Copper signaling promotes proteostasis and animal development via allosteric activation of ubiquitin E2D conjugases
Version 2 2024-06-04, 03:38Version 2 2024-06-04, 03:38
Version 1 2021-02-19, 08:24Version 1 2021-02-19, 08:24
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 03:38authored byCM Opazo, A Lotan, Z Xiao, B Zhang, MA Greenough, Chris LimChris Lim, H Trytell, A Ramirez, AA Ukuwela, CH Mawal, J McKenna, DN Saunders, R Burke, PR Gooley, AI Bush
Nutrient copper supply is critical for cell growth and differentiation, and its disturbance is associated with major pathologies including cancer and neurodegeneration. Although increasing copper bioavailability in late Precambrian facilitated emergence of novel cuproproteins, their intricate regulation by this essential trace element remains largely cryptic. We found that subtle rises in cellular copper strikingly increase polyubiquitination and accelerate protein degradation within 30 minutes in numerous mammalian cell lines. We track this surprising observation to allostery induced in the UBE2D ubiquitin conjugase clade through a conserved CXXXC sub-femtomolar-affinity Cu+ binding motif. Thus, physiologic fluctuation in cytoplasmic Cu+ is coupled to the prompt degradation of UBE2D protein targets, including p53. In Drosophila harboring a larval-lethal knockdown of the nearly identical fly orthologue UbcD1, complementation with human UBE2D2 restored near-normal development, but mutation of its CXXXC Cu+ binding motif profoundly disrupted organogenesis. Nutrient Cu+ emerges as a trophic allosteric modulator of UBE2D activity through a structural motif whose evolution coincides with animal multicellularity.