Institute Seminar - Understanding specificity within the ubiquitin cascad
- Date: Jun 5, 2025
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Dr. Paul Elliott
- Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, UK
- Host: Malte Gersch
Ubiquitination
is achieved through a co-ordinated enzymatic cascade of E1, E2, and E3
ligases. E1 ubiquitin activating enzymes are the initiators of
ubiquitination. In most metazoans two E1 ubiquitin activating enzymes
exist: UBA1 and the non-canonical E1, UBA6. Recently, we and others have
discovered that the E2 and regulator of cell death and development,
BIRC6, functions exclusively with UBA6. Both UBA6 and BIRC6 are
essential for normal development and brain specific UBA6 knockout mice
display neurological disorders. Despite their functional importance, how
E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes function exclusively with UBA6 is not
understood. Through trapping stable complexes of E2s receiving ubiquitin
from UBA6 we are uncovering the molecular determinants of E2
specificity. Our work will provide the fundamental molecular
understanding crucial for investigating the non-canonical ubiquitination
pathway in cellular processes.