Abstract

Ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like proteins are known to be covalently conjugated to a variety of cellular substrates via a three-step enzymatic pathway. These modifications lead to the degradation of substrates or change its functional status. The ubiquitin-activating enzyme (E1) plays a key role in the first step of ubiquitination pathway to activate ubiquitin or ubiquitin-like proteins. Ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1-domain containing 1 (UBE1DC1) had been proved to activate an ubiquitin-like protein, ubiquitin-fold modifier 1 (Ufm1), by forming a high-energy thioester bond. In this report, UBE1DC1 is proved to activate another ubiquitin-like protein, SUMO2, besides Ufm1, both in vitro and in vivo by immunological analysis. It indicated that UBE1DC1 could activate two different ubiquitin-like proteins, SUMO2 and Ufm1, which have no significant similarity with each other. Subcellular localization in AD293 cells revealed that UBE1DC1 was especially distributed in the cytoplasm; whereas UBE1DC1 was mainly distributed in the nucleus when was cotransfected with SUMO2. It presumed that UBE1DC1 greatly activated SUMO2 in the nucleus or transferred activated-SUMO2 to nucleus after it conjugated SUMO2 in the cytoplasm.

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