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Nat Struct Mol Biol
Published

Target-induced clustering activates Trim-Away of pathogens and proteins.

Authors

Jingwei Zeng, Ana Filipa Santos, Aamir S Mukadam, Mariana Osswald, David A Jacques, Claire F Dickson, Stephen H McLaughlin, Christopher M Johnson, Leo Kiss, Jakub Luptak, Nadine Renner, Marina Vaysburd, William A McEwan, Eurico Morais-de-Sá, Dean Clift, Leo C James

Abstract

Trim-Away is a recently developed technology that exploits off-the-shelf antibodies and the RING E3 ligase and cytosolic antibody receptor TRIM21 to carry out rapid protein depletion. How TRIM21 is catalytically activated upon target engagement, either during its normal immune function or when repurposed for targeted protein degradation, is unknown. Here we show that a mechanism of target-induced clustering triggers intermolecular dimerization of the RING domain to switch on the ubiquitination activity of TRIM21 and induce virus neutralization or drive Trim-Away. We harness this mechanism for selective degradation of disease-causing huntingtin protein containing long polyglutamine tracts and expand the Trim-Away toolbox with highly active TRIM21-nanobody chimeras that can also be controlled optogenetically. This work provides a mechanism for cellular activation of TRIM RING ligases and has implications for targeted protein degradation technologies.

PMID:33633400 | DOI: