1. Academic Validation
  2. A Small Molecule That Switches a Ubiquitin Ligase From a Processive to a Distributive Enzymatic Mechanism

A Small Molecule That Switches a Ubiquitin Ligase From a Processive to a Distributive Enzymatic Mechanism

  • J Am Chem Soc. 2015 Oct 7;137(39):12442-5. doi: 10.1021/jacs.5b06839.
Stefan G Kathman 1 Ingrid Span 1 Aaron T Smith 1 Ziyang Xu 1 Jennifer Zhan 1 Amy C Rosenzweig 1 Alexander V Statsyuk 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Center for Molecular Innovation and Drug Discovery, Chemistry of Life Processes Institute, Department of Chemistry, Department of Molecular Biosciences, Northwestern University , Silverman Hall, 2145 Sheridan Road, Evanston, Illinois 60208, United States.
Abstract

E3 Ligases are genetically implicated in many human diseases, yet E3 Enzyme mechanisms are not fully understood, and there is a strong need for pharmacological probes of E3s. We report the discovery that the HECT E3 Nedd4-1 is a processive Enzyme and that disruption of its processivity by biochemical mutations or small molecules switches Nedd4-1 from a processive to a distributive mechanism of polyubiquitin chain synthesis. Furthermore, we discovered and structurally characterized the first covalent inhibitor of Nedd4-1, which switches Nedd4-1 from a processive to a distributive mechanism. To visualize the binding mode of the Nedd4-1 inhibitor, we used X-ray crystallography and solved the first structure of a Nedd4-1 family ligase bound to an inhibitor. Importantly, our study shows that processive Nedd4-1, but not the distributive Nedd4-1:inhibitor complex, is able to synthesize polyubiquitin chains on the substrate in the presence of the deubiquitinating Enzyme USP8. Therefore, inhibition of E3 ligase processivity is a viable strategy to design E3 inhibitors. Our study provides fundamental insights into the HECT E3 mechanism and uncovers a novel class of HECT E3 inhibitors.

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