Targeted ubiquitination of CDT1 by the DDB1–CUL4A–ROC1 ligase in response to DNA damage

Author:  ["Jian Hu","Chad M. McCall","Tomohiko Ohta","Yue Xiong"]

Publication:  Nature Cell Biology

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Tags:  general   CellBiology   CancerResearch   DevelopmentalBiology   StemCells   Biological

Abstract

Cullins assemble a potentially large number of ubiquitin ligases by binding to the RING protein ROC1 to catalyse polyubiquitination, as well as binding to various specificity factors to recruit substrates1,2,3,4. The Cul4A gene is amplified in human breast and liver cancers, and loss-of-function of Cul4 results in the accumulation of the replication licensing factor CDT1 in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos and ultraviolet (UV)-irradiated human cells. Here, we report that human UV-damaged DNA-binding protein DDB1 associates stoichiometrically with CUL4A in vivo, and binds to an amino-terminal region in CUL4A in a manner analogous to SKP1, SOCS and BTB binding to CUL1, CUL2 and CUL3, respectively. As with SKP1–CUL1, the DDB1–CUL4A association is negatively regulated by the cullin-associated and neddylation-dissociated protein, CAND1. Recombinant DDB1 and CDT1 bind directly to each other in vitro, and ectopically expressed DDB1 bridges CDT1 to CUL4A in vivo. Silencing DDB1 prevented UV-induced rapid CDT1 degradation in vivo and CUL4A-mediated CDT1 ubiquitination in vitro. We suggest that DDB1 targets CDT1 for ubiquitination by a CUL4A-dependent ubiquitin ligase, CDL4ADDB1, in response to UV irradiation.

Cite this article

Hu, J., McCall, C., Ohta, T. et al. Targeted ubiquitination of CDT1 by the DDB1–CUL4A–ROC1 ligase in response to DNA damage. Nat Cell Biol 6, 1003–1009 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncb1172

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