Abstract

We show that the monomeric form of Shigella IpaH9.8 E3 ligase catalyses the ubiquitination of human U2AF35 in vitro, providing a molecular mechanism for the observed in vivo effect. We further discover that under non-reducing conditions IpaH9.8 undergoes a domain swap driven by the formation of a disulfide bridge involving the catalytic cysteine and that this dimer is unable to catalyse the ubiquitination of U2AF35. The crystal structure of the domain-swapped dimer is presented. The redox inactivation of IpaH9.8 could be a mechanism of regulating the activity of the IpaH9.8 E3 ligase in response to cell damage so that the host cell in which the bacteria resides is maintained in a benign state suitable for bacterial survival. Structured summary MINT- 7993779: ipaH9.8 (uniprotkb: Q8VSC3) and ipaH9.8 (uniprotkb: Q8VSC3) bind (MI: 0408) by X- ray crystallography (MI: 0114) MINT- 7993812: ipaH9.8 (uniprotkb: Q8VSC3) and ipaH9.8 (uniprotkb: Q8VSC3) bind (MI: 0407) by affinity chromatography technology (MI: 0004) MINT- 7993790: ipaH9.8 (uniprotkb: Q8VSC3) and ipaH9.8 (uniprotkb: Q8VSC3) bind (MI: 0407) by blue native page (MI: 0276)

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