Small ubiquitin-like modifiers (SUMOs) are members of the superfamily of small ubiquitin-like proteins. SUMOs become covalently attached to intracellular target proteins in the process known as SUMOylation. When a substrate protein becomes SUMOylated, it can change its inherent activity, interactions, subcellular location, or stability. SUMOylation plays an essential role in almost all biological functions and is implicated in diseases such as neurodegeneration and cancer.
The SUMOylation process typically depends on an interplay between an enzyme called E2 (its technical name in humans is UBC9), which acts as a “carrier” of SUMO, and a scaffold called a SUMO E3 ligase that can accelerate discharge of SUMO from the E2 onto a specific set of substrates. While SUMO E3 ligases are arguably key players in this modification system, contributing to its substrate specificity, few SUMO E3 ligases are known, and even fewer are well understood in terms of their mechanism of action. Furthermore, although we know that SUMOylation of a protein substrate can change its function in various ways listed above, there are hardly any examples available where this change is precisely understood in molecular, mechanistic terms.
In this project, we aim to illuminate the two main aspects of protein SUMOylation using approaches of mechanistic and structural biology. The first part of the project concerns the process of SUMO ligation onto substrates, catalysed by the interplay between SUMO E2 and E3 enzymes. We will move from characterising some enzymes that have been reported to have SUMO E3 ligase activity but remain poorly understood – to identifying new enzymes with this function, using both bioinformatic tools and chemical biology probes. In the second part of the project, we will explore how SUMO modification of substrates impacts their properties.
Given the biological importance of protein SUMOylation - which is an essential process in humans and other eukaryotic model organisms - the mechanistic insights gained through this project will inform research in various parts of biology.