Introduction

SNARE (soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor) proteins are the indispensable mediators of membrane fusion reactions within the endomembrane system of eukaryotic cells1,2,3,4,5. The SNARE superfamily consists of several sub-families whose members contain one or two SNARE domains of ~ 60 residues in length3,4,6. Members of the syntaxin family of SNAREs are central to the formation of SNARE complexes. They contain a C-terminal transmembrane anchor, preceded by the SNARE domain. The latter engages in interactions with cognate SNAREs to form a SNARE complex in a 4-helix bundle arrangement that ultimately leads to membrane fusion7,8,9.

Syntaxins also contain an N-terminal regulatory domain that consists of three α helices (a, b, c) and has been termed the Habc domain. At least 16 syntaxins are encoded in the human genome and many more in divergent species. Amongst these syntaxins, the Habc domains are poorly—or not at all—conserved at the primary sequence level. However, in the cases of syntaxin family members whose Habc domains have been structurally studied it was found that they all share a highly conserved fold. This includes Stx1A10,11, Stx612, Sso113, Stx1014, Vam3p15 and several others (see Protein Data Bank) whose Habc domains fold into essentially superimposable three-helix bundles despite limited or absent sequence similarity. The Habc domains of various syntaxins have been found to be binding sites to proteins that regulate SNARE function including those of the munc18, munc13 and synaptotagmin families16. In addition, in some—but not all—syntaxins the Habc domains have the ability to engage in an intramolecular interaction with the SNARE domain resulting in a tetrameric helical bundle. This “closed” conformation generally inhibits the formation of complexes with cognate SNARE proteins and thereby inhibits membrane fusion16,17. These findings clearly indicate that the Habc domains of syntaxins play a critical role in the regulation of membrane fusion and that this function depends on the conserved three-dimensional structure of these domains.

It was found that a conserved domain in a very different family of proteins shares the same fold with the syntaxin Habc domain. The GAT (GGAs and TOM) domain of GGA1 was found to be nearly superimposable with the Habc domains of Stx1A and Stx6 despite their lack of sequence similarity18. GGA proteins are Golgi- and endosome-associated clathrin adaptor proteins involved in cargo recruitment in membrane trafficking pathways. At the time of the discovery of the structural similarity with the syntaxin Habc domain, relatively little was known about the function of the GAT domain. Subsequently, however, the GAT domains of GGA proteins were found to be ubiquitin binding domains19,20,21,22,23,24 which helped to explain their function in recruiting ubiquitinated membrane proteins for targeting to multivesicular bodies (MVBs)25.

Ubiquitin, an 8 kDa protein, is covalently attached to lysine residues of target proteins via E3 ligases26. In the case of membrane proteins, reversible ubiquitination serves as a signal for targeting to endosomes, and then to intraluminal vesicles of MVBs. MVBs can subsequently either fuse with lysosomes leading to degradation27 or they can fuse with the plasma membrane leading to extracellular secretion of membrane proteins in the form of exosomes28. Ubiquitin itself may be ubiquitinated at any of its seven lysine residues leading to target proteins being tagged with a chain of polyubiquitin molecules29. K48-linked polyubiquitin chains are a signal for proteasomal degradation whereas mono-ubiquitin and K63-linked polyubiquitin chains are another signal for trafficking of membrane proteins to the endosomal pathway, and especially into the MVB pathway30,31,32. The GAT domain of GGA proteins has been shown to be required for the sorting of membrane proteins tagged with K63-polyubiquitin chains into the MVB pathway31,32.

GGA proteins themselves are also mono-ubiquitinated in a manner dependent on the binding of ubiquitin to their GAT domain19. A large number of ubiquitin-binding proteins have been found to also be ubiquitinated themselves. The reasons for this are not always completely clear but it is thought that concurrent ubiquitin-binding and ubiquitination of sorting proteins aids in the establishment of protein networks to create sorting domains25,33. We have recently reported that syntaxin 3, a SNARE involved in membrane fusion at the apical plasma membrane of polarized epithelial cells, undergoes mono-ubiquitination at lysine residues adjacent to its transmembrane domain34. Ubiquitination of Stx3 leads to endocytosis from the basolateral plasma membrane, direction into the endosomal/MVB pathway and eventually excretion with exosomes34. Functional studies using a non-ubiquitinatable Stx3 mutant suggested that Stx3 may function to sort specific cargo proteins into the MVB/exosomal pathway34. Such a function is unexpected for a protein thought to be involved in membrane fusion.

The structural similarity between the Habc domain of syntaxins and the GAT domain suggests a common ancestry and related function. Given this structural similarity, and given the finding that Stx3—like GGA proteins—is mono-ubiquitinated and appears to play a role in cargo sorting in the MVB/exosomal pathway, we hypothesized that the Habc domain of Stx3 may be a ubiquitin-binding domain. We report here that Stx3 indeed binds to ubiquitin and K63-linked polyubiquitin chains, but not K48-linked polyubiquitin chains. Structural modeling and mutagenesis experiments suggest that the mode of ubiquitin binding could be similar to that of the GAT domain and may involve conserved hydrophobic interactions and a salt bridge. These results suggest that syntaxin function may be regulated by ubiquitin binding, and that syntaxins may function in protein sorting in addition to their established role in membrane fusion.

Results

Stx3 binds non-covalently to ubiquitin

To investigate the possibility that Stx3 may bind to ubiquitin we incubated a purified GST-fusion protein of the entire cytoplasmic domain (1–265) of Stx3 with ubiquitin-coated beads to observe any interaction in a pull-down assay (Fig. 1a, domain architecture map of Stx3). A GST-fusion protein of the GGA3-GAT domain served as a positive control. As shown in Fig. 1b, GGA3-GAT interacts strongly with ubiquitin-coated beads as expected. GST-Stx3 also interacts with ubiquitin-coated beads although with reduced efficiency as compared to GGA3-GAT. A GST-fusion protein containing only the Habc domain (1–146) of Stx3 pulls down with ubiquitin-coated beads much more efficiently than the entire Stx3 cytoplasmic domain (3.78 fold change increase) (Fig. 1c). This suggests that the Habc domain directly binds to ubiquitin, and that this interaction is inhibited by intramolecular binding between the Habc and SNARE domains in the “closed conformation” of Stx3. To test this possibility, we introduced the LE165/166AA mutation that has previously been shown to prevent the closed conformation in the highly conserved Stx1A leading to a constitutively open conformation17. The observed increase in binding of the open-mutant vs. wild-type Stx3 (1.73 fold change increase) (Fig. 1c) suggests that the Habc domain preferentially binds to ubiquitin when it is not engaged in binding to the SNARE domain.

Figure 1
figure 1

Stx3 binding to mono-ubiquitin. (A) Schematic of representation of Syntaxin 3. (B) Purified GST fusion protein of the GGA3-GAT domain (positive control for ubiquitin binding) or the cytoplasmic region (1–265) of Stx3 was precipitated with ubiquitin-coated (U) agarose beads or control, uncoated CL4B beads (C) and subjected to immunoblotting (IB) using anti-GST antibody. (C) Purified GST fusion proteins: cytoplasmic region of Stx3 (1–265), Habc domain Stx3 (1–146), and constitutively open mutant of cytoplasmic region Stx3 (L165A/E166A) were each precipitated as in panel A and probed with anti-Stx3 antibody. (D) SPR experimental data of interaction between captured GST-GGA3-GAT and free ubiquitin. (E) SPR experimental data of interaction between captured GST-Stx3-1–146 and free ubiquitin. In B, C, D and E, experiments shown are representative of three independent experiments.

To assess the affinity of the Habc domain of Stx3 for ubiquitin, we utilized a surface plasmon resonance assay using immobilized GST-Stx3-Habc in comparison with GST-GGA3-GAT as a positive control. The measured KD for the binding of GST-GGA3-GAT to ubiquitin is 0.211 mM (Fig. 1d), which is consistent with previously, published values of 0.231 mM24 and 0.181 mM23. This interaction has been described as a “high-affinity” interaction for a ubiquitin binding protein29. In comparison, the measured KD for the Habc domain of Stx3 is 1.36 mM (Fig. 1e) indicating that the binding of Stx3 to mono-ubiquitin in solution is a low-affinity interaction and is weaker than the binding of GGA3 to ubiquitin.

Altogether, these results suggest that the similarity between the GAT domain of GGA proteins and the Habc region of Stx3 is not only structural, but also functional with respect to ubiquitin binding.

Stx3 binds to K63-linked but not K48-linked polyubiquitin chains

Ubiquitin-binding domains commonly have weak affinities for mono-ubiquitin but the presence of multiple ubiquitin binding sites in the same molecule often results in much higher affinities for polyubiquitin chains29. Since the affinity of the Habc domain of Stx3 for mono-ubiquitin was low, we next investigated whether Stx3 may exhibit higher affinity for polyubiquitin chains. The two predominant chain-linkages are via the K48 or K63 residues of ubiquitin. GST-Stx3 was incubated with either K48- or K63-linked polyubiquitin chains covering a range of lengths from dimeric to 7-mers. As shown in Fig. 2a, Stx3 interacts with K63-linked polyubiquitin chains of lengths between 4–6. In this assay, no binding is detected to 2 and 3-mers ubiquitin, suggesting a selectivity of Stx3 for K63-linked ubiquitin chains with a minimum of 4 ubiquitin units. Importantly, no interaction between Stx3 and K48-linked chains of any length is detected suggesting that Stx3 exhibits binding specificity to the K63 linkage.

Figure 2
figure 2

Stx3 binding to K63-linked polyubiquitin chains. (A) Purified GST fusion protein of Stx3 (cytoplasmic region, 1–265) was incubated with a mix of K48 or K63-linked polyubiquitin chains (2–7 ubiquitin molecules in length) followed by pull-down with glutathione sepharose and immunoblot (IB) using anti-ubiquitin or anti-GST antibodies. (B) Purified GST fusion protein of the cytoplasmic regions of Stx1A, Stx2, Stx3, or Stx4 were incubated with a mix of K63-linked polyubiquitin chains (2–7 ubiquitin molecules in length) followed by glutathione sepharose pull-down and probed with anti-ubiquitin and anti-GST antibodies. In A and B, experiments shown are representative of three independent experiments.

Next, we tested whether the ability to interact with K63-linked ubiquitin chains is unique to Stx3 or may also be a feature of other syntaxins. We compared GST-fusion proteins of Stx1A, Stx2, and Stx4 side-by-side with Stx3. As shown in Fig. 2b, Stx1A and Stx2 interact with K63-linked ubiquitin chains similarly to Stx3 albeit with somewhat differing preferences for different chain lengths. Stx4 only exhibits very weak interaction with Ubi6. Altogether, these data suggest that the Habc domains of several syntaxins are capable of binding to polyubiquitin chains and that ubiquitin-binding may be a conserved function among the syntaxin protein family.

Structural modeling

The GAT domain of GGA3 has been shown to have two distinct binding sites for ubiquitin. Site 1 has been studied in most detail and encompasses residues from the C-terminal half of helix A and the N-terminal half of helix B (Fig. 3a). X-ray structure analysis of ubiquitin in complex with the GGA3-GAT domain revealed prominent hydrophobic interactions with ubiquitin involving L227, M231 and L247 of GGA3, and a salt bridge involving E246 and E250 of GGA323,24. These residues interact closely with I44 and R42, respectively, of ubiquitin. The other ubiquitin binding site of GGA3 (site 2) is located on the opposite face of the 3-helix bundle of the GAT domain and encompasses residues in helices B and C24, but no 3D structure is available for this interaction.

Figure 3
figure 3

Conservation of residues important in GGA3-ubiquitin interaction. (A) Sequence alignment of the Habc domains of human Stx3 and human Stx1A with the GAT domain of human GGA3. Hydrophobic and ionic residues known to be involved in the interaction between GGA3 and ubiquitin are highlighted in color. Putative equivalent residues, determined based on structural alignment (Fig. 4) in syntaxins are similarly highlighted. (B) Sequence alignment of Stx3 orthologues from 26 different species. Hydrophobic and ionic residues that are putatively involved in ubiquitin interaction are highlighted in red and blue, respectively. (C) Sequence alignment of human Stx1(Q16623), Stx2(P32856), Stx3 (Q13277) and Stx4 (Q12846). Hydrophobic and ionic residues selected for mutagenesis are highlighted in red and blue respectively.

To better understand how the Habc domain of Stx3 may interact with ubiquitin we constructed a model based on the X-ray structure of ubiquitin in association with site 1 of the GGA3 GAT domain23,24. We modeled the Stx3 sequence into the known structure of the Habc domain of the closely related Stx1A10,11, and then fitted this Stx3 Habc domain onto the GGA3 GAT domain. The resulting model is shown in Fig. 4. This allowed us to identify Stx3 residues that correspond most closely to the known hydrophobic and ionic interactions between GGA3-GAT and ubiquitin. As shown in Fig. 4, the Stx3 Habc domain has two glutamic acid residues (E78 and E83) in very similar positions as E246 and E250 of GGA3-GAT, and these residues may be predicted to engage in a salt bridge with R42 of ubiquitin. Similarly, L59, L77 and L80 of Stx3 would form a hydrophobic pocket that may interact with I44 of ubiquitin, analogous to the hydrophobic pocket formed by L227, M231 and L247 of GGA3 (Fig. 4).

Figure 4
figure 4

Structural modeling. (A) Structural model based on the X-ray structure of ubiquitin in association with site 1 of the GGA3 GAT domain23,24. The Stx3 sequence was modeled into the known structure of the Habc domain of the closely related Stx1A10,11 and fitted onto the GGA3 GAT domain. R42 of ubiquitin (yellow) is known to engage in an ionic interaction with E246 and E250 of GGA3-GAT (green). I44 of ubiquitin (yellow) is known to engage in interactions with a hydrophobic pocket formed by L227, M231 and L247 of GGA3-GAT (green). Stx3 residues (blue) that correspond most closely to these residues are E78 and E83 for the ionic site and L59, L77 and L80 for the hydrophobic site.

Due to the lack of similarity between Stx3 and GGA3 at the primary sequence level (Fig. 3a) these predictions would have been difficult or impossible to make. However, we note that E78 and E83 of Stx3 and E246 and E250 of GGA3 could be aligned closely with each other (Fig. 3a). Sequence alignment of Stx3 orthologs from numerous species indicates that all of the residues that may potentially interact with ubiquitin are highly conserved (Fig. 3b). In addition, sequence alignment of human Stx1-4 showed that E78/E83 and L77/L80 are largely conserved between them (Fig. 3c).

Mutational analysis

Based on this model, we decided to mutate residues L77, E78, L80, and E83 of Stx3 to alanine residues and test any effects on the ability to interact with ubiquitin chains. GST fusion proteins with the cytoplasmic domain of Stx3 containing either double leucine (L77A/L80A) or double glutamate (E78A/E83A) mutations were generated. Introducing all four mutations simultaneously resulted in an insoluble GST fusion protein that could not be analyzed.

The ability of the mutants to bind to K63-linked polyubiquitin chains was assessed using the same assay as in Fig. 2. Introducing the E78A/E83A mutations had no discernible effect on polyubiquitin binding as compared to wild-type Stx3 (Fig. 5). Introducing the L77A/L80A mutations had only a seemingly minor effect in that it eliminated a very weak interaction with K63-linked Ubi3 (Fig. 5). Given that similar mutagenesis experiments with GGA GAT domains frequently lead only to minor disruption of ubiquitin binding19,21,23, however, these results may not be surprising. First, the interactions between the GAT domain and ubiquitin involve numerous contacts with multiple residues. Second, the fact that the GAT domain has two separate ubiquitin binding sites suggests that mutations of one site alone might have little effect on overall ubiquitin binding, especially for the binding of polyubiquitin chains. We hypothesize that polyubiquitin chains may wrap around the entire surface of the GAT domain, and by analogy also the Habc domain of syntaxins, and engage in numerous contacts that are difficult to completely disrupt by mutagenesis. Such a binding mode may also explain why similar structures (GAT and Habc domains) could bind to polyubiquitin even in the absence of highly conserved primary sequence similarity. In this regard, it is interesting that the L77A/L80A mutations in Stx3 appear to disrupt only the binding to K63-linked Ubi3, which may suggest that longer ubiquitin chains can compensate by interacting with additional residues simultaneously.

Figure 5
figure 5

Binding mutant Stx3 to K63-linked polyubiquitin chains. Purified GST fusion protein of the wild-type Stx3 cytoplasmic region (1–265) or of mutants containing either L77A/L80A (LL) or E78A/E83A (EE) mutations were incubated with K63-linked polyubiquitin chains (1–7 ubiquitin molecules in length) followed by glutathione sepharose pull-down and probed with anti-ubiquitin and anti-GST antibodies. Experiment shown is representative of three independent experiments.

Discussion

This study illuminates a novel characteristic of syntaxins, ubiquitin binding. This is a surprising finding because, to our knowledge, ubiquitin-binding has not previously been reported for any SNARE protein, nor has there been any indication that ubiquitin-binding could affect SNARE-mediated membrane fusion events. On the other hand, the fact that the 3D structures of the GAT and Habc domains are highly similar, and the fact that hydrophobic and ionic residues known to mediate ubiquitin-binding of the GAT domain may have equivalent residues in the Habc domain of Stx3 (Fig. 4) makes it plausible that both domains may share a similar function. Besides in GGA proteins, GAT domains are also present in the more distantly related proteins TOM1 and TOM1-L1, both of which also bind to ubiquitin37. The degree of primary sequence similarity among these GAT domains is low but the overall structures of these 3-helix bundles are highly conserved. The finding that Habc domains of syntaxins not only share the same fold with GAT domains but also function in ubiquitin-binding suggests that these domains share a common ancestry.

Our data support the conclusion that the Habc domain of Stx3 is a bona fide ubiquitin binding domain. The specificity for polyubiquitin-K63 chains could be influenced by the ability of GST proteins to form multimers35. Furthermore, it is known that SNARE complexes form dimers and higher-order multimers at the site of fusion36. We therefore hypothesized that the specificity for K63-linked chains could be favored when Stx3 is present in clusters (forming multimers). This may add a high level of complexity to the regulation of ubiquitin binding of Stx3, as previously suggested by Sims et al.35 for other UBA domains. While the purpose of the ability of syntaxins to bind to mono-ubiquitin and K63-linked polyubiquitin chains remains to be elucidated, several possibilities can be envisioned. Binding of K63-linked polyubiquitin chains to the Habc domain of a syntaxin may interfere with the ability of that syntaxin to bind to other regulatory proteins that are known to interact with the Habc domain such as members of the munc13, synaptotagmin and munc18 families of SNARE regulators. Thereby, K63-linked polyubiquitin chains, possibly attached to specific regulatory proteins, may regulate SNARE function and therefore membrane fusion in certain vesicle trafficking pathways. Another possibility is that binding of K63-linked polyubiquitin chains to the Habc domain of a syntaxin would interfere with the ability of the Habc domain to engage in an intramolecular interaction with the SNARE domain of that syntaxin. This would result in a “constitutively open” conformation of that syntaxin and, again, may regulate membrane fusion functions. Another possibility emerges from our recent finding that Stx3 can undergo ubiquitination at a cluster of lysine residues located between its SNARE domain and transmembrane domain34. It may be possible that the Habc domain could engage in an intramolecular interaction with this covalently attached ubiquitin thereby locking such modified Stx3 in a “constitutively closed” conformation. Finally, it is possible that binding of K63-linked polyubiquitin chains to the Habc domain of Stx3 may be unrelated to a function in membrane fusion but rather relates to a different function. Such a possibility may be supported by our recent finding that Stx3 that is covalently ubiquitinated at the lysine cluster proximal to its transmembrane domain, enters the endosomal pathway, traffics to intraluminal vesicles of MVBs, and is eventually excreted with exosomes34. We reported that a non-ubiquitinatable mutant of Stx3 (termed Stx3-5R) is not only unable to enter the MVB/exosomal pathway but also interferes with the recruitment of a specific apical exosomal cargo protein, the orphan G-protein coupled receptor GPRC5B, into this pathway. This suggested that Stx3 normally plays a role in cargo recruitment in a fashion that is dependent on its ability to be ubiquitinated. Interestingly, the Stx3-5R mutant was also found to disrupt the secretion of human cytomegalovirus (hCMV) virions, a result that—combined with other findings—suggests that hCMV exploits the MVB/exosomal pathways for virion production and secretion34. In this regard, Stx3 bears striking similarities to GGA proteins. Both contain a similarly structured ubiquitin-binding domain, both undergo ubiquitination themselves, and both are involved in recruitment of membrane proteins into the MVB pathway. In the case of GGA proteins, this sorting function requires cargo proteins to be tagged with K63-linked polyubiquitin chains31,32.

Altogether, these results suggest that syntaxins contain a ubiquitin binding domain similar to the GAT domain. The implications of this finding are yet to be elucidated but may relate to the regulation of membrane fusion functions and/or point towards a novel function of syntaxins in the sorting of membrane proteins.

Materials and methods

Plasmid construction

The cytoplasmic region of rat Stx3 (1–265) and the N-terminal region of Stx3 (1–146), respectively, were cloned into pGEX-4T-3 (GE Healthcare Life Sciences). pGEX-4T-2-GGA3-GAT plasmid was a kind gift of Kazuhisa Nakayama (Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyoto University). Site-directed mutagenesis (QuickChange II, Agilent Technologies) was employed to generate the open-conformation mutant (LE165/166AA) in the Stx3 (1–265) plasmid.

Protein expression and purification

GST-fusion protein plasmids were transformed into E. coli Rosetta 2 (Millipore-Sigma) competent cells. When the cultures reached an OD of 0.6, IPTG was added to induce expression of GST-protein. Cells were pelleted and lysed in a buffer containing 10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0; 150 mM NaCl; 500 µg/mL of lysozyme; 50 µg/mL of RNase; 100 µg/mL of DNase; 0.5% Triton X-100; 5 mM DTT; 5 mM EDTA; 1 mM PMSF and a protease inhibitor cocktail (Millipore-Sigma) containing: 100 µM AEBSF, 0.085 µM Aprotinin, 4 µM Bestatin, 1.4 µM E-64, 2 µM Leupeptin, 1.5 µM Pepstain A was subsequently added. CL2B Sepharose beads (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) were used to pre-clear the lysates, followed by incubation with glutathione-coated agarose overnight at 4 °C with rotating. Beads were washed four times and eluted with glutathione. Eluate content was analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Eluates were then dialyzed into 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA and the protein concentration determined using a Nanodrop spectrophotometer (ThermoScientific).

Mono-ubiquitin binding assay

55 µl (dry volume) of ubiquitin-coated agarose (Millipore-Sigma) or CL4B Sepharose (GE Healthcare Lifesciences) beads were washed three times with 1 ml of Buffer A (25 mM HEPES–KOH, pH 7.4, 125 mM potassium acetate, 2.5 mM magnesium acetate, 5 mM EGTA) + 1% FBS. Buffer was removed from pelleted beads using a Hamilton syringe and 55 µL of Buffer A + 1% FBS were added to beads to create a 50/50 slurry. 30 µL of the bead slurry were added to 1 ml of Buffer A + 1% FBS containing 1 µM of purified GST-fusion protein in an Eppendorf tube. Tubes were tumbled end-over-end for 2 h at room temperature. Beads were pelleted and washed four times with 1 ml of Buffer A + 0.005% Tween-20 before pelleting and removing residual buffer with a Hamilton syringe. Beads were re-suspended in 45 µl of SDS-PAGE sample buffer containing 100 mM DTT, boiled, separated on SDS-PAGE, and transferred to nitrocellulose membrane. Membranes were probed with a polyclonal goat anti-GST antibody (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) and a Stx3-antibody generated by us (available as MAB2258 from Millipore-Sigma) and a donkey anti-goat IgG HRP-conjugated secondary antibody (Jackson Immunoresearch).

Poly-ubiquitin binding assay

GST-fusion proteins were incubated in Buffer A containing FBS (25 mM HEPES–KOH, pH 7.4, 125 mM potassium acetate, 2.5 mM magnesium acetate, 5 mM EGTA, 1% FBS) while rotating at room temperature with 8 μg of a K48-linked or K63-linked mixture of polyubiquitin chains of 2–7 ubiquitins in length (Boston Biochem). After 1 h, glutathione-coated agarose beads were added to the sample and incubated for one hour. Beads were washed three times with Buffer A containing 0.005% Tween-20, re-suspended in SDS-PAGE sample buffer and treated as above. Membranes were boiled for 10 min in H2O prior to blocking in 5% dry milk in TBST before being probed with mouse anti-ubiquitin antibody P4D1 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology).

Surface plasmon resonance measurements

SPR measurements were performed on a Biacore 2000 instrument and were performed at room temperature in HBS-EP buffer (10 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 3 mM EDTA, 0.005% Tween-20). GST-fusion proteins were captured to a CM5 Sensor Chip (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) by using a GST capture kit (GE Healthcare Life Sciences) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Purified bovine ubiquitin was from Millipore-Sigma (U6253).

Structural modeling

Homology model of the Habc domain of human Stx3 sequence (Q13277) was constructed using the structure of Syntaxin-1A (PDB: 1EZ3) as template and the Swiss-model website for building the 3D model. The structure of GG3-GAT domain: Ubiquitin (PDB:(1YD8)) and Habc of Stx3 were aligned over 88 residues using PyMOL. Figures were generated using PyMOL (The PyMOL Molecular Graphics System).