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Translocation of polyubiquitinated protein substrates by the hexameric Cdc48 ATPase

Authors :
Steven P. Gygi
Jarrod A. Marto
Thomas E. Wales
Zhejian Ji
John R. Engen
Hao Li
Daniele Peterle
Joao A. Paulo
Scott B. Ficarro
Tom A. Rapoport
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

SUMMARYThe hexameric Cdc48 ATPase (p97 or VCP in mammals) cooperates with its cofactor Ufd1/Npl4 to extract polyubiquitinated proteins from membranes or macromolecular complexes for degradation by the proteasome. Here, we clarify how the Cdc48 complex unfolds its substrates and translocates polypeptides with branchpoints. The Cdc48 complex recognizes primarily polyubiquitin chains, rather than the attached substrate. Cdc48 and Ufd1/Npl4 cooperatively bind the polyubiquitin chain, resulting in the unfolding of one ubiquitin molecule (initiator). Next, the ATPase pulls on the initiator ubiquitin and moves all ubiquitin molecules linked to its C-terminus through the central pore of the hexameric double-ring, causing transient ubiquitin unfolding. When the ATPase reaches the isopeptide bond of the substrate, it can translocate and unfold both N- and C-terminal segments. Ubiquitins linked to the branchpoint of the initiator dissociate from Ufd1/Npl4 and move outside the central pore, resulting in the release of unfolded, polyubiquitinated substrate from Cdc48.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c52b479a4d55ba82a4c8c7948711cdf1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.10.21.465358