Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (proteasome)
28,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The BAG-1 protein modulates the chaperone activity of Hsc70 and Hsp70 in the mammalian cytosol and nucleus. Remarkably, BAG-1 possesses a ubiquitin-like domain at its amino terminus, suggesting a link to the ubiquitin/proteasome system. Here we show that BAG-1 is indeed associated with the 26 S proteasome in HeLa cells. Binding of the chaperone cofactor to the proteolytic complex is regulated by ATP hydrolysis and is not mediated by Hsc70 and Hsp70. The presented findings reveal a role of BAG-1 as a physical link between the Hsc70/Hsp70 chaperone system and the proteasome. In fact, targeting of BAG-1 to the proteasome promotes an association of the chaperones with the proteolytic complex in vitro and in vivo. A regulatory function of the chaperone cofactor at the interface between protein folding and protein degradation is thus indicated.
...
PMID:The ubiquitin-related BAG-1 provides a link between the molecular chaperones Hsc70/Hsp70 and the proteasome. 1067 88

BAG-1 is a ubiquitin domain protein that links the molecular chaperones Hsc70 and Hsp70 to the proteasome. During proteasomal sorting BAG-1 can cooperate with another co-chaperone, the carboxyl terminus of Hsc70-interacting protein CHIP. CHIP was recently identified as a Hsp70- and Hsp90-associated ubiquitin ligase that labels chaperone-presented proteins with the degradation marker ubiquitin. Here we show that BAG-1 itself is a substrate of the CHIP ubiquitin ligase in vitro and in vivo. CHIP mediates attachment of ubiquitin moieties to BAG-1 in conjunction with ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes of the Ubc4/5 family. Ubiquitylation of BAG-1 is strongly stimulated when a ternary Hsp70.BAG-1.CHIP complex is formed. Complex formation results in the attachment of an atypical polyubiquitin chain to BAG-1, in which the individual ubiquitin moieties are linked through lysine 11. The noncanonical polyubiquitin chain does not induce the degradation of BAG-1, but it stimulates a degradation-independent association of the co-chaperone with the proteasome. Remarkably, this stimulating activity depends on the simultaneous presentation of the integrated ubiquitin-like domain of BAG-1. Our data thus reveal a cooperative recognition of sorting signals at the proteolytic complex. Attachment of polyubiquitin chains to delivery factors may represent a novel mechanism to regulate protein sorting to the proteasome.
...
PMID:Ubiquitylation of BAG-1 suggests a novel regulatory mechanism during the sorting of chaperone substrates to the proteasome. 1229 98

BAG-1 is a multifunctional protein that interacts with a wide range of cellular targets. There is accumulating evidence that overexpression of BAG-1 may play an important role in breast cancer; however, the functional consequences of BAG-1 expression and its mechanism of action in breast cancer cells have not been studied in detail. Here we demonstrate that BAG-1 overexpression completely protected breast cancer cells from apoptosis and long-term growth inhibition induced by heat shock and also partially protected cells from other stresses, including hypoxia, radiation, and chemotoxic drugs. BAG-1 exists as three protein isoforms, and all isoforms prevented stress-induced growth inhibition. This required a conserved lysine in the BAG-1S ubiquitin-like domain thought to be important for proteasome binding and COOH-terminal amino acids required for interaction with the chaperone molecules, Hsc70 and Hsp70. Although expression of BAG-1 was unaltered by heat shock, endogenous and overexpressed BAG-1S relocalized from the cytoplasm to the nucleus after heat shock. The endogenous BAG-1S.Hsc70/Hsp70 complex dissociated after heat shock but was maintained at a detectable level in cells overexpressing BAG-1S. BAG-1-mediated resistance to stress-induced growth inhibition is likely to have a major impact on the development and response to therapy of breast cancer. Targeting the interaction of BAG-1 with chaperones is an attractive strategy to counter the biological effects of BAG-1.
...
PMID:BAG-1 prevents stress-induced long-term growth inhibition in breast cancer cells via a chaperone-dependent pathway. 1287 20

BAG-1 (Bcl-2-associated athanogene-1) proteins interact with the HSC70 and HSP70 heat shock proteins and have been proposed to promote cell survival by coordinating the function of these chaperones with the proteasome to facilitate protein degradation. Consistent with this proposal, previous analyses in cancer cells have demonstrated that BAG-1 requires protein domains important for HSC70/HSP70 and proteasome binding in order to interfere with the growth inhibition induced by heat shock (Townsend, P. A., Cutress, R. I., Sharp, A., Brimmell, M., and Packham, G. (2003) Cancer Res., 63, 4150-4157). Moreover, cellular stress triggered the relocalization of the cytoplasmic BAG-1S (approximately 36 kDa) isoform to the nucleus, and both BAG-1S and the constitutively nuclear localized BAG-1L (approximately 50 kDa) isoform suppressed heat shock-induced apoptosis to the same extent, suggesting a critical role in the nucleus. Because ischemia (I) and reperfusion (R) are important stress signals in acute and chronic heart disease, we have examined the expression and function of BAG-1 proteins in primary cardiac myocytes (CMs) and the Langendorff-perfused intact heart. The expression of both BAG-1 isoforms, BAG-1S and BAG-1L, was rapidly induced following ischemia in rat CM, and this was maintained during subsequent reperfusion. In control hearts, BAG-1S and BAG-1L were readily detectable in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm. However, BAG-1S did not relocate to the nucleus following simulated I/R. BAG-1 interacted with both RAF-1 and HSC70 in CMs and the whole heart, and binding to HSC70 was increased following I/R. Overexpression of the human BAG-1S and BAG-1 M isoforms significantly reduced CM apoptosis following simulated I/R. By contrast, BAG-1L or BAG-1S fused to a heterologous nuclear localization sequence failed to protect CM. Finally, overexpression of BAG-1 deletion and point mutants unable to bind HSC70/HSP70 failed to offer cardioprotection. Surprisingly, a deletion mutant lacking the N-terminal ubiquitin-like domain, which mediates interaction with the proteasome, still promoted cardioprotection. Therefore, BAG-1 has a novel cardioprotective role, mediated via association with HSC70/HSP70, which is critical upon cytoplasmic localization but independent of the BAG-1 ubiquitin-like domain. Our studies demonstrate that BAG-1 can influence cellular response to stress by multiple mechanisms, potentially influenced by the cell type and nature of the stress signal.
...
PMID:BAG-1 proteins protect cardiac myocytes from simulated ischemia/reperfusion-induced apoptosis via an alternate mechanism of cell survival independent of the proteasome. 1497 28

BAG-1 (Bcl-2-associated athanogene) is a multifaceted protein implicated in the modulation of a large variety of cellular processes. Elucidating the molecular mechanisms that underlie the cellular functions of BAG-1 becomes an increasingly important task, particularly in light of the growing evidence connecting aberrant BAG-1 expression to certain human cancers. A common element of the remarkable functional diversity of BAG-1 appears to be the interaction with molecular chaperones of the Hsp70 family. In fact, BAG-1 functions as a nucleotide exchange factor of mammalian cytosolic Hsc70, thereby triggering substrate unloading from the chaperone. In addition, recent findings reveal an association of BAG-1 with the proteasome, which suggests a role in coordinating chaperone and degradation pathways.
...
PMID:BAG-1--a nucleotide exchange factor of Hsc70 with multiple cellular functions. 1498 55

BAG-1 is a multi-functional protein that exists as three functionally distinct and differentially localized isoforms which originate from a single mRNA and interact with a wide range of cellular targets. These include heat shock proteins, nuclear hormone receptors, signalling molecules, the anti-apoptotic BCL-2 protein and components of the ubiquitylation/proteasome machinery. Overexpression of BAG-1 isoforms has been demonstrated to regulate apoptosis, proliferation, transcription, metastasis and cell motility in a wide variety of cell systems. Since BAG-1 has a role in many biological pathways there is increasing evidence supporting the view that BAG-1 is an important molecule in disease, for example, potentially modulating both cell survival and response to nuclear hormones in breast cancer, and BAG-1 is a potential molecular target for therapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:BAG-1: a multi-functional pro-survival molecule. 1547 70

Intraneuronal accumulation of phosphorylated Tau protein is a molecular pathology found in many forms of dementia, including Alzheimer disease. Research into possible mechanisms leading to the accumulation of modified Tau protein and the possibility of removing Tau protein from the system have revealed that the chaperone protein system can interact with Tau and mediate its degradation. Hsp70/Hsc70, a member of the chaperone protein family, interacts with Tau protein and mediates proper folding of Tau and can promote degradation of Tau protein under certain circumstances. However, because Hsp70/Hsc70 has many binding partners that can mediate its activity, there is still much to discover about how Hsp70 acts in vivo to regulate Tau protein. BAG-1, an Hsp70/Hsc70 binding partner, has been implicated as a mediator of neuronal function. In this work we show that BAG-1 associates with Tau protein in an Hsc70-dependent manner. Overexpression of BAG-1 induced an increase in Tau levels, which is shown to be due to an inhibition of protein degradation. We further show that BAG-1 can inhibit the degradation of Tau protein by the 20 S proteasome but does not affect the ubiquitination of Tau protein. RNA-mediated interference depletion of BAG-1 leads to a decrease in total Tau protein levels as well as promoting hyperphosphorylation of the remaining protein. Induction of Hsp70 by heat shock enhanced the increase of Tau levels in cells overexpressing BAG-1 but induced a decrease of Tau levels in cells that were depleted of BAG-1. Finally, BAG-1 is highly expressed in neurons bearing Tau tangles in a mouse model of Alzheimer disease. This data suggests a molecular mechanism through which Tau protein levels are regulated in the cell and possible consequences for the pathology and treatment of Alzheimer disease.
...
PMID:BAG-1 associates with Hsc70.Tau complex and regulates the proteasomal degradation of Tau protein. 1795 34

The Bcl-2 associated athanogene (BAG) family of proteins function as cochaperones by bridging molecules that recruit molecular chaperones to target proteins. BAG-1 provides a physical link between the heat shock proteins Hsc70/Hsp70 and the proteasome to facilitate ubiquitin-proteasome-mediated protein degradation. In addition to the proteasome, protein degradation via autophagy is responsible for maintaining cellular metabolism, organelle homeostasis and redox equilibrium. Our recent report shows that autophagy plays an important role in cardiac adaptation-induced cell survival against ischemia-reperfusion injury in association with the BAG-1 protein. BAG-1 is associated with the autophagosomal membrane protein LC3-II and it may participate in the induction of autophagy via Hsc70. Moreover, another BAG family member, BAG-3, is responsible for the induction of macroautophagy in association with HspB8. These results show the involvement of BAG family members in the induction of autophagy for the degradation of damaged or oxidized proteins to promote cell survival.
...
PMID:BAG-1 induces autophagy for cardiac cell survival. 1900 66

The maturation of mouse macrophages and dendritic cells involves the transient deposition of ubiquitylated proteins in the form of dendritic cell aggresome-like induced structures (DALIS). Transient DALIS formation was used here as a paradigm to study how mammalian cells influence the formation and disassembly of protein aggregates through alterations of their proteostasis machinery. Co-chaperones that modulate the interplay of Hsc70 and Hsp70 with the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) and the autophagosome-lysosome pathway emerged as key regulators of this process. The chaperone-associated ubiquitin ligase CHIP and the ubiquitin-domain protein BAG-1 are essential for DALIS formation in mouse macrophages and bone-marrow derived dendritic cells (BMDCs). CHIP also cooperates with BAG-3 and the autophagic ubiquitin adaptor p62 in the clearance of DALIS through chaperone-assisted selective autophagy (CASA). On the other hand, the co-chaperone HspBP1 inhibits the activity of CHIP and thereby attenuates antigen sequestration. Through a modulation of DALIS formation CHIP, BAG-1 and HspBP1 alter MHC class I mediated antigen presentation in mouse BMDCs. Our data show that the Hsc/Hsp70 co-chaperone network controls transient protein aggregation during maturation of professional antigen presenting cells and in this way regulates the immune response. Similar mechanisms may modulate the formation of aggresomes and aggresome-like induced structures (ALIS) in other mammalian cell types.
...
PMID:The Hsc/Hsp70 co-chaperone network controls antigen aggregation and presentation during maturation of professional antigen presenting cells. 2128 20

A significant portion of newly synthesized protein fails to fold properly and is quickly degraded. These defective ribosomal products (DRiPs) are substrates for the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) and give rise to a large fraction of peptides presented by major histocompatibility complex class I molecules (MHCI). Here, we showed that DRiPs are also autophagy substrates, which accumulate upon autophagy inhibition in aggresome-like-induced structures (ALIS). Aggregation is critically depending on p62/SQSTM1, but occurs in the absence of activation of the NRF2 signaling axis and transcriptional regulation of p62/SQSTM1. We demonstrated that autophagy-targeted DRiPs can become UPS substrates and give rise to MHCI presented peptides upon autophagy inhibition. We further demonstrated that autophagy targeting of DRiPs is controlled by NBR1, but not p62/SQSTM1, CHIP or BAG-1. Active autophagy therefore directly modulates MHCI presentation by constantly degrading endogenous defective neosynthesized antigens, which are submitted to at least two distinct quality control mechanisms.
...
PMID:Autophagy inhibition promotes defective neosynthesized proteins storage in ALIS, and induces redirection toward proteasome processing and MHCI-restricted presentation. 2594 32


1 2 Next >>