Labeling proteins with ubiquitin paves new road to cell regulation research

Tipping the scales
The researchers equipped a cellular protein (gray) with a modified lysine amino acid building block (pink), to which the bacterial enzyme sortase (yellow) transmits a ubiquitin molecule (blue). Credit: K. Lang / TUM

Human cells have a sophisticated regulatory system that consists of labeling proteins with the small molecule ubiquitin. In a first, a team from the Technical University of Munich (TUM) has succeeded in marking proteins with ubiquitin in a targeted manner in test tubes as well as in living cells. The procedure opens the door to exploring the inner workings of this vital regulatory system.

Plants, fungi, animals and humans express the protein ubiquitin. It comprises a sequence of 76 , making it a relatively small biomolecule. But its influence is far-reaching: the type, position and number of ubiquitin molecules bound to proteins determine their stability, function, and location within the cell.

"Virtually every process in the cell is directly or indirectly affected by ubiquitin. That is why malfunctions of this labeling mechanism are associated with the development and progression of cancer and many other severe diseases," explains Kathrin Lang, Professor of Synthetic Biochemistry at the Technical University of Munich.

The discovery of the important role this cellular plays in the controlled degradation of proteins was acknowledged with the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. But, in many cases the details of how ubiquitin modifications affect the function of cells remains unclear. Kathrin Lang's team has now developed a method for attaching ubiquitin labels to targeted proteins—a key to exploring the system.

A bacterial enzyme creates new compounds

Lang's team uses two tricks to circumvent the complicated natural system: They incorporate a novel modified amino acid, at which the bacteria-derived enzyme sortase can attach ubiquitin or a ubiquitin-similar molecule.

Tipping the scales
First author Maximilian Fottner and Prof. Kathrin Lang in their laboratory. Credit: Andreas Battenberg / TUM

"The biggest challenge was to align the various steps—the incorporation of the unnatural amino acid into a and the transfer of ubiquitin by the enzyme sortase—in such a way that they will work not only in the test tube but also in living cells," recalls Maximilian Fottner, the lead author of the study.

In the meantime, the researchers at the Technical University of Munich have optimized and patented their new method for many different cellular proteins. "We have already entered into collaborations with physicians and cell biologists who now want to work with us to study the effects of ubiquitin markers on the development of cancer and such as Parkinson's at the ," says Prof. Lang.

More information: Maximilian Fottner et al, Site-specific ubiquitylation and SUMOylation using genetic-code expansion and sortase, Nature Chemical Biology (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41589-019-0227-4

Amit Kumar Singh Gautam et al. Decoding without the cipher, Nature Chemical Biology (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41589-019-0230-9

Journal information: Nature Chemical Biology

Citation: Labeling proteins with ubiquitin paves new road to cell regulation research (2019, April 4) retrieved 19 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2019-04-proteins-ubiquitin-paves-road-cell.html
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