pr8b00623_si_004.xls (36.5 kB)
Download fileSite-Specific K63 Ubiquitinomics Provides Insights into Translation Regulation under Stress
dataset
posted on 2018-11-29, 00:00 authored by Songhee Back, Andrew W. Gorman, Christine Vogel, Gustavo M. SilvaDuring oxidative stress, K63-linked
polyubiquitin chains modify
a variety of proteins including ribosomes. Knowledge of the precise
sites of K63 ubiquitin is key to understand its function during
the response to stress. To identify the sites of K63 ubiquitin, we
developed a new mass spectrometry based method that quantified
>1100 K63 ubiquitination sites in yeast that responded to oxidative
stress induced by H2O2. We determined that under
stress, K63 ubiquitin-modified proteins were involved in several cellular
functions including ion transport, protein trafficking, and translation.
The most abundant ubiquitin sites localized to the head of the
40S subunit of the ribosome, modified assembled polysomes, and affected
the binding of translation factors. The results suggested a new pathway
of post-initiation control of translation during oxidative stress
and illustrated the importance of high-resolution mapping of noncanonical
ubiquitination events.