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Dive into the research topics where Min Zhuang is active.

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Featured researches published by Min Zhuang.


Nature | 2007

Basis for a ubiquitin-like protein thioester switch toggling E1–E2 affinity

Danny T. Huang; Harold W. Hunt; Min Zhuang; Melanie D. Ohi; James M. Holton; Brenda A. Schulman

Ubiquitin-like proteins (UBLs) are conjugated by dynamic E1–E2–E3 enzyme cascades. E1 enzymes activate UBLs by catalysing UBL carboxy-terminal adenylation, forming a covalent E1˜UBL thioester intermediate, and generating a thioester-linked E2˜UBL product, which must be released for subsequent reactions. Here we report the structural analysis of a trapped UBL activation complex for the human NEDD8 pathway, containing NEDD8’s heterodimeric E1 (APPBP1–UBA3), two NEDD8s (one thioester-linked to E1, one noncovalently associated for adenylation), a catalytically inactive E2 (Ubc12), and MgATP. The results suggest that a thioester switch toggles E1–E2 affinities. Two E2 binding sites depend on NEDD8 being thioester-linked to E1. One is unmasked by a striking E1 conformational change. The other comes directly from the thioester-bound NEDD8. After NEDD8 transfer to E2, reversion to an alternate E1 conformation would facilitate release of the E2˜NEDD8 thioester product. Thus, transferring the UBL’s thioester linkage between successive conjugation enzymes can induce conformational changes and alter interaction networks to drive consecutive steps in UBL cascades.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013

The DegraBase: A Database of Proteolysis in Healthy and Apoptotic Human Cells

Emily D. Crawford; Julia E. Seaman; Nick Agard; Gerald W. Hsu; Olivier Julien; Sami Mahrus; Huy Nguyen; Kazutaka Shimbo; Hikari A.I. Yoshihara; Min Zhuang; Robert J. Chalkley; James A. Wells

Proteolysis is a critical post-translational modification for regulation of cellular processes. Our lab has previously developed a technique for specifically labeling unmodified protein N termini, the α-aminome, using the engineered enzyme, subtiligase. Here we present a database, called the DegraBase (http://wellslab.ucsf.edu/degrabase/), which compiles 8090 unique N termini from 3206 proteins directly identified in subtiligase-based positive enrichment mass spectrometry experiments in healthy and apoptotic human cell lines. We include both previously published and unpublished data in our analysis, resulting in a total of 2144 unique α-amines identified in healthy cells, and 6990 in cells undergoing apoptosis. The N termini derive from three general categories of proteolysis with respect to cleavage location and functional role: translational N-terminal methionine processing (∼10% of total proteolysis), sites close to the translational N terminus that likely represent removal of transit or signal peptides (∼25% of total), and finally, other endoproteolytic cuts (∼65% of total). Induction of apoptosis causes relatively little change in the first two proteolytic categories, but dramatic changes are seen in endoproteolysis. For example, we observed 1706 putative apoptotic caspase cuts, more than double the total annotated sites in the CASBAH and MEROPS databases. In the endoproteolysis category, there are a total of nearly 3000 noncaspase nontryptic cleavages that are not currently reported in the MEROPS database. These studies significantly increase the annotation for all categories of proteolysis in human cells and allow public access for investigators to explore interesting proteolytic events in healthy and apoptotic human cells.


Cancer Cell | 2014

SPOP Promotes Tumorigenesis by Acting as a Key Regulatory Hub in Kidney Cancer

Guoqiang Li; Weimin Ci; Subhradip Karmakar; Ke Chen; Ruby Dhar; Zhixiang Fan; Zhongqiang Guo; Jing Zhang; Yuwen Ke; Lu Wang; Min Zhuang; Shengdi Hu; Xuesong Li; Liqun Zhou; Xianghong Li; Matthew F. Calabrese; Edmond R. Watson; Sandip M. Prasad; Carrie W. Rinker-Schaeffer; Thomas Stricker; Yong Tian; Brenda A. Schulman; Jiang Liu; Kevin P. White

Hypoxic stress and hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) play important roles in a wide range of tumors. We demonstrate that SPOP, which encodes an E3 ubiquitin ligase component, is a direct transcriptional target of HIFs in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). Furthermore, hypoxia results in cytoplasmic accumulation of SPOP, which is sufficient to induce tumorigenesis. This tumorigenic activity occurs through the ubiquitination and degradation of multiple regulators of cellular proliferation and apoptosis, including the tumor suppressor PTEN, ERK phosphatases, the proapoptotic molecule Daxx, and the Hedgehog pathway transcription factor Gli2. Knockdown of SPOP specifically kills ccRCC cells, indicating that it may be a promising therapeutic target. Collectively, our results indicate that SPOP serves as a regulatory hub to promote ccRCC tumorigenesis.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Substrates of IAP ubiquitin ligases identified with a designed orthogonal E3 ligase, the NEDDylator.

Min Zhuang; Shenheng Guan; Haopeng Wang; Alma L. Burlingame; James A. Wells

Inhibitors of Apoptosis Protein (IAPs) are guardian ubiquitin ligases that keep classic proapoptotic proteins in check. Systematic identification of additional IAP substrates is challenged by the heterogeneity and sheer number of ubiquitinated proteins (>5,000). Here we report a powerful catalytic tagging tool, the NEDDylator, which fuses a NEDD8 E2-conjugating enzyme, Ubc12, to the ubiquitin ligase, XIAP or cIAP1. This permits transfer of the rare ubiquitin homolog NEDD8 to the ubiquitin E3 substrates, allowing them to be efficiently purified for LC-MS/MS identification. We have identified >50 potential IAP substrates of both cytosolic and mitochondrial origin that bear hallmark N-terminal IAP binding motifs. These substrates include the recently discovered protein phosphatase PGAM5, which we show is proteolytically processed, accumulates in cytosol during apoptosis, and sensitizes cells to death. These studies reveal mechanisms and antagonistic partners for specific IAPs, and provide a powerful technology for labeling binding partners in transient protein-protein complexes.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2008

Identification of conjugation specificity determinants unmasks vestigial preference for ubiquitin within the NEDD8 E2

Danny T. Huang; Min Zhuang; Olivier Ayrault; Brenda A. Schulman

Ubiquitin-like proteins (UBLs) modify targets via related E1-E2-E3 cascades. How is UBL conjugation fidelity established? Here we report the basis for UBL selection by UBL conjugating enzyme 12 (Ubc12), which is specific for the neural precursor cell expressed, developmentally down-regulated protein 8 (NEDD8), and does not form a thioester-linked conjugate with ubiquitin. We systematically identified Ubc12 surfaces impeding Ubc12∼ubiquitin conjugate formation and found that several structurally dispersed E1 binding elements, rather than UBL-interacting surfaces, determine E2∼UBL specificity. In addition to roles for conserved E1 and E2 domains, unique structures contribute UBL specificity to the NEDD8 and ubiquitin pathways. By removing surface elements, without substituting corresponding sequences from ubiquitin E2s, we unmasked Ubc12s vestigial preference for ubiquitin over NEDD8 by ∼1010-fold. This has implications for the evolution of specific functions among ubiquitin E2s. We also find that Ubc12 sequences dictating UBL selection map to the E3 binding site, thus providing a molecular mechanism preventing inappropriate modification of targets.


Biochemistry | 2009

ERdj3, a luminal ER DnaJ homologue, binds directly to unfolded proteins in the mammalian ER: identification of critical residues.

Yi Jin; Min Zhuang; Linda M. Hendershot

ERdj3 was identified as a soluble, lumenal DnaJ family member that binds to unassembled immunoglobulin heavy chains along with the BiP chaperone complex in the endoplasmic reticulum of mammalian cells. Here we demonstrated that ERdj3 binds directly to unfolded substrates. Secondary structure predictions suggested that the substrate binding domain of ERdj3 was likely to closely resemble Ydj1, a yeast cytosolic DnaJ family member, which was previously crystallized with a peptide bound to the C-terminal fragment composed of domains I, II, and III. Mutation of conserved residues in domain I, which formed the peptide binding site in Ydj1, affected ERdj3s substrate binding ability in mammalian cells and in vitro binding studies. Somewhat unexpectedly, we found that domain II, which is highly conserved among ERdj3 homologues, but very different from domain II of Ydj1, was also critical for substrate binding. In addition, we demonstrated that ERdj3 forms multimers in cells and found that the conserved carboxy-terminal residue phenylalanine 326 played a critical role in self-assembly. In vitro binding assays revealed that mutation of this residue to alanine diminished ERdj3s substrate binding ability, arguing that multimerization is important for substrate binding. Together, these studies demonstrate that the Ydj1 structure is conserved in another family member and reveal that among this group of DnaJ proteins domain II, which is not present in the closely related type II family members, also plays an essential role in substrate binding.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Quantitative MS-based enzymology of caspases reveals distinct protein substrate specificities, hierarchies, and cellular roles.

Olivier Julien; Min Zhuang; Arun P. Wiita; Anthony J. O'Donoghue; Giselle M. Knudsen; Charles S. Craik; James A. Wells

Significance Caspases, a family of 12 proteases involved in irreversible cell state changes including cell death, often cleave common substrates. However, we show here by quantitative N-terminomics MS, for caspase-2 and caspase-6, that the rates of substrate cleavage vary more than 500-fold in cellular lysate. The rates of cleavage show virtually no correlation among common substrates for these two caspases, as well as for three other caspases previously studied: caspase-3, caspase-7, and caspase-8. These global and unbiased studies reveal a greater degree of substrate hierarchy and specialized functions for caspases than previously appreciated. We believe this quantitative approach is of general use to other proteases and enzymes involved in posttranslational modifications to better define their roles. Proteases constitute the largest enzyme family, yet their biological roles are obscured by our rudimentary understanding of their cellular substrates. There are 12 human caspases that play crucial roles in inflammation and cell differentiation and drive the terminal stages of cell death. Recent N-terminomics technologies have begun to enumerate the diverse substrates individual caspases can cleave in complex cell lysates. It is clear that many caspases have shared substrates; however, few data exist about the catalytic efficiencies (kcat/KM) of these substrates, which is critical to understanding their true substrate preferences. In this study, we use quantitative MS to determine the catalytic efficiencies for hundreds of natural protease substrates in cellular lysate for two understudied members: caspase-2 and caspase-6. Most substrates are new, and the cleavage rates vary up to 500-fold. We compare the cleavage rates for common substrates with those found for caspase-3, caspase-7, and caspase-8, involved in apoptosis. There is little correlation in catalytic efficiencies among the five caspases, suggesting each has a unique set of preferred substrates, and thus more specialized roles than previously understood. We synthesized peptide substrates on the basis of protein cleavage sites and found similar catalytic efficiencies between the protein and peptide substrates. These data suggest the rates of proteolysis are dominated more by local primary sequence, and less by the tertiary protein fold. Our studies highlight that global quantitative rate analysis for posttranslational modification enzymes in complex milieus for native substrates is critical to better define their functions and relative sequence of events.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2018

Heat Shock Protein 70 (Hsp70) Suppresses RIP1-Dependent Apoptotic and Necroptotic Cascades

Sharan R. Srinivasan; Laura C. Cesa; Xiaokai Li; Olivier Julien; Min Zhuang; Hao Shao; Jooho Chung; Ivan Maillard; James A. Wells; Colin S. Duckett; Jason E. Gestwicki

Hsp70 is a molecular chaperone that binds to “client” proteins and protects them from protein degradation. Hsp70 is essential for the survival of many cancer cells, but it is not yet clear which of its clients are involved. Using structurally distinct chemical inhibitors, we found that many of the well-known clients of the related chaperone, Hsp90, are not strikingly responsive to Hsp70 inhibition. Rather, Hsp70 appeared to be important for the stability of the RIP1 (RIPK1) regulators: cIAP1/2 (BIRC1 and BIRC3), XIAP, and cFLIPS/L (CFLAR). These results suggest that Hsp70 limits apoptosis and necroptosis pathways downstream of RIP1. Consistent with this model, MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells treated with Hsp70 inhibitors underwent apoptosis, while cotreatment with z-VAD.fmk switched the cell death pathway to necroptosis. In addition, cell death in response to Hsp70 inhibitors was strongly suppressed by RIP1 knockdown or inhibitors. Thus, these data indicate that Hsp70 plays a previously unrecognized and important role in suppressing RIP1 activity. Implications: These findings clarify the role of Hsp70 in prosurvival signaling and suggest IAPs as potential new biomarkers for Hsp70 inhibition. Mol Cancer Res; 16(1); 58–68. ©2017 AACR.


Molecular Cell | 2009

Structures of SPOP-Substrate Complexes: Insights into Molecular Architectures of BTB-Cul3 Ubiquitin Ligases.

Min Zhuang; Matthew F. Calabrese; Jiang Liu; M. Brett Waddell; Amanda Nourse; Michal Hammel; Darcie J. Miller; Helen Walden; David M. Duda; Steven N. Seyedin; Timothy Hoggard; J. Wade Harper; Kevin P. White; Brenda A. Schulman


Molecular Cell | 2005

Structural Basis for Recruitment of Ubc12 by an E2 Binding Domain in NEDD8's E1

Danny T. Huang; Amir Paydar; Min Zhuang; M. Brett Waddell; James M. Holton; Brenda A. Schulman

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Brenda A. Schulman

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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James A. Wells

University of California

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Danny T. Huang

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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James M. Holton

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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M. Brett Waddell

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Matthew F. Calabrese

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Jiang Liu

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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