Protein degradation by the ubiquitin/proteasome system plays an important role for many cellular processes such as cell cycle progression, induction of inflammatory response or general protein turnover and is severely dependent on stringent regulation for immaculate biological function. Selective ubiquitylation of target substrate proteins requires a cascade of enzymes consisting of an E1 ubiquitin-activating enzyme, an E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme and finally an E3 enzyme which acts as a ubiquitin-protein ligase. In some instances a fourth enzyme, E4, is required for final multiubiquitylation of the target protein. The progression of this cascade often results in terminal protein degradation by the 26S proteasome. Recent studies in our lab have revealed that UFD-2 and CHN-1 form a novel complex with E3/E4 activity in C. elegans. This complex is necessary and sufficient to multiubiquitylate and subsequently downregulate the myosin chaperone UNC-45. It has been shown that CHIP, the human ortholog of CHN-1, and UNC-45 interact with the chaperones Hsp90 and Hsp70, respectively. Thus, it appears that co-chaperone activity of CHN-1 and UNC-45 in concomitance with E4 dependent degradation result in a tightly regulated mechanism for proper myosin assembly. We are looking for further interaction partners of CHN-1 and UNC-45 which will be cloned for interaction studies to investigate how potential chaperone activity may influence ubiquitylation in vitro. In addition, we will perform a genetic screen for suppression of two different
unc-45(ts) alleles we have used for our previous studies as well as generate double mutants to explicate this regulation in detail. We are currently investigating if this mechanism of myosin assembly regulation is also conserved in mammals by studying the identified mouse and human UNC-45 homologs. In this regard, we are cloning the mammalian
unc-45 isoforms into expression vectors to perform rescue experiments with the different
unc-45(ts) mutants and subsequently with
chn-1(
by155);
unc-45(ts) double mutants to elucidate if they also represent functional orthologs.