4.5 Article

Nucleolar Targeting of the Fbw7 Ubiquitin Ligase by a Pseudosubstrate and Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 1214-1224

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.01347-10

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Funding

  1. NIH [CA084069, P01 HL 084205, 2T32 GM007270]
  2. CIHR [12477]

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E3 ubiquitin ligases catalyze protein degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome system, and their activity is tightly controlled. One level of regulation involves subcellular localization, and the Fbw7 tumor suppressor exemplifies this type of control. Fbw7 is the substrate-binding component of an SCF ubiquitin ligase that degrades critical oncoproteins. Alternative splicing produces three Fbw7 protein isoforms that occupy distinct compartments: Fbw7 alpha is nucleoplasmic, Fbw7 beta is cytoplasmic, and Fbw7 gamma is nucleolar. We found that cancer-associated Fbw7 mutations that disrupt substrate binding prevent Fbw7 gamma nucleolar localization, implicating a substrate-like interaction in nucleolar targeting. We identified EBNA1-binding protein 2 (Ebp2) as the critical nucleolar factor that directly mediates Fbw7 nucleolar targeting. Ebp2 binds to Fbw7 like a substrate, and this is mediated by an Ebp2 degron that is phosphorylated by glycogen synthase kinase 3. However, despite these canonical substrate-like interactions, Fbw7 binding is largely uncoupled from Ebp2 turnover in vivo. Ebp2 thus acts like a pseudosubstrate that directly recruits Fbw7 to nucleoli.

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