Abstract
UEV domains are catalytically dead variants of the E2 enzymes which play an intermediate role in ubiquitin signaling. UEV domain containing proteins, like the ESCRT-I factor Tsg101 often play critical roles in trafficking of ubiquitylated cargos or in modulating ubiquitin processivity, or in determining the type of signal that is transferred to a target protein. Ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme E2 variant (UEV) and lactate/malate dehydrogenase (UEVLD), also known as UEV3, is a human paralogue of Tsg101 with apparent associations to cancer, innate immunity, NF-κB signaling, and autophagy. It contains an N-terminal UEV domain with 56% identity to that of Tsg101 and a C-terminal lactate dehydrogenase domain. Here, we show the backbone assignments of the UEV domain from UEVLD and find that its Cα shifts are consistent with a UEV domain composition. Further experiments suggest that it may have regions corresponding to the known binding pockets of Tsg101, but further structural and functional work will be required to uncover critical determinants of UEV domain function, and the role of these domains in Ubiquitin signaling as a whole.