The E3 ligase parkin ubiquitinates outer mitochondrial membrane
proteins during oxidative stress and is linked to early-onset
Parkinson’s disease. Parkin is autoinhibited but is activated by the
kinase PINK1 that phosphorylates ubiquitin leading to parkin
recruitment, and stimulates phosphorylation of parkin’s N-terminal
ubiquitin-like (pUbl) domain. How these events alter the
structure of parkin to allow recruitment of an E2~Ub conjugate
and enhanced ubiquitination is an unresolved question. We
present a model of an E2~Ub conjugate bound to the phosphoubiquitin-loaded
C-terminus of parkin, derived from NMR chemical
shift perturbation experiments. We show the UbcH7~Ub conjugate
binds in the open state whereby conjugated ubiquitin binds to the
RING1/IBR interface. Further, NMR and mass spectrometry experiments
indicate the RING0/RING2 interface is re-modelled,
remote from the E2 binding site, and this alters the reactivity of
the RING2(Rcat) catalytic cysteine, needed for ubiquitin transfer.
Our experiments provide evidence that parkin phosphorylation
and E2~Ub recruitment act synergistically to enhance a weak
interaction of the pUbl domain with the RING0 domain and rearrange
the location of the RING2(Rcat) domain to drive parkin
activity