Transient Kinetic Analysis
of USP2-Catalyzed Deubiquitination
Reveals a Conformational Rearrangement in the K48-Linked Diubiquitin
Substrate
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Abstract
Deubiquitination has emerged as an essential regulatory
mechanism
of a number of cellular processes. An in-depth understanding of deubiquitinating
enzyme (DUB) catalysis, particularly the mode of ubiquitin binding
and the individual steps in the DUB catalytic turnover, is imperative
for exploiting DUBs for therapeutic intervention. In this work, we
present a transient kinetic study of USP2 in hydrolyzing a model substrate
Ub-AMC and a physiological substrate K48-linked diubiquitin. We conducted
stopped-flow fluorescence analyses of the binding of mono- and diubiquitin
to an inactive USP2 mutant and unveiled interesting differences in
the binding kinetics between the two substrates. While a simple one-step
binding of monoubiquitin to USP2 was observed, a biphasic binding
was evident for diubiquitin. We further followed the deubiquitination
reaction of Ub-AMC and K48-linked IQF-diubiquitin by USP2 using stopped-flow
florescence under a single-turnover condition. Global fitting of the
reaction traces revealed differences in the microscopic rate constants
between Ub-AMC and the physiological diubiquitin substrate. Our binding
and single-turnover data support a conformational rearrangement of
the diubiquitin substrate in USP2-catalyzed deubiquitination. This
finding is significant given the recent finding that the K48-linked
diubiquitin is dynamic in its conformation. Our results provide useful
insights into the mechanism of how USP recognizes ubiquitin moieties
in a chain structure, which is important for understanding USP catalysis
and developing inhibitors against USPs