Ubiquitination regulates many aspects of host immunity and thus is a common target
for infectious agents. Recent studies revealed that members of the SidE effector family of the
bacterial pathogen Legionella pneumophila attacked several small GTPases associated with
the endoplasmic reticulum by a novel ubiquitination mechanism that does not require the E1
and E2 enzymes of the host ubiquitination machinery. Following ubiquitin activation by ADP-
ribosylation via a mono-ADP-ribosylation motif, ADP-ribosylated ubiquitin is cleaved by a
phosphodiesterasedomainwithinSdeA,whichisconcomitantwiththelinkof
phosphoribosylated ubiquitin to serine residues in the substrate. Here we demonstrate that
the activity of SidEs is regulated by SidJ, another effector encoded by a gene situated in the
locus coding for three members of the SidE family (SdeC, SdeB and SdeA). SidJ functions to
remove ubiquitin from SidEs-modified substrates by cleaving the phosphodiester bond that
links phosphoribosylated ubiquitin to protein substrates. Further, the deubiquitinase activity of
SidJ is essential for its role in L. pneumophila infection. Finally, the activity of SidJ is required
for efficiently reducing the abundance of ubiquitinated Rab33b in infected cells within a few
hours after bacterial uptake. Our results establish SidJ as a deubiquitinase that functions to
impose temporal regulation of the activity of the SidE effectors. The identification of SidJ may
shed light on future study of signaling cascades mediated by this unique ubiquitination that
also potentially regulates cellular processes in eukaryotic cells.
Revised: April 10, 2020 |
Published: May 12, 2017
Citation
Qiu J., K. Yu, X. Fei, Y. Liu, E.S. Nakayasu, P.D. Piehowski, and J.B. Shaw, et al. 2017.A unique deubiquitinase that deconjugates phosphoribosyl-linked protein ubiquitination.Cell Research 27, no. 7:865-881.PNNL-SA-123995.doi:10.1038/cr.2017.66