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9OUT

SPOP double donut locally refined MATH domains

This is a non-PDB format compatible entry.
Summary for 9OUT
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb9out/pdb
EMDB information70881
DescriptorSpeckle-type POZ protein (1 entity in total)
Functional Keywordsubiquitination, protein degradation, protein oligomer, substrate adapter, protein binding
Biological sourceHomo sapiens (human)
Total number of polymer chains15
Total formula weight632750.33
Authors
Cuneo, M.J. (deposition date: 2025-05-29, release date: 2025-07-30)
Primary citationCuneo, M.J.,Gullulu, O.,Ammar, M.R.,Gui, X.,Churion, K.,Turk, M.,O'Flynn, B.G.,Sabri, N.,Mittag, T.
The equilibrium between two quaternary assembly states determines the activity of SPOP and its cancer mutants.
Biorxiv, 2025
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: Proteostasis is critical for preventing oncogenesis. Both activating and inactivating mutations in the ubiquitin ligase subunit SPOP result in oncogenesis in different tissues. SPOP assembles into filaments that are multivalent for substrates, and substrates have multiple weak motifs for SPOP that are not activated via post-translational modifications. It is thus unclear how regulation is achieved. Here, we show that SPOP filaments circularize into rings that dimerize into up to 2.5 MDa-large, auto-inhibited double donuts. The equilibrium between double donuts and linear filaments determines SPOP activity. Activating and deactivating cancer mutations shift the equilibrium towards the filament or the double donut, respectively, and this influences substrate turnover and subcellular localization. This regulatory mechanism requires long filaments that can circularize into rings, likely explaining the presence of multiple weak SPOP-binding motifs in substrates. Activating and deactivating mutations combine to give rise to intermediate activities, suggesting new levers for cancer therapies.
PubMed: 40666954
DOI: 10.1101/2025.06.19.659812
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
ELECTRON MICROSCOPY (4.3 Å)
Structure validation

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