posted on 2023-03-10, 14:33authored byReina Iwase, Daniel R. Dempsey, Samuel D. Whedon, Hanjie Jiang, Brad A. Palanski, Bedphiny Deng, Philip A. Cole
Phosphatase and tensin homologue (PTEN) tumor suppressor
protein
is a PIP3 lipid phosphatase that is subject to multifaceted post-translational
modifications. One such modification is the monoubiquitination of
Lys13 that may alter its cellular localization but is also positioned
in a manner that could influence several of its cellular functions.
To explore the regulatory influence of ubiquitin on PTEN’s
biochemical properties and its interaction with ubiquitin ligases
and a deubiquitinase, the generation of a site-specifically and stoichiometrically
ubiquitinated protein could be beneficial. Here, we describe a semisynthetic
method that relies upon sequential expressed protein ligation steps
to install ubiquitin at a Lys13 mimic in near full-length PTEN. This
approach permits the concurrent installation of C-terminal modifications
in PTEN, thereby facilitating an analysis of the interplay between
N-terminal ubiquitination and C-terminal phosphorylation. We find
that the N-terminal ubiquitination of PTEN inhibits its enzymatic
function, reduces its binding to lipid vesicles, modulates its processing
by NEDD4-1 E3 ligase, and is efficiently cleaved by the deubiquitinase,
USP7. Our ligation approach should motivate related efforts for uncovering
the effects of ubiquitination of complex proteins.