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Divergent self-association properties of paralogous proteins TRIM2 and TRIM3 regulate their E3 ligase activity

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posted on 2022-12-09, 10:49 authored by Diego Esposito, Jane Dudley-Fraser, Acely Garza-Garcia, Katrin Rittinger
Tripartite motif (TRIM) proteins constitute a large family of RING-type E3 ligases that share a conserved domain architecture. TRIM2 and TRIM3 are paralogous class VII TRIM members that are expressed mainly in the brain and regulate different neuronal functions. Here we present a detailed structure function analysis of TRIM2 and TRIM3, which despite high sequence identity, exhibit markedly different self-association and activity profiles. We show that the isolated RING domain of human TRIM3 is monomeric and inactive, and that this lack of activity is due to a few placental mammal-specific amino acid changes adjacent to the core RING domain that prevent self-association but not E2 recognition. We demonstrate that the activity of human TRIM3 RING can be restored by substitution with the relevant region of human TRIM2 or by hetero-dimerization with human TRIM2, establishing that subtle amino acid changes can profoundly affect TRIM protein activity. Finally, we show that TRIM2 and TRIM3 interact in a cellular context via their filamin and coiled-coil domains, respectively.

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Crick (Grant ID: CC2075, Grant title: Rittinger CC2075) Crick (Grant ID: CC2000, Grant title: Carvalho CC2000)

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