Serine Phosphorylation Is Critical for the Activation of Ubiquitin-Specific Protease 1 and Its Interaction with WD40-Repeat Protein UAF1

  • Mark A. Villamil (1338432)
  • Qin Liang (1338441)
  • Junjun Chen (529954)
  • Yong Seok Choi (1675024)
  • Shuyu Hou (1918264)
  • Kelvin H. Lee (2024467)
  • Zhihao Zhuang (1338450)
Publication date
November 2012

Abstract

Deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) are important for the normal function of a number of cellular processes, including transcriptional regulation, cell cycle control, and DNA damage response. The enzymatic activity of DUB is regulated by different mechanisms. DUBs in several different families are post-translationally modified by phosphorylation. Large-scale phosphoproteomic studies of human DUBs revealed that a majority of ubiquitin-specific proteases (USPs) are phosphorylated. USP1 is a prototypical DUB that requires a specific interaction with a WD40-repeat protein, UAF1, for its catalytic activity. In this study, we show that Ser313 phosphorylation in USP1 is required for its interaction with UAF1 and for the stimulation of USP1’s activity....

Extracted data

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