BTB (also known as POZ) was first identified as a conserved motif presented in the Drosophila melanogaster Bric-a-Brac, Tramtrack, Broad complex transcription regulators (1). BTB, Cul3 and RBX1 form a Cul3-based ligase (BCR), which targets substrates for ubiquitin-dependent degradation by the 26S proteasome. As a substrate recognition subunit of Cul3-based ligase, the member of BTB family can bridge the Cul3 to the substrate in a single polypeptide (2,3). Recently, it was observed that a 3-box is responsible for the Cul3-interacting in a variety of BTB proteins including almost all of BTB-Kelch and MATH-BTB proteins (4). Here we defined the BTB_Other family as the proteins contain only BTB domain but not 3-box domain. BTB-containing proteins are highly conserved and participate in diverse biological processes, including transcriptional regulation, ion channel assembly and gating, cytoskeleton dynamics, and targeting proteins for ubiquitination (1).
1. Stogios, P.J., Downs, G.S., Jauhal, J.J., Nandra, S.K. and Prive, G.G. (2005). Sequence and structural analysis of BTB domain proteins. Genome Biol., 6, R82. PMID:16207353
2. Xu, L., Wei, Y., Reboul, J., Vaglio, P., Shin, T.H., Vidal, M., Elledge, S.J. and Harper, J.W. (2003). BTB proteins are substrate-specific adaptors in an SCF-like modular ubiquitin ligase containing CUL-3. Nature, 425, 316-321. PMID: 13679922
3. Pintard, L., Willems, A. and Peter, M. (2004). Cullin-based ubiquitin ligases: Cul3-BTB complexes join the family. EMBO J., 23, 1681-1687. PMID: 15071497
4. Zhuang, M., Calabrese, M.F., Liu, J., Waddell, M.B., Nourse, A., Hammel, M., Miller, D.J., Walden, H., Duda, D.M., Seyedin, S.N., Hoggard, T., Harper, J. W., White, K. P. and Schulman, B. A.. (2009). Structures of SPOP-substrate complexes: insights into molecular architectures of BTB-Cul3 ubiquitin ligases. Mol. Cell, 36(1): 39-50. PMID: 19818708
Cullin family are a family of hydrophobic proteins that act as scaffolds for ubiquitin ligases. Cullin consists of several domains, including cullin repeat domain, a 4-helical bundle domain, an alpha+beta domain, and a winged helix-like domain. Members of Cullin family are found throughout eukaryotes. Humans express seven cullins (Cul1, 2, 3, 4A, 4B, 5 and 7), each forming part of a multi-subunit ubiquitin complex. Cullin RING ubiquitin ligases (CRLs), such as Cul1 (SCF), play an essential role in targeting proteins for ubiquitin-mediated destruction; as such, they are diverse in terms of composition and function, regulating many different processes from glucose sensing and DNA replication to limb patterning and circadian rhythms. The catalytic core of CRLs consists of a RING protein and a cullin family member. For Cul1, the C-terminal cullin-homology domain binds the RING protein. The RING protein appears to function as a docking site for ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes (E2s). Other proteins contain a cullin-homology domain, such as the APC2 subunit of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome and the p53 cytoplasmic anchor PARC; both APC2 and PARC have ubiquitin ligase activity. The N-terminal region of cullins is more variable, and is used to interact with specific adaptor proteins (1).
1. http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/entry/IPR001373