ub occupying the S1 and S2 sites (Fig. 6b; the S1, S2 notation follows a similar nomenclature as that used to describe protease–substrate interactions, except that the S1, S2 etc. sites refer to the binding pocket for an entire Ub in the context of a polyubiquitin substrate; the first Ub preceding the scissile peptide bond binds at the S1 site, the Ub before that at the S2 site and so on), whereas the third Ub-binding site is contributed solely by a C-terminal extension after the The extension, consisting of four α-helices, folds into a distinct domain that has been shown to function as an accessory module for recruiting Ub (accordingly, it is referred to as the ubiquitin-binding domain; UBD) through interactions amounting to single-digit nanomolar affinity (Berk et al., 2020). The ubiquitin-binding site on the UBD does not fit the description of a substrate-like arrangement of Ub binding as represented by the Si or Si′ notation (i = 1, 2, 3 and so on). Moreover, this domain seems to fold independently of the and retains high-affinity Ub binding even as a separate construct outside the context of the OtDUB protein (Berk et al., 2020).
The high-affinity UBD patch, while unsatisfied within the c). For example, the Ile44 patch on UbG76C (residues Leu8, Ile44 and Val70) makes close contact with a complementary hydrophobic patch of OtDUB UBD (Val203, Phe207 and Leu221), while electrostatic attraction brings Lys6, Arg42 and His68 of UbG76C into close contact with three aspartates (Asp204, Asp208 and Asp226) of UBD located within the high-affinity patch. The Ile44 interaction with the UBD hydrophobic patch brings interacting hydrophobic residues into close van der Waals contact (Supplementary Fig. S4b). Thus, the Ub–UBD high-affinity interaction provides crystal-packing contacts that seem to be important for crystal growth along one of the axes of the unit cell.
complex, interacts with Ub from a different symmetry mate using all of the expected Ub–UBD interactions that constitute the high-affinity binding (Fig. 64. Discussion
Disulfide cross-linking has been used in the past to obtain structures comprising two or more proteins. In the ubiquitin field, this has been used to capture at least six Ub-bound structures of ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes and E3 ligases (Lorenz et al., 2016; Wiener et al., 2012; Maspero et al., 2013; Kamadurai et al., 2013; Jäckl et al., 2018; Puvar et al., 2020). In these examples, the disulfide link involves the catalytic cysteine of the ubiquitin-conjugating E2 enzyme or a HECT-family ubiquitin E3 ligase and the cysteine residue of the G76C Ub mutant. Here, we explore whether a similar strategy can be used to capture Ub bound to cysteine-protease DUBs. Using a panel of eukaryotic and prokaryotic DUBs, we find that the disulfide reactivity with UbG76C can show significant variation. In some cases, the reaction can proceed to a substantial degree, allowing the isolation of a single-Ub adduct of the disulfide-linked DUB for structural characterization, as exemplified by the CE-clan SdeA DUB from L. pneumophila, which contains a single cysteine as its catalytic residue. LotB, an OTU family DUB from the same organism, reacts readily but produces two distinct apparently single-Ub adducts. These species could result from the reaction of one UbG76C group with either the catalytic or another reactive cysteine. Previous studies on LotB (also known as Ceg23) have shown that in addition to the catalytic cysteine there is still at least one other reactive cysteine (Ma et al., 2020), which could explain our observation of two distinct single-Ub adducts (Fig. 1c). To the extent that the disulfide reaction is a proximity-driven effect, the observation of multiple disulfide modifications may indicate the presence of additional Ub-binding sites other than the expected S1 site.
While the previous structures of Ub bound to SdeA DUB (Sheedlo et al., 2015, 2021) had many similarities to the disulfide-linked structure obtained in this study, this new structure shows a different arrangement of the catalytic cysteine and some nearby residues in the DUB active site (Fig. 2d and Supplementary Figs. S2b and S2c). Compared with the Ub-bound noncovalent complex (representing binding of the Ub product) and the Ub-VME-bound structure, in which the warhead mimics the last glycine and the scissile peptide bond in a more or less isosteric arrangement, reaction with UbG76C results in local distortion at the active-site cysteine, presumably to accommodate the non-isosteric cysteine substitution at Gly76 (Supplementary Fig. S2b). In fact, this substitution may prevent the Ub mutant binding to the DUB in the first place, which could explain the lack of reaction with some of the other DUBs in our panel. It seems likely that SdeA DUB and those that readily react with the Ub mutant may possess an active site that is flexible enough to accommodate the cysteine substitution. The active-site cysteine in the disulfide-linked structure adopts an unproductive orientation which lies beyond an interacting distance from the catalytic histidine (Sγ–Nδ distance of 7.7 Å). Thus, it appears that disulfide formation occurs when the cysteine is in a more accessible conformation while pointing away from the catalytic histidine, even though it is at the expense of the interaction that is observed in productive cysteine (typically characterized by an Sγ–Nδ distance of ∼4 Å). As an implication for structural analysis, the disulfide-linked structure on its own may not yield a productive arrangement of the catalytic residues of the DUB.
In contrast to SdeA DUB, the disulfide reaction of OtDUB with Ub76C resulted in an adduct that involves a different cysteine to the catalytic residue (Fig. 5). It is possible that some amount of catalytic cysteine-linked disulfide adduct could be produced in the reaction but did not yield crystals. Since we went straight from the reaction to crystallization without purification, our results may not entirely reflect the situation in solution. Nevertheless, the crystals were disulfide-linked, based on the behavior of the dissolved crystals under reducing conditions (Fig. 4c), and the disulfide did not involve the catalytic cysteine but instead involved a surface-exposed cysteine.
Under conditions of a limiting concentration of the Ub reagent, it is possible that the nanomolar UBD-binding site becomes saturated first and it is this Ub-bound species that undergoes disulfide chemistry. The C-terminal tail of this Ub connected to the UBD in one complex may favor an `intermolecular' reaction with a readily accessible cysteine of a different OtDUB–Ub complex in solution (over an `intramolecular' reaction with the catalytic cysteine, for example, within the same complex), giving rise to the crystals that we have characterized here. In retrospect, it might have been possible to capture the S1 binding site through disulfide linkage only if we had used an excess of the Ub reagent.
The two examples of disulfide strategy described here illustrate the potential limitations of this approach compared with co-crystallization with Ub C-terminal electrophiles. In spite of requiring more steps in their production, in contrast to the simpler cysteine mutagenesis involved in the disulfide strategy, the Ub electrophiles are more likely to produce biologically relevant complexes.
Supporting information
Supplementary Figures. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S2059798323008501/nj5320sup1.pdf
Acknowledgements
We thank our staff contacts, David Neau and Frank Murphy, on NE-CAT beamlines 24-ID-C and 24-ID-E at the Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory for their support during X-ray data collection. We thank Ronald Stenkamp for help comparing Ube2N structures. We acknowledge Genentech Inc. for the gift of ubiquitin and Mark Hochstrasser (Yale School of Medicine) for the OtDUB plasmid. The contents of this publication are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of NIH.
Funding information
This work was funded by National Institute of Health Grant R01GM126296 (to CD).
References
Agirre, J., Atanasova, M., Bagdonas, H., Ballard, C. B., Baslé, A., Beilsten-Edmands, J., Borges, R. J., Brown, D. G., Burgos-Mármol, J. J., Berrisford, J. M., Bond, P. S., Caballero, I., Catapano, L., Chojnowski, G., Cook, A. G., Cowtan, K. D., Croll, T. I., Debreczeni, J. É., Devenish, N. E., Dodson, E. J., Drevon, T. R., Emsley, P., Evans, G., Evans, P. R., Fando, M., Foadi, J., Fuentes-Montero, L., Garman, E. F., Gerstel, M., Gildea, R. J., Hatti, K., Hekkelman, M. L., Heuser, P., Hoh, S. W., Hough, M. A., Jenkins, H. T., Jiménez, E., Joosten, R. P., Keegan, R. M., Keep, N., Krissinel, E. B., Kolenko, P., Kovalevskiy, O., Lamzin, V. S., Lawson, D. M., Lebedev, A. A., Leslie, A. G. W., Lohkamp, B., Long, F., Malý, M., McCoy, A. J., McNicholas, S. J., Medina, A., Millán, C., Murray, J. W., Murshudov, G. N., Nicholls, R. A., Noble, M. E. M., Oeffner, R., Pannu, N. S., Parkhurst, J. M., Pearce, N., Pereira, J., Perrakis, A., Powell, H. R., Read, R. J., Rigden, D. J., Rochira, W., Sammito, M., Sánchez Rodríguez, F., Sheldrick, G. M., Shelley, K. L., Simkovic, F., Simpkin, A. J., Skubak, P., Sobolev, E., Steiner, R. A., Stevenson, K., Tews, I., Thomas, J. M. H., Thorn, A., Valls, J. T., Uski, V., Usón, I., Vagin, A., Velankar, S., Vollmar, M., Walden, H., Waterman, D., Wilson, K. S., Winn, M. D., Winter, G., Wojdyr, M. & Yamashita, K. (2023). Acta Cryst. D79, 449–461. Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Berk, J. M., Lim, C., Ronau, J. A., Chaudhuri, A., Chen, H., Beckmann, J. F., Loria, J. P., Xiong, Y. & Hochstrasser, M. A. (2020). Nat. Commun. 11, 2343. CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Borodovsky, A., Ovaa, H., Kolli, N., Gan-Erdene, T., Wilkinson, K. D., Ploegh, H. L. & Kessler, B. M. (2002). Chem. Biol. 9, 1149–1159. CrossRef PubMed CAS Google Scholar
Boudreaux, D. A., Chaney, J., Maiti, T. K. & Das, C. (2012). FEBS J. 279, 1106–1118. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Boudreaux, D. A., Maiti, T. K., Davies, C. W. & Das, C. (2010). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 107, 9117–9122. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Chen, V. B., Arendall, W. B., Headd, J. J., Keedy, D. A., Immormino, R. M., Kapral, G. J., Murray, L. W., Richardson, J. S. & Richardson, D. C. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 12–21. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Eletr, Z. M. & Wilkinson, K. D. (2014). Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1843, 114–128. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Emsley, P., Lohkamp, B., Scott, W. G. & Cowtan, K. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 486–501. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Evans, P. R. & Murshudov, G. N. (2013). Acta Cryst. D69, 1204–1214. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Haj-Yahya, N., Hemantha, H. P., Meledin, R., Bondalapati, S., Seenaiah, M. & Brik, A. (2014). Org. Lett. 16, 540–543. CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Hausman, J. M., Kenny, S., Iyer, S., Babar, A., Qiu, J., Fu, J., Luo, Z.-Q. & Das, C. (2020). Biochemistry, 59, 1604–1617. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Hermanns, T. & Hofmann, K. (2019). Biochem. Soc. Trans. 47, 1857–1866. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Hewings, D. S., Heideker, J., Ma, T. P., AhYoung, A. P., El Oualid, F., Amore, A., Costakes, G. T., Kirchhofer, D., Brasher, B., Pillow, T., Popovych, N., Maurer, T., Schwerdtfeger, C., Forrest, W. F., Yu, K., Flygare, J., Bogyo, M. & Wertz, I. E. (2018). Nat. Commun. 9, 1162. CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Husnjak, K. & Dikic, I. (2012). Annu. Rev. Biochem. 81, 291–322. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Jäckl, M., Stollmaier, C., Strohäker, T., Hyz, K., Maspero, E., Polo, S. & Wiesner, S. (2018). J. Mol. Biol. 430, 3218–3233. PubMed Google Scholar
Kabsch, W. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 125–132. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Kamadurai, H. B., Qiu, Y., Deng, A., Harrison, J. S., MacDonald, C., Actis, M., Rodrigues, P., Miller, D. J., Souphron, J., Lewis, S. M., Kurinov, I., Fujii, N., Hammel, M., Piper, R., Kuhlman, B. & Schulman, B. A. (2013). eLife, 2, e00828. CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Keusekotten, K., Elliott, P. R., Glockner, L., Fiil, B. K., Damgaard, R. B., Kulathu, Y., Wauer, T., Hospenthal, M. K., Gyrd-Hansen, M., Krappmann, D., Hofmann, K. & Komander, D. (2013). Cell, 153, 1312–1326. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Komander, D. & Rape, M. (2012). Annu. Rev. Biochem. 81, 203–229. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Kwasna, D., Abdul Rehman, S. A., Natarajan, J., Matthews, S., Madden, R., De Cesare, V., Weidlich, S., Virdee, S., Ahel, I., Gibbs-Seymour, I. & Kulathu, Y. (2018). Mol. Cell, 70, 150–164. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Li, G., Liang, Q., Gong, P., Tencer, A. H. & Zhuang, Z. (2014). Chem. Commun. 50, 216–218. CrossRef CAS Google Scholar
Liebschner, D., Afonine, P. V., Baker, M. L., Bunkóczi, G., Chen, V. B., Croll, T. I., Hintze, B., Hung, L.-W., Jain, S., McCoy, A. J., Moriarty, N. W., Oeffner, R. D., Poon, B. K., Prisant, M. G., Read, R. J., Richardson, J. S., Richardson, D. C., Sammito, M. D., Sobolev, O. V., Stockwell, D. H., Terwilliger, T. C., Urzhumtsev, A. G., Videau, L. L., Williams, C. J. & Adams, P. D. (2019). Acta Cryst. D75, 861–877. Web of Science CrossRef IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Lorenz, S., Bhattacharyya, M., Feiler, C., Rape, M. & Kuriyan, J. (2016). PLoS One, 11, e0147550. CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Ma, K., Zhen, X., Zhou, B., Gan, N., Cao, Y., Fan, C., Ouyang, S., Luo, Z.-Q. & Qiu, J. (2020). J. Biol. Chem. 295, 1646–1657. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Maspero, E., Valentini, E., Mari, S., Cecatiello, V., Soffientini, P., Pasqualato, S. & Polo, S. (2013). Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 20, 696–701. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
McCoy, A. J., Grosse-Kunstleve, R. W., Adams, P. D., Winn, M. D., Storoni, L. C. & Read, R. J. (2007). J. Appl. Cryst. 40, 658–674. Web of Science CrossRef CAS IUCr Journals Google Scholar
Nijman, S. M. B., Luna-Vargas, M. P. A., Velds, A., Brummelkamp, T. R., Dirac, A. M. G., Sixma, T. K. & Bernards, R. (2005). Cell, 123, 773–786. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed CAS Google Scholar
Otwinowski, Z. & Minor, W. (1997). Methods Enzymol. 276, 307–326. CrossRef CAS PubMed Web of Science Google Scholar
Pruneda, J. N., Durkin, C. H., Geurink, P. P., Ovaa, H., Santhanam, B., Holden, D. W. & Komander, D. (2016). Mol. Cell, 63, 261–276. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Puvar, K., Iyer, S., Fu, J., Kenny, S., Negrón Terón, K. I., Luo, Z.-Q., Brzovic, P. S., Klevit, R. E. & Das, C. (2020). Nat. Commun. 11, 2365. CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
Puvar, K., Iyer, S., Sheedlo, M. J. & Das, C. (2019). Methods Enzymol. 618, 343–355. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Sato, Y., Yoshikawa, A., Yamagata, A., Mimura, H., Yamashita, M., Ookata, K., Nureki, O., Iwai, K., Komada, M. & Fukai, S. (2008). Nature, 455, 358–362. Web of Science CrossRef PubMed CAS Google Scholar
Sheedlo, M. J., Kenny, S., Podkorytov, I. S., Brown, K., Ma, J., Iyer, S., Hewitt, C. S., Arbough, T., Mikhailovskii, O., Flaherty, D. P., Wilson, M. A., Skrynnikov, N. R. & Das, C. (2021). Biochemistry, 60, 584–596. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Sheedlo, M. J., Qiu, J., Tan, Y., Paul, L. N., Luo, Z.-Q. & Das, C. (2015). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 112, 15090–15095. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Shrestha, R. K., Ronau, J. A., Davies, C. W., Guenette, R. G., Strieter, E. R., Paul, L. N. & Das, C. (2014). Biochemistry, 53, 3199–3217. Web of Science CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Vijay-kumar, S., Bugg, C. E. & Cook, W. J. (1987). J. Mol. Biol. 194, 531–544. CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Warren, G. D., Kitao, T., Franklin, T. G., Nguyen, J. V., Geurink, P. P., Kubori, T., Nagai, H. & Pruneda, J. N. (2023). Mol. Cell, 83, 105–120. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Wiener, R., Zhang, X., Wang, T. & Wolberger, C. (2012). Nature, 483, 618–622. CrossRef CAS PubMed Google Scholar
Zhang, Z. & Das, C. (2023). Methods Mol. Biol. 2591, 1–15. CrossRef PubMed Google Scholar
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.